Parliamentary report reveals
high import content in “indigenous” arms
By Ajai Shukla
Business Standard, 13th March 17
Parliament’s Standing Committee on Defence
(hereafter “Committee”) reveals in a new report released on Thursday that the
United States (US) has been India’s biggest supplier of weapons platforms over
the last three years. It is followed by Russia, Israel and France in that
order.
Non-official think tanks and non-proliferation
groups like the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) publish
annual assessments of global arms transfers. This, however, is an authoritative
declaration from the government of India.
The Committee’s Report No. 31 divulges that
India concluded contracts worth Rs 28,895 crore ($4.35 billion) with the US during
2013-14, 2014-15 and 2015-16.
India’s foreign arms partners
Country
|
2013-14
|
2014-15
|
2015-16
|
Total
|
|||
Contracts
|
Value
|
Contracts
|
Value
|
Contracts
|
Value
|
||
Russia
|
2
|
1,342
|
7
|
6,085
|
3
|
947
|
8,374
|
Israel
|
5
|
3,751
|
1
|
875
|
4
|
2,979
|
7,605
|
USA
|
7
|
6,787
|
2
|
58
|
4
|
22,050
|
28,895
|
France
|
2
|
299
|
3
|
1,537
|
0
|
0
|
1,836
|
Others
|
5
|
1,072
|
5
|
2,707
|
6
|
3,195
|
6,974
|
Total
|
21
|
13,251
|
18
|
11,262
|
17
|
29,172
|
53,685
|
(Source: Standing Committee on Defence,
Report No. 31)
Russia was a distant second in this period
with contracts worth Rs 8,374 crore ($1.26 billion), Israel third with
contracts worth Rs 7,605 crore ($1.14 billion), and France fourth with
contracts worth Rs 1,836 crore. India also signed contracts worth Rs 6,974
crore ($1.05 billion) with “others”, which include Germany, UK, Ukraine and
Poland.
These rankings move up and down sharply as
big contracts are inked. Last year’s Rs 55,400 crore ($8.33 billion) contract
for 36 Rafale fighters will see France vaulting to the top of the rankings for
2016-17.
Separately, the Committee also demolishes
the myth of substantial indigenous production, that the MoD perpetuates by
citing orders placed on defence public sector undertakings (DPSUs) and Ordnance
Factories (OFs).
The report details the extent to which
orders for “indigenous” weapon systems and equipment actually pay for imported equipment.
This is because the equipment supplied by DPSUs and OFs contains many
components, sub-systems and systems acquired from foreign vendors.
Yet, the MoD, when providing Parliament
with figures, treats all orders placed on DPSUs and OFs as indigenous orders.
On Friday, the defence minister told parliament that, of the Rs 66,821 crore in
capital procurement in 2013-14, Rs 31,576 crore was paid to Indian vendors; and
of the Rs 65,584 crore capital procurement in 2014-15, Rs 39,599 crore was paid
to Indian vendors.
However, the Committee details how much
foreign component each DPSU or OF puts into the “indigenous” kit it supplies.
For example, Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd
(HAL) retains the import content of the Sukhoi-30MKI fighter at 44 per cent, even
after building it in India under licence for over a decade. The import
component of the Hawk trainer, which is built in Bengaluru, remains 58 per
cent, the Dhruv helicopter is 50 per cent imported, the Tejas fighter 40 per
cent imported and the Dornier-228 aircraft 60 per cent imported.
Bharat Electronics Ltd (BEL) also imports a
substantial part of the equipment it supplies. The Committee report divulges
that the import content of input material it uses was 36 per cent in 2013-14
and 2014-15, which rose to 44 per cent in 2015-16.
Imported content accounted for 18.62 per
cent of the value of production of Bharat Earth Movers Ltd (BEML) in 2011-12;
25.29 per cent in 2012-13; 19.67 per cent in 2013-14, 15.87 per cent in 2015-16
and 21.68 per cent by end-December 2016.
Bharat Dynamics has been reducing its
import content over the last six years. It had 41.01 per cent import content in
its production in 2011-12, 35.20 in 2012-13, 20.06 per cent in 2013-14, 13.70
per cent in 2015-16 and 9.36 per cent by end-December 2016.
The same is true of warship builder, Garden
Reach Shipbuilders & Engineers (GRSE) which imported 27.64 per cent of its
value of production in 2012-13, 24.9 per cent in 2013-14, 15.6 per cent in
2014-15, 10.38 per cent in 2015-16 and 6.97 per cent up to December last year.
Mazagon Dock Ltd (MDL), started building
its new, complex destroyers and frigate classes with a high import content but
reduced it progressively as it went along. MDL imported 58 per cent of the
Delhi-class destroyers (Project 15), brought this down to 43 per cent in the
follow-on Kolkata-class destroyers (Project 15-A), and is bringing this down to
32 per cent in the new Project 15-B destroyers.
MDL imported 48 per cent of the three
Shivalik-class frigates (Project 17), and plans to reduce the import content of
the follow-on Project 17-A frigates to 28 per cent.
Goa Shipyard Ltd (GSL), which builds
relatively simpler vessels imported 14.51 per cent of the value of four Naval
Offshore Patrol Vessels (NOPVs) and 35.5 per cent of the Coast Guard Offshore
Patrol Vessels (CGOPVs) it built in the last three years.
Hindustan Shipyard Ltd (HSL), the MoD’s
newest shipyard, imported 27 per cent of its production in 2015-16, and 21 per
cent of its production in 2016-17 till December.
The percentage of import of the OFs,
according to the Committee, was 15.15 per cent of its total production of Rs
11,123 crore in 2013-14; 8.9 per cent of its production of Rs 11,364 crore in
2014-15; and 12.66 per cent of the Rs 13,081 it sold in 2015-16.
DPSUs’ foreign buys raise import ratio
Year
|
Total capital
spend
|
Paid to foreign
vendors*
|
Paid to Indian
vendors*
|
Import-Indian
ratio
|
Diverted abroad
by DPSUs^
|
Adjusted payment
abroad
|
Adjusted payment
to India
|
Actual
Import-Indian ratio
|
2013-14
|
66,821
|
35,245
|
31,576
|
53:47
|
18,274
|
53,519
|
13,302
|
80:20
|
2014-15
|
65,584
|
25,985
|
39,599
|
40:60
|
14,781
|
40,766
|
24,818
|
62:38
|
^
Figures from IDSA publication, by Laxman Behera
This is borne out by independent research.
Laxman Behera of the Institute of Defence Study and Analyses (IDSA) calculates
that DPSUs funnelled Rs 18,274 crore worth of business to overseas entities in
2013-14; and Rs 14,781 worth in 2014-15. As seen in the chart, that
dramatically enhances India’s foreign arms dependency.
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ReplyDeleteGreat reporting as usual Col. Shukla....
ReplyDelete