Monday, August 31, 2015

My Views on NDTV on Smart Cities Announcement

Ready for massive job destruction?

http://www.mydigitalfc.com/knowledge/bjaijit-bhattacharyab-ready-job-destruction-439

Jaijit Bhattacharya: Ready for job destruction?

Tags: Knowledge

Plan a future where manufacturing & services are highly automated


Jobs are generated from the primary sector, secondary sector and tertiary sector industries. Primary sector jobs consist mainly of agriculture and a bit of mining in India. Core agriculture sector has already seen significant reduction in jobs. That leaves manufacturing and service as the expected growth engines for job creation. Manufacturing forms the secondary industry and services largely consists of tertiary industry.

India’s services sector holds enormous significance for the Indian economy; dynamic and endowed with a distinct universe of its own. India has grown rapidly in the last decade with almost 72.4 per cent of the growth contribution in India’s GDP in 2014-15, coming solely from its service sector. It has emerged to contribute majorly to national and states’ incomes, job creation and contribution to the economy. This is unlike other developing economies where manufacturing plays a key role in job creation.

A critical debate has now emerged on whether India can become the world’s third largest economy and if that can be achieved by revamping India’s manufacturing. The underlying assumption is that manufacturing can generate significant jobs and that it is strategic for the economy. As the latter is a policy decision, one has to be careful about the first assumption that manufacturing can lead to job creation.

Given the march of technology, manufacturing is expected to get even more automated with technologies such as 3D printing not only replacing traditional manufacturing, but also handicraft craftsmen whose work could not be replicated by earlier technologies. We may soon see a tipping point where suddenly in a span of a few years, vast amount of manufacturing industries may switch to low cost 3D printers, leaving millions jobless in a short period of time.

Low-end services jobs, including the BPO industry, are already getting highly automated with software replacing humans. The lower end services industry is at the cusp of transformation with technologies such as driverless cars, ATMs, automatic payment systems replacing service jobs in driving, ticketing and banking. For the longer run, we need to immediately create frameworks of training our workforce to perform very high end service jobs, else we could soon see massive job losses, followed by a collapse in demand and eventual collapse in economy.

Revisiting the government’s current intent on structurally transforming the manufacturing sector through its flagship initiative Make in India, we must note that manufacturing as a sector offers one of the most complex interplays of labour and capital. Thus, many argue that Make in India is easier said than done. India has almost everything that China had to provide a boost to its manufacturing in terms of sound fundamentals and a massive pool of labour. To top it, it has a very large English-speaking population. So, what is stopping investments into manufacturing from pouring in?

Among other reasons, India’s poor ranking in ease of doing business has discouraged global investors. Acquiring land for a largescale manufacturing facilities teamed with stringent labour reforms are viewed as major roadblocks. Weak infrastructure deters India from replicating the low cost high-volume manufacturing that China excels in. Given the impediments, while it might take time for manufacturing to lift off, services sector’s establishment cannot be overlooked. India’s services sector currently accounts for about 65 per cent of India’s GDP and the point that it is the world’s second-fastest growing services-sector cannot be ignored. In fact, it presents an opportunity to be leveraged upon.

Research points to positive and significant sectoral-linkages between manufacturing and services. India’s policymakers too seem to have realised that the two need to go together especially in case of a large diversified economy like ours. In fact, Make in India cannot succeed without robust manufacturing activities accompanied by a healthy service sector. For instance, growth of communication services might provide the market with demand and supply insights for manufacturing to regulate production and industrial inputs in the form of buseswhich can be imperative to a service sub-sector like, transport services.

Both sectors warrant rapid skill upgradation because sustaining the dynamism of skill-intensive sectors requires a continuous supply of skills. The prime minister’s Skill India objective needs to be accorded with high priority in order to gain momentum in high-tech manufacturing. Currently, less than 40 per cent of around 1 million people added to India’s workforce every month meet the industry’s skill requirements. There is an urgent need to tackle employability rather than just unemployment.

A number of productive initiatives are already in place. A National Skill Development Mission has been launched to create the strategiesthat could help implement decisions of the PM’s Council and the National Skill Development Corporation (NSDC). NSDC is expected to provide skill training that is required by organised and unorganised sectors.

Make in India can be as much about services as it is about manufacturing. India’s service sector remained resilient even during the global financial crisis. Moreover, services are now part of WTO and FTA negotiations. Reforms that could make Indian services more competitive globally include ushering in the concept of Total Factor Productivity to enable high quality of services, in line with global parameters. We need to improve the TFP of services particularly in relationship to other countries’ TFP that could be a real acid test for India’s service sector.

China’s loss of an estimated 6 million from the job market due to an ageing population presents to India an incredible opportunity which should be capitalised to the fullest? All three arms of the Indian economy: agriculture, manufacturing and services being interlinked need to support each other for this. We need more unifying measures like the GST encompassing all three and creating a holistic environment of a single market for the government and for industry.

In conclusion, a new India is in the making in which services along with manufacturing are expected to play a pivotal role in translating the advantage of democracy, demography and demand into real growth and empowerment, through employment. In answer to the economic survey 2014-15’s statement – What to make in India? Manufacturing or services it is not so much a question of ‘or’ as it is a matter of ‘and.’ In addition, we must immediately start planning for a future where manufacturing and services can be highly automated, this suits well for China and the western economies as they are expected to have a reduced workforce due to their demographic structure while India could be saddled with a large workforce waiting to pick up the reins.



