India Inc should think beyond policy push: CII
Advises industry to contemplate outside of sops, subsidies to boost global competitiveness
image for illustrative purpose
Need Of The Hour
- Move away from risk-averse culture
- Explore new FTAs
- Enhance R&D spending
- India Inc's share in R&D is 37% as against 80% in South Korea, 77% in China
- Digital revolution creating immense opportunities
New Delhi: India Inc must think outside the regime of incentives and subsidies and improve its competitiveness and productivity, while ramping up R&D expenditure for being future ready, CII President TV Narendran said on Wednesday.
Speaking at 'Being Future Ready Business Summit 2022', the CII President observed that a responsible and conscious industry must think beyond its own priorities to drive positive change for the nation. He pointed out that recalibration of global supply chains presents an opportunity for the industry to embed itself more firmly in the international arena and expand its global footprint.
"We must move away from a risk-averse culture to a mindset that proactively explores all markets and all sectors. The many new free trade agreements being signed with our key market partners open up immense opportunities for our international engagement and we must support and leverage these to the optimum," Narendran said.
He called upon the industry to shift the focus on building competitiveness through workforce skilling, innovation, quality and sustainability. "It is absolutely essential for industry to ramp up R&D expenditure for being future ready. The Indian industry's share in total R&D spend in India is 37 per cent, as against 80 per cent in South Korea and 77 per cent in China. Further, industry collaboration with academia and research institutions on R&D is critical," the CII president said. CII president designate Sanjiv Bajaj spoke on 'India@100'.
Recalibration of global supply chains presents an opportunity for the industry to embed itself more firmly in the international arena and expand its global footprint
- TV Narendran, president, CII