India's Biggest Problem and Its Solution:
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Overview
After completing MBA in USA, I opted to go back to India with one main goal: To contribute whatever I can, however small it could be, to India's tremendous needs and problems. We usually talk a lot about India and her problems. However most of the time, our discussion varies among so many topics, it is hard to get hold of some central issues. It is not that we don't love India nor it is not that we don't want to help India. I believe the real issue is that we need to focus on some specific issues. My MBA, exposure to US economy and then around six years of actual stay and active involvement with Indian businesses have given me an opportunity to look at things more closely. I strongly believe that the single most thing that can solve most of India's problems effectively is EMPLOYMENT/JOBS. I believe that Unemployment and our failure to create Jobs for hundreds of millions of employable Indians is one of the biggest challenges faced by India. In next 10 minutes I want to highlight importance of 'Jobs Creation' and also reasons why we have failed in this area. Then in the end, I would list what we need to do to create jobs. Why JOB CREATIONS be the TOP PRIORITY?
Our politicians always talk a lot about it; but nothing is actually done. What they have done so far is quite opposite. Their work and policies have abolished jobs and directly or indirectly drove talented people out of India. It is the biggest failure of Indian democracy that vast majority of our graduates remain unemployed. We may be tampted to quickly pass on the blame on Overpopulation and simply accept the 'reality' that nothing can be done in this respect. It is not so. Just follow me. Importance of JOBS CREATION Humanity concern: The other critical thing to note is that this human resources that could be utilized for creating national wealth are not only wated but often 'utilized' in antisocial and anti national activities. India's all major internal problems like Kashmir issue, Zarkhand movement, Shikhs problems, terrorism, Nexellites, Hindu-muslim riots-- all of them have their prime strenghts and roots in young people, mostly those unemployeed. Consumers are created:
There is no doubt that primary focus on JOB creation would revive more and more industries which would in turn create more and more jobs. It is a domino effect. (In fact we are looking at the domino effect in the reverse direction at present. More and more factories close day by day, losing more jobs and consumers. This creates more pressure on demand and on survival of other business units. We need to put our best efforts to reverse it immediately.) Exports and strong Rupee:
The day our exports overtake our imports, the reverse would happen. Tremendous increase in exports is possible because we have one of the world's most skillful, also the cheapest labor force and also the world's most entrepreneurial people. All we need is the RIGHT FOCUS and CORRECT POLICIES. STOP BRAIN-DRAIN:
(Use the simple arithmetic and it would not be hard to realize how we can fulfill our long cherished dream of making our India a world leader). Every graduate in India feels 'he is struck in India' and wants to get out. Why? I guess the single important factor is lack of a well paying job which would guarantee a good life style for himself and his family. (Let us ask ourselves: If I had a well paying job and a promise of good life style, would I had been desperate to come to USA leaving my family and relatives there?). If we succeed in reversing this brain drain, our businesses, industries and products would benefit and would become more competitive in the world market. This would also increase exports and strengthen Indian Rupee. There is no doubt that JOBS oriented economy would kick-start Indian economy and businesses creating more jobs and opportunities resulting in better standard of living. Encourage business and industries: Who creates jobs in the economy? it is always the private sector- businesses and industries. Every single job created is a small boost to the economy. Every newly employed person is creating/contributing some goods/services in the economy simultaneously causing some increase in demand for other goods and services. Government also creates some jobs- but most often such jobs does no good to economy; they don't result in value addition or value creation in the economy.
We need to respect business people, businesses and industries at every level. We need to provide a conductive environment and infrastructure for them to grow. Do the reality check of the 'regulation raj': Excessive burden of rules and regulations (most of them hardly achieving anything good for the nation and its economy), the harassment by the government departments and the widespread corruption are acting against national interests.
We need a courageous and business focused political leader like Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister Chandra Babu Naidu (preferably as a prime minister or a finance/industry minister) who can simplify and also eliminate if needed those rules and regulations. We need to do the reality check and the cost benefit analysis for all existing regulations. In other words
Reduce the types and also quantum of taxes: Do you know how many types of taxes are there in India? Income Tax, Corporate tax, wealth tax, Excise, Customs, Service tax, Sales tax, CST, Octroi, Turnover tax, Professional tax and so on.
