Page 7 - CII ARTHA_Next Generation_Web
P. 7

Focus Story


 Next Generation   labour, and building regulations—that affect decision-making   AI AND AUTOMATION REQUIRE UPSKILLING &
        across all enterprises. For instance, Indian factory owners often
                                                                  RESKILLING WORKERS TO MAXIMISE INDIA'S
        forgo up to 69 per cent of their industrial plots due to
                                                                  DEMOGRAPHIC ADVANTAGE
        outdated setback norms, incurring millions in opportunity
 Reforms   costs and lost employment potential. These are not mere   As Artificial Intelligence and automation begin to alter the
        administrative nuisances—they are binding constraints on
        India’s growth.
                                                                contours of employment and productivity, the private sector
                                                                must also shoulder the responsibility for preparing the
        As espoused in the Economic Survey 2024-25, the principle of
 Required for   “minimum necessary, maximum feasible” should guide all   workforce. This includes participating in curriculum design,
                                                                robust on-the-job training, and enabling apprenticeships. The
        regulation going forward. Indian businesses—especially
                                                                Indian labour force cannot be left to fend for itself against
        MSMEs—must be enabled to allocate their limited managerial
                                                                these disruptions alone. Deployment of capital must be
        bandwidth towards growth and innovation, not compliance
                                                                sensitive to the needs of India’s demographic, ensuring it is
 Leapfrogging   paperwork. Likewise, legal safeguards around punitive actions   harnessed rather than squandered. The depth and range of
        must be codified to ensure transparency, fairness, and the
                                                                deployment of technology is a decision to be made by business
        minimisation of discretionary power. Deregulation must not be
                                                                leaders and not technologists.
        misconstrued as the removal of all rules, but as a recalibration
        of the regulatory burden keeping in mind the state capacity for
 India’s Growth  enforcement and the legitimate growth aspirations of   India’s economic destiny will not be charted in isolation from
        entrepreneurs.
                                                                global developments—but it will be determined by the resolve
                                                                with which we reform ourselves. Change in business practices
        However, reforms are neither the sole prerogative nor the sole
                                                                lengthening our horizons. Kinship and network societies are
        responsibility of public authorities. For India to achieve its   and policymaking requires broadening our minds and
        development goals, reforms of mind-sets and practices must   good for social cohesion but they are not scale-friendly
        happen in the private sector too. The private sector must also   because trust does not travel beyond communities. Hence,
        demonstrate its commitment towards Indian society – one   both commercial practices and compliance policies are
                                                                premised on low trust and low sanctity of contracts. That has
 I n a world fraught with uncertainty, fragmentation, and shifting   that is based on trust, integrity and long term value creation.   to change for the country to leapfrog to the next level of
        They must realise that Corporate Social Responsibility is not
 global economic alignments, India stands at a critical juncture.
 The global trading order, once predicated on integration and   distinct from Corporate Responsibility to the Consumer.   development.
 the free flow of goods, capital, and people, now teeters on the   Worrying trends such as the increasing sale of junk foods, the   By unleashing the economic freedom of its people, reimagining
 edge of reversal. Geo-economic fragmentation is no longer a   promotion of online betting platforms, and quality lapses in   the role of the state from regulator to enabler, and a socially
 theoretical risk but a lived reality. India, however, has the   The first wave of structural reforms—from the Goods and   sectors such as pharmaceuticals and food safety need to be   responsible private sector, India can emerge as a model for
 opportunity not merely to weather this storm, but to leapfrog   Services Tax to the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code—laid the   arrested. A physically and mentally healthy young population   inclusive, sustainable and sustained development
 into a higher growth trajectory through the next generation of   foundation for a unified, resilient economic architecture. These   serves the need for quality labour in the private sector. Hence,
 reforms—rooted in domestic empowerment, deregulation, and   reforms, alongside the India Stack, have brought transparency,   it will not be an act of charity but self-interest on the part of
 a steadfast belief in the creative potential of its people and   formalisation, and an unprecedented leap in digital public   the private sector not to undermine the health of India’s youth
 enterprises.  infrastructure. Yet, the burdens of compliance, inspection, and
 licensing remain disproportionately high for micro, small and   with its products and services. This calls for looking beyond
 The aspiration to become a Viksit Bharat by 2047, coinciding   medium enterprises (MSMEs), which are the backbone of   short-term gains and broadening the private sector’s ambition
        to match the scale of the nation’s development aspirations.
 with the centenary of our independence, demands a consistent   employment and innovation. The cost of regulation, particularly
 growth rate of 8 per cent in real terms over the next two   for smaller firms, often outweighs the benefits of formalisation,   A deeper social compact with Indian society also requires
 decades. Achieving this is not only desirable—it is essential. But   leading many to remain outside the system and thereby   reflection on labour practices and wage structures. Competing
 given the increasingly unfavourable global context,   forgoing access to institutional finance, skilled talent, and   on cost efficiency must not come at the cost of fair wages and
 the answer lies not in waiting for a benign   integration into formal supply chains.  worker dignity. In the medium to long run, both goals are
 external environment, but in intensifying our   consistent with one another. Furthermore, building a healthy
 reliance on internal engines of growth.   FUTURE REFORMS SHOULD REDUCE THE COST,   and productive Mittelstand will also require larger enterprises
 TIME, AND UNCERTAINTY OF DOING BUSINESS   to play a mentoring role, enabling knowledge transfer, market
 This means enhancing economic freedom,   IN INDIA BY DEREGULATING FACTOR MARKETS  linkages, and access to working capital. This ecosystem-wide
 dismantling regulatory constraints, and   view of value creation, one that transcends balance sheets and
 enabling enterprise at the grassroots. India   quarterly targets, is the cornerstone of sustainable capitalism.
 must now decisively transition from reforms   The next generation of reforms ought to be about liberating
 aimed at formalisation and digitisation to those   this latent entrepreneurial energy. The goal must be clear: to
 centred on systemic deregulation and the   reduce the cost, time, and uncertainty of doing business in
 promotion of investment efficiency.   India. This requires a paradigm shift from a mindset of
 Otherwise, India risks being   control to one of facilitation. The focus must be on
 trapped at low-middle income   deregulating factor markets—especially land,
 levels in the coming years.

 Dr. V. Anantha Nageswaran, Chief Economic
 Advisor to the Government of India


 06  QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF ECONOMICS                                                        QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF ECONOMICS  07
 APRIL 2025
                                                                                                        APRIL 2025
   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9   10   11   12