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Aditya
Vikram Birla was conferred the "Management
Man of the Year Award" in 1992, by the Bombay
Management Association, the premier management
association in India. In a hard-hitting, forward-looking
speech, he identified the challenges which corporate
India and the government needed to grapple with.
Even today, his words ring true.
Excerpts
from his speech:
A
global village
Unbelievable and unprecedented events have torn
through the fabric of recent history. Perhaps,
more epochal economic and political changes have
taken place in the past three years than in the
three-quarters of a century that preceded it.
The
Berlin Wall has fallen. Russia, that monolithic
tower of communism has split and its socialist
trappings discarded and abandoned. The once invincible
power now grapples with the task of making the
transition to a market economy. And, most astonishingly,
helping in the process, are a group of economists
from that citadel of capitalism, Harvard University.
The
East European countries have unshackled themselves
from their communist chains and are vying with
each other to attract private capital and make
the vital transformation and breakthrough to establish
market-driven economies.The economic ferment is
fast spreading to China where enterprises flourish
as the country reverses from the dead-end road
of centralised planning.
This
then is the world scenario: Countries competing
and vying with each other to put in place policies
which will attract private enterprise, initiative
and capital. Governments and people everywhere
realise that this is the only certain route to
prosperity.
India
cannot isolate itself from the world economy.
It has to catch up and move in step. It has to,
therefore, deregulate, draw in foreign capital,
encourage private initiative, attract multinational
companies and encourage Indian companies to become
multinational. We have to create an atmosphere
where Indian entrepreneurs and corporations develop
into world citizens. Therefore, the choice before
us needs to be starkly restated: It is not, whether
to deregulate or not and whether to integrate
with the world economy or not; rather it is, whether
we want to survive or perish. We are faced with
a Hobson's choice.
Today,
the countries of the world have become so interdependent
and inter-linked that they are making political
and historical boundaries increasingly irrelevant
economically. With global integration, goods will
be produced at those locations that provide a
distinct economic advantage for doing so. We,
in our Group, have some exposure to this larger
world stage.
We
have manufacturing operations in eight countries
and trading offices in several others. We have
about twenty joint ventures operating outside
India. These ventures thrive in a free and competitive
environment. In fact, our dynamic and outstanding
Finance Minister, Dr. Manmohan Singh, has repeatedly
stressed that India needs to integrate with the
world economy. This is indeed a laudable cause.
But do we really know how to go about it?
How
do we achieve this challenging objective? Are
we aware of the pitfalls and opportunities for
industry?
It
is a difficult road requiring consistent actions
across a wide range of areas. Most importantly,
there has to be a national will. Positive as the
start has been, we cannot remain stranded in midstream,
left to the mercies of the currents. We must go
the whole way and reach the other shore. If we
miss the boat this time, the lost chance could
take a long time to come our way again.
The
task before the government
First and foremost, we as businessmen, have to
develop an international mindset. The world over,
business is becoming outward looking and market
oriented. Unfortunately, in India, we have developed
a psyche of looking inwards. For us, for a long
time, the world has been India and India has been
our world. We need to get out of our shell. It
will be difficult to change the mentality and
vision of businessmen who have for too long operated
in a protected market, thwarted by controls. But
it is imperative to start to look beyond our doorstep
and out into the world. Consistent with this larger
view, we must put up production capacities that
are not fragmented and not located in the wrong
areas due to political considerations. Plants
have to be rationally sited and be of world-scale
to cater to international markets. Such Plants
alone can lower costs and create competitive export
surplus.
The
task before corporates
Much as the corporate sector needs to take the
initiatives as mentioned, we cannot succeed unless
the Government is also a participant partnering
the process. The Government has already done a
lot. Dilution of the MRTP regulations, scrapping
of industrial licensing in certain industries,
opening up of more industries to the private sector,
reduction of some taxes and introduction of partial
currency convertibility are some such steps.
Yet, much more needs to be done.
Legislative
measures
Do we need such self-defeating laws that stall
and hinder progress? Of the complexities of our
laws, I compare them to what Winston Churchill
said about the Soviet Union: "It is a mystery,
wrapped in a riddle, trapped inside an enigma."