If you have a booming business and you want to expand it all over the India, the compliance with these tax laws of central, state and local city administrations would be a gigantic task. The other byproduct is that the taxes (actual amounts plus compliance costs in terms of time and human resources plus fees charges by variety of tax consultants plus surcharges plus corruption) add up to 40-70 % of the price the consumer pays for most of the final products. In other words the higher prices (caused mainly by taxes) make things less accessible to most of our counterparts in India.
I guess a car's final price to customer is made up of 60% of taxes and only 40% of the raw material, manufacturing, selling costs, other business expenses, dealers' margin and profits. So it in not a surprise that, we sell hardly a million cars among a population of 1000 millions India. Assume that the tax levels and also the degree of complexity are brought down to the level of a developed country, a car's price would drop by 30 to 40% causing the market to increase exponentially. Imagine how many more Indians would be able to afford a car raising their standard of living? And think about the Jobs created in the automobile, ancillaries industries, steel and aluminum industry and the service industries. That's is the real benefit. Cars is just one example. (Thanks to Manmohan Singh and Chidambaram, the talented finance ministers India had in 1990s. They really have brought down taxes significantly, as an example excise and customs duties from 250% level to around 50% levels for some products.... If Monmohan Singh were not there in early 1990s, Indian markets would have collapsed causing currency devaluation and high inflation.)
Why should we let our finance minister and beurocrats make arbitrary changes in duties on different products? Budgets in India do more harm to the nation than the good they do to it. Why should we one billion Indians give all power to one person- a finance minister to decide what products are good or bad for 1 billion of us? Why should we let him decrease duty on say nylon and viscose yarn and increase duty on cotton and polyester? Rate of duty have to be same (or maybe maximum three slabs based on the importance of the product to a common man) on all the products and all a finance minister can do is increase or decrease the rate across the board. This would instantly break the vicious links between industrialists and politicians.
These is nothing but robbery. The businessman who got minister's favor would make a killing by making say 20 crores and then giving maybe 5 crores to finance minister/his political party. Think who pays the cost of this ill practice? We the citizens of India. Fortune of score of Indian industries change overnight on Budget day.
If you are a businessman with ten million dollars to invest, would you set up a business in an economy where on a particular day, one Indian (a finance minister) would kill your business by increasing duty on your product or lowering it on your substitute/competitive products? The other bad effect is that it acts as a bumpy ride for good, honest and professional management. This also prevents Indian companies from growing bigger and achieving economies of scale which is a must for an export oriented economy. Think of USA in this context where almost all products (except food products which have much lower taxes) carry the same rate of tax. Did you ever hear Clinton, Greenspan or anyone else in USA doing favors or punishing some particular industries?
You would be wondering why we are referring to gold here. ...We Indians are still obsessed with gold. We love and buy gold. Do you know that India is the single biggest buyer in the world gold market?
I think one crore Rs of investment would create 20 jobs in the economy. If the money which flies the country for gold is invested in productive assets instead, it would generate around 5 lacs of direct jobs in the economy every year. If you consider broadly, this investment and the jobs created would generate tremendous positive impact on existing businesses and industries causing GNP to grow exponentially.
Government should not create even a single new job. The government and its employees are the biggest 'drain' on Indian economy. Not only their contribution to economy is questionable, the work standard and the pay standard it has created are totally wrong and unrealistic. It has indirectly killed moral of most of the common people working in private sector. I am not against the higher pay for people in India. But I am against the unnecessarily higher salaries paid to government employees from public resources which could otherwise be used for infrastructure development. An employee in private sector is paid less because there is a much greater demand for jobs than the jobs actually created in economy. This is the law of market. Who do we refer to as Government employees here? We exclude those employees who are employed to carry out the vital functions for any government like providing water, clean environment, defense, justice, security, education, forests and natural resources preservation, building vital infrastructure etc.
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