MoD
secretary says defence PSUs have “low level of efficiency”
By Ajai
Shukla
Business Standard, 6th Jan 2015
For the
first time ever, a top ministry of defence (MoD) official has justified the
need to favour defence public sector undertakings (DPSUs) because of their
inherent inefficiency.
Addressing
an Assocham gathering of defence industry in New Delhi on Monday, Secretary of
Defence Production, G Mohan Kumar, explained why DPSUs were handed contracts on
“nomination”, i.e. without competitive bidding: “One of the reasons why
nominations take place is low level of efficiency of the DPSUs. Because of the
characteristics of the DPSUs, they also suffer various problems and they may not
be able to come to a level of open competition with the result that often they
depend on nominations (sic).”
The private
sector has long complained about the disadvantages they face vis-à-vis DPSUs, particularly
in discriminatory taxes and duties, delayed payment schedules and the absence
of any protection against exchange rate variations.
Kumar
promised: “As far as fiscal or taxation measures are concerned we are trying
our best to see that a level playing field is being provided to the private
sector and I think that shortly you'll start seeing the results.”
The defence
production secretary also promised a “massive thrust” to the “Make” category of
acquisitions, in which the MoD reimburses Indian companies for developing
specified defence platforms, such as tanks, artillery guns or communications
networks.
Kumar said:
“The ‘Make’ policy is under change, it is being streamlined, and it is on our
agenda that at least 8-10 ‘Make’ projects will be started every year. Once this
happens, I'm sure defence production and development will attain a critical
volume which would be able to carry the industry forward.”
This is not
the first time the MoD has announced that “Make” projects would be the
locomotives that galvanise defence industry. At the Defexpo 2012, in March that
year, the MoD’s acquisitions chief, Vivek Rae, promised: “There will be
a list of 150-180 “Make” projects that we will put on the web.”
Accepted
that procurement processes currently took “a pretty long time”, Kumar promised
to simplify the Defence Procurement Procedure (DPP) to make acquisition quicker
and more predictable.
“We have a
very bulky procedural volume i.e. the DPP and this is my dream to see that this
procedure is reduced to 25-30 pages instead of hundreds of pages”, said Kumar.
The MoD, he
said, is seriously considering setting up a “promotional body” that would assist
defence industry in obtaining investments, and in finding markets.
Admitting
that little headway had been made in facilitating the private sector since it
was first allowed into defence production in 2001, Kumar pointed to several recent
“successes” --- liberalizing of defence industrial licences; easing of the
foreign direct investment (FDI) cap from 26 to 49 per cent; export
liberalization and a raft of procedural changes.
“These are
superficial changes that do very little to make it easier to do business”,
pointed out a private defence industry CEO.
THE LEARNED SECRETARY MUST FIRST REDUCE THE DOCUMENT TP 25 PAGES AND IN NEXT GO TO LESS THAN 3TO 5 PAGES . KEEP IT SIMPLE , EASY TO UNDERSTAND , AND WORK ON IT
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