By Ajai
Shukla
Business Standard, 3rd May 13
On
Saturday, the defence ministry (MoD) released the Defence Procurement Procedure of
2013 (DPP-2013), which had only been outlined earlier. The full policy document contains
unprecedented clauses and rules that add teeth to the MoD’s declared intention
to promote indigenisation.
A key step
towards this is a far more stringent definition of “indigenous equipment.” So
far, successive DPPs of 2002, 2005, 2006, 2008, 2009 and 2011 have regarded all
equipment purchased from Indian suppliers as “indigenous”, even when it
contains 80-90 per cent foreign-built items, with just 10-20 per cent Indian
components, often in secondary fields like assembly and delivery. Now, indigenisation
will be gauged all the way down the chain of vendors and sub-vendors. The MoD
has ruled, “Import content in the products supplied by the sub-vendors will not
qualify towards indigenous content.”
Companies
like Bharat Electronics Ltd (BEL), which traditionally do large volumes of
“indigenous” business that actually consist of assembling imported components,
will struggle to meet the MoD’s new definition of indigenisation.
An entire
new Appendix to DPP-2013 precisely defines “indigenous content.” It stipulates
that the following will be deducted from the cost of indigenous equipment: the
direct costs “of all materials, components, sub-assemblies, assemblies and
products imported into India”; costs of all services obtained from non-Indian
entities; all royalties, license fees, technical fees etc. that are paid
abroad.
The new
procurement policy charges the prime vendor (with which the MoD has signed a
procurement contract) with compiling the actual indigenisation achieved by all his
sub-vendors. Each level of manufacture/production/assembly is required to
compile and report their actual level of indigenisation --- based on the MoD’s
new definition --- to the level above them. The policy stipulates, “The final
aggregation of indigenous content shall be undertaken by the prime (main)
contractor with whom an acquisition contract is signed by the Ministry.”
Interestingly,
DPP-2013 recognises that the MoD has only a limited ability to monitor entire production
chains for multiple contracts that it simultaneously handles. Therefore, each
prime contractor is required to self-certify the indigenisation achieved by his
supply chain. The ministry, however, will conduct random audits at any level in
the production chain. Alternatively, the audit could be conducted by “an
agency/institution/officer(s) nominated by the Ministry.”
Payments by
the MoD will only be made after “a certificate of indigenous content issued by
the Chief Financial Officer of the prime/main contractor.” In addition, a
certificate is required from the vendor’s company auditor.
DPP-2013
provides for banning or suspending a vendor for up to 5 years if any false
certification is detected, or if a vendor fails to achieve the mandated levels
of indigenisation. However, the new procedure provides for allowing a vendor
who is facing difficulties in indigenising at an early stage of the contract,
to make up the deficiency at a later stage.
The new DPP
recognises that the “Buy and Make (Indian)” and the “Make” procedures must be
simplified to attract more Indian companies into defence production and,
thereby, enhance indigenisation. In the former category, the requirement for a
“Project Appraisal Committee” to short-list vendors has been done away with.
The validity of an Acceptance of Necessity (AoN) --- an MoD sanction that
recognizes the military need for the equipment being procured --- has been kept
at two years in order to permit detailed consultations with defence industry.
The MoD
says that the simplification of the “Make” procedure is also under way and “is
expected to be completed in a few months.”
Defence
Minister AK Antony clearly expects that mandating a greater role for Indian
industry is the route to indigenisation. He states in the introduction to
DPP-2013, “The emphasis this time has been on giving a boost to the Indian
Defence Industry, both in the Public and the Private sector, by according a
higher preference to the ‘Buy (Indian)’, ‘Buy and Make (Indian)’ and ‘Make’
categorisation, bringing further clarity in the definition of the ‘Indian
Content’ and simplifying the ‘Buy and Make (Indian)’ procedure.”
However, private
defence companies see DPP-2013 as only a first step. “Unless structural
discrimination against the private sector is addressed, this will only be a
pretty-sounding expression of intent. The MoD must protect us against exchange
rate variation (ERV); and bring tax and import duty regimes in line with what
the public sector and foreign vendors enjoy,” says the CEO of an IT engineering
company with interests in defence.
Has the Indian industry not heard of currency hedging? Why go crying to Mama?
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