By Ajai
Shukla
Business Standard, 23rd Nov 13
A new and
unconventional mechanism holds genuine promise for easing the private sector’s
entry into indigenous defence production. On Saturday, at the Institute for
Defence Studies and Analyses (IDSA) in Delhi, the MoD’s procurement chief ---
Director General (Acquisitions) Satish B Agnihotri --- and a group of senior ministry
of defence (MoD) officials will meet with private sector defence heads,
discussing and resolving their difficulties.
This will
be the third such meeting of this informal, but highly effective, forum.
Agnihotri instituted this outreach after making the unprecedented decision to
resolve private industry structural problems in face-to-face meetings at the
IDSA on Saturdays.
Since the
private sector was allowed into defence production in 2001, policy hurdles,
discriminatory taxation regimes and organisational bias in favour of the public
sector have placed structural hurdles before private companies hoping to
benefit from India’s enormous defence market.
“For the
first time in a decade, we are beginning to feel like we are not talking to a
wall,” says Rahul Chaudhary, co-chief of Ficci’s defence committee and CEO of
Tata Power (SED).
Achievements
of the Saturday Forum include the issue last week of a tender for four Landing
Platform Docks (LPDs), giant 21,000-tonne helicopter carrying ships that will
be built by India’s private sector in consortium under the “Buy & Make
(Indian) category. Also initiated last week was a project for building a
Battlefield Management System (BMS) under the “Make” procurement category.
Private
industry chiefs say that individual problems are not discussed during the
Saturday meetings --- only issues that relate to the entire industry. For that
reason, the private sector representation is restricted to industry bodies CII,
Ficci and Assocham.
“If private
companies come and meet me one-on-one, it sometimes spells trouble for me,”
said Agnihotri at a Ficci function on Thursday evening. “So I would rather meet
with industry bodies.”
Agnihotri
says that his plan for creating a role for the private sector has centred on
small, sustainable steps rather than spectacular policy changes. Like many
officials and industrialists who are adopting Tendulkar similes, Agnihotri too
uses a cricket simile to illustrate the bureaucratic and political difficulties
in making bold changes.
“Defence
has certain peculiar characteristics… the outfield is slow. If you just keep
waiting to score boundaries, I’m sorry but you will not score very much. The
trick lies in singles and twos, which one can take,” he says.
This
Saturday’s meeting will be Agnihotri’s last, as he has been transferred out on
promotion as secretary in the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy. On the
agenda are measures for giving MSMEs a larger role in defence production.
“One man
has made a substantial difference in a very short time. We hope this initiative
continues,” stated Jayant Patil of L&T, who handles R&D in Ficci’s
defence committee.
why are there bottlenecks created in the first place, why are there reoccurring policy issues, looks like they have not learned from their mistakes of the past. let this technology superpower country get the best tech in weapons production too
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