Tuesday, August 18, 2015

Building 100 Smart Cities: Smart execution holds the key

http://www.financialexpress.com/article/fe-columnist/building-100-smart-cities-smart-execution-holds-the-key/71890/

The initial funding of $16 billion is like seed money to bootstrap the process of urban rejuvenation

smart-city

To get an idea of the magnitude of the impact, it is important to understand that the entire initiative could probably cost over $5 trillion in today’s value, and may spread over at least 20 years, if not more.

The Cabinet approval for central funding of $16 billion for 100 smart cities and 500 rejuvenated cities may change the way we live and work, the way we carry out business, and the way we are perceived by the rest of the world. More importantly, it is expected to give an explosive push to the growth of the economy, on a scale that can dwarf even the growth provided by the Golden Quadrilateral project.
To get an idea of the magnitude of the impact, it is important to understand that the entire initiative could probably cost over $5 trillion in today’s value, and may spread over at least 20 years, if not more.
So, what would $16 billion provide against the overall requirement of $5 trillion? This initial funding of $16 billion is like seed money to bootstrap the process of urban rejuvenation and build 100 smart cities. As each city gets built up and as cities get rejuvenated, it can have an amplifying effect on the economy as it starts to become more and more efficient, allowing faster growth, which, in turn, could lead to larger investments into our cities. Hence, the initial $16 billion, and whatever else the central government earmarks for this initiative in subsequent years, is expected to play the role of catalysing the private sector to step in and invest in a series of initiatives in our cities, which would fall under the category of public-private partnership.
However, why is this interesting from a place-to-dwell perspective? These cities aim to transform the way we live, work and also think. Since these cities will be smart, they may consume less energy, be neat and tidy, have a cleaner environment, be more safe and secure, and also be resilient to disasters—both natural and man-made. What this means is that these cities may draw energy from in situ sources such as solar. Water may be recirculated with near-zero wastage. Sewage may be treated locally. Transportation could be far better managed through technology and even have near-zero pollution. With clean air, clean water and a minimally-polluted environment, health and quality of life can improve significantly, making Indian cities one of the most preferred cities in the world to live in.
This is only a snapshot of what smart cities can do in the short run. In the long run, they probably could change the way we think. They could push us to be more innovative, making us think in a manner that we have not been able to do so previously due to the cacophony of systems and processes that run our cities. The standardisation of city systems could lead to exponential increase in adoption of innovations within the city systems, which, in turn, could lead to creation of new kinds of industries that hitherto do not exist. And just as in many leading economies, innovation is expected to contribute a lion’s share to the GDP.
Beyond the impact that the Cabinet decision will have on India and the Indian economy, it is important to note that it may also have a very significant consequence on the global economy. The expected total of $5 trillion spend is equal to about 7% of the current global economy. As India starts spending on her cities, it may start consuming goods and services from the global market—this proving to be the desperately-needed global growth engine. Therefore, the Cabinet decision is expected to have a far-reaching impact than just contributing to India’s growth.
This initiative, when juxtaposed with the ‘Housing for All by 2022’ and the ‘Make in India’ programmes, can also have a highly amplified impact on India, the Indian industry and the Indians per se. The Housing for All initiative will hopefully provide the framework and funds that can lead to many families in the country having their own homes. And many of these homes may not be ordinary, but could even be smart homes that are able to talk and interact with the larger city, unleashing advanced technology industries in India and making it easier to live here.
However, the execution of smart cities and city rejuvenation plans also needs to be appropriate to get a greater return on investments than what previous attempts had brought in. As of now, the government is planning to have a ‘city competition’, wherein cities can hire consultants to present what their plans are and why they should be selected in the first lot of 16 cities to be short-listed for being funded by the government. If that turns out to be the case, then cities with more capacity, which, needless to say, are mainly in the southern and western parts of the country, would end up having the bulk of the funding for becoming smart cities. However, this may deprive the ordinary citizens of an equitable opportunity to have their city upgraded. Also, this would not allow equitable distribution of funds to cities across the country.
If, on the other hand, the government uses its discretion and equitably distributes the funding across the country—based on considerations of population and other social-economic criteria—then perhaps the mechanism of ‘city competition’ would seem like a misnomer and should probably be called a ‘city readiness and planning’ exercise.
A ‘city competition’ is used in developed countries, where cities are inherently highly developed and liveable, and such a ‘competition’ is brought in to discover potential leading practices that could make these cities even better.
However, in India, cities do not even have basic level of facilities that are expected from a city of a globally competitive economy.
We are at the threshold of an exciting new India. It is important that the execution is flawless. The mechanism of using ‘city competition’ as a basis for providing funding to cities needs to be executed in a manner that is non-discriminatory to those cities which are already laggards and have much lesser capability to scale up to be able to be considered under the competition mechanism. It is important for India and the global economy that this initiative is a resounding success.
The author is partner, Infrastructure & Government Services, KPMG in India. Views are personal
First Published on May 13, 2015 12:27 am