It may be recalled India’s Ease of Doing Business ranking had improved from 143 in 63 in 2014 to 2020. INDIA IS THE world’s fifth largest manufacturing power house producing nearly $560 billion worth of goods per year but our share in global manufacturing output is below 39% And the share of manufacturing in India’s Gross Value Added (GVA) is stuck at just 17%, not far ahead of share of agriculture, it is often stated that India seems to be transitioning directly from a primary sector dominant economy into one dominated by the service sector. The question often asked is whether manufacturing is going to play its part in India’s often paradoxical and counter intuitive growth story. However, one element of India’s industrial landscape is quite predictable. The concepts of growth poles first pro pounded by the French economist François Perroux along with its accompanying concepts of inevitability of unbalanced regional growth in industrial clusters, with an agglomeration effect that will accentuate regional diversity, seems pretty close to India’s development experience. Thus, even where India had set up new industrial townships in places like Rourkela, Bokaro or even Jamshedpur in an earlier era, the side not appear have led to broader regional development, with the nearby hinterland areas still remaining under developed for the most part. The broader issue of regional dis parities that have emerged in India have been sought to be addressed institutionally by the various Finance Commission’s devolution formula which give overwhelming weightage to per capita income and, therefore, ensure higher resource flows into backward areas The market, on the other hand, has responded to these disparities by the movement of migrant labour to the faster growing parts of the country, with the migrant labour being the unsung hero of the construction and manufacturing growth in these areas. Moreover, as the Imperative of global supply chains has led to industrial production getting increasingly linked to international trade, the concepts of growth poles and growth centers are now being supplemented by the phenomenon era of port led industrial growth with major ports, old and new, serving as growth centers in many countries.
The National Industrial Corridor Development Program (NICDP) takes on the challenges of accelerating India’s manufacturing growth, of creating multiple industrial growth foci and of linking industrialization to transport nodes, head on. The NICDP has focused on development of industrial townships adjacent to 11 key transport corridors. Eight such townships had been approved till the current year, four of which are shovel ready with the industrial plots being allotted, and four others are being Implemented with trunk infrastructure being set up. As against eight projects implemented under implementation over the last 17 years, the Government has recently approved 12 such smart industrial cities in 10 States, at one go, with a big bang approach which is characteristic of PM Modi’s style which focuses on speed and scale. All these sites have been validated using the geospatial data on the PM Gati Shakti National Platform to minimise disturbances to existing habitations and ecology, with prioritisation to availability of land parcels with the State Governments, covering land of relatively lesser agriculture value, with proximity to major transport modes for multi-model connectivity and having strong potential for backward and forward linkages with the neighbouring areas. A new aspect of using PM Gati Shakti to not only ensure enhancement of transport infra (highways, rail links, airports) for improved connectivity but also to combine such network planning with an area planning approach by asking States to start filling social infrastructure gaps (schools, anganwadis, IMMs, accommodation) concurrently with project implementation, has been initiated. This combination of transport network planning and area planning should lead to these greenfield industrial cities getting plug and play infrastructure and multi-model transport links ahead of demand for the private sector and particularly for foreign investors, who wish to participate in India’s growth story. It may be recalled that India’s Ease of Doing Business ranking had improved from 143 in 2014 to 63 in 2020, in last year that such rankings were published by World Bank. However, in two key aspects of ease of doing business, land management and contract compliances, India’s rank continues to be well above 100. While contract compliances and improvement are linked to improvement broader issue of judicial reform, the NICDP program will substantially address, along with the parallel initiatives by the States, the issues of land availability and its transparent administration, for any investors seeking industrial sites in these cities. The NICDP program also de-risks the investors from one key compliance burden which new investors are concerned about, the issue of environmental clearances by ensuring that full environmental clearance for the entire township is already in place and is backed up by a full spectrum of utility services like power, sewage and waste treatment, roads, etc., in a smart city with state of the art infra and digitised grievance redressal mechanisms. NICDP programme thus has great potential for transforming India’s industrial landscape, derisking private sector investments in manufacturing creating new growth focussing in regionally dispersed locations on the backbone of the golden quadrilateral, generating potential investment of 21.5 lakh crores and employment of million people and thus helping cement India’s emerging role in global supply chains.