News Analysis / Make in India
Published on: January 09, 2023
Source: PIB
Why in News?
Recently, over a dozen “restrictive and discriminatory” conditions which prevented local suppliers from participating in the bidding process were flagged by the Union Government to boost ‘Make in India’ initiative.
These conditions were in violation of the Public Procurement (Preference to Make in India) Order, 2017, issued to protect the interests of local suppliers and to promote manufacturing and production of goods and services in India with a view to enhance income & employment.
What is Make in-India Programme?
About:
Objectives:
Four Pillars:
New Processes:
‘Make in India’ recognizes ‘Ease of Doing Business’ as the single most important factor to promote entrepreneurship for which a number of initiatives have already been undertaken.
The aim is to de-license and de-regulate the industry during the entire life cycle of a business.
New Infrastructure:
The government intends to develop industrial corridors, strengthen existing infrastructure, and design a fast-paced registration system as part of its commitment to the growth of the industry.
New Sectors:
‘Make in India’ has identified 27 sectors in manufacturing, infrastructure and service activities and detailed information is being shared through interactive web-portal and professionally developed brochures.
New Mindset:
‘Make in India’ intends to bring a paradigm shift in how Government interacts with industry.
The Government will partner industry in economic development of the country and the approach will be that of a facilitator and not regulator.
Outcomes:
1. Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) Inflows: To attract foreign investments, Government of India has put in place a liberal and transparent policy wherein most sectors are open to FDI under the automatic route.
FDI inflows in India stood at USD 45.15 billion in 2014-2015 and have since consecutively reached record FDI inflows for eight years.
The year 2021-22 recorded the highest ever FDI at USD 83.6 billion
On the back of economic reforms and Ease of Doing Business in recent years, India is on track to attract USD 100 Billion in FDI in the current Financial Year (2022-23)
2. Production Linked Incentive (PLI): The Production Linked Incentive (PLI) scheme across 14 key manufacturing sectors, was launched in 2020-21 as a big boost to the Make in India initiative.