The
laws must be pruned and those that do not contribute
to growth, but retard it, must be discarded and
scrapped. The Government has taken the first few
tentative steps. But we need to take bold, firm
and decisive steps with greater speed to achieve
our objectives. As I said, stopping midway means
certain death. The third legislative area concerns
the philosophy behind the making of the Budget.
I
have first hand experience of operating in eight
countries. I also interact actively with businesses
in several other nations. No other country has
a process as complex, as filled with abrupt directional
changes, year after year, as India. In fact, the
only certainty about the Budget is the uncertainty
it creates.
Today,
on the faith of certain fiscal policies and implied
promises of the Government, you go ahead and put
up a project. Halfway through, you find that customs
duties or some tax has been raised, resulting
in a project cost escalation of several crores
of rupees. How do you cover these cost overruns?
With such uncertainty, how can it be expected
of businesses to grow and flourish, least of all
integrate themselves with the global economy?
The
entire regime seems to be characterised by subjectivity
and uncertainty. In fact, among the eight countries
in which we do business, India is the most risky
place, not because there is any physical threat
to your project but due to the ever-hanging fiscal
threat. And this can happen not due to competition
but, perhaps due to an over enthusiastic fiscal
change made in the Budget.
The
Budget, in most countries, is what it is meant
to be, an expression of the income and expenditure
of the country, no more or less. It should not
be an occasion to play around with the destinies
of individuals and companies by subjecting them
to make-or-break changes. I suggest that the Budget-making
process be made totally transparent, carried out
in full view of the nation and based on expert
opinions with all sections of the public contributing,
since it is their pocketbooks on which claims
are being made.
Administrative
changes
Achieving success in taking administrative measures
is the more difficult part for the Government.
Firstly, our cost of production is higher than
most countries. This is not due to our businesses
being inefficient. In fact, as far as raw material
and utility consumption are concerned, on a ton-by-ton
basis, we are as competitive, in many industries,
as anyone else in the world. Yet the rates of
our inputs specially coal, petroleum products,
electricity, transport and communication, which
are all supplied by the Government are way out
of line with what prevails in other countries.
The same applies to the cost of finance, with
our interest rates being much higher than in most
countries.
Take
another vital input - electricity. We have power
cuts and blackouts even after paying, on an average,
26% more per unit, than in the ASEAN countries.
In fact, India's overall power plant capacity
utilisation is dismal.
At
our Renusagar plant, the load factor is 95%. In
contrast, the all-India average is around 55%.
This is because there is no management, there
is no autonomy and there is no accountability.
How can we integrate with the rest of the world
if our basic inputs are of such poor quality and
are so highly priced? The answer lies in having
a greater public awareness of this sorry state
of affairs. Also, we must improve the quality
and lower the cost of our inputs supplied by the
Government by making public corporations autonomous
and accountable.
Conclusion
We, as a country, must realise that deregulation
and the free market economy is not a luxury; it
is not a largesse being showered by the Government
on the private sector; it is not a favour being
done by the Government. It is a compulsion.If
we do not deregulate, if we do not cut down bureaucratic
delays, if we do not untangle the red tape, if
we do not bring efficiency to the public sector,
how will prosperity come to this country?
Therefore,
let us all realise that deregulation, decentralisation
and liberalisation are actions essential to the
country's self-preservation in a world where there
is intense competition among countries to attract
capital and investments. The task of integrating
with the world economy is a task of enormous and
stupendous magnitude. Mere slogans and speeches
will not help.
The
will of the entire nation will be tested in this
mission. It is not the task for one man or the
private sector or the Government. It is a job
in which industry, Government, labour, the opposition
and the bureaucracy will all have to pitch in
and work as one team. I hope, God will give us
the wisdom to work in harmony and discipline.
Then, and then alone, will we be able to achieve
the dream of integrating India into the world's
economic mainstream.
Let
us solemnly promise to create the national will
to integrate with the world economy.
More
speeches by Mr. Aditya Vikram Birla

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