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Indian
exports in 2005: One of the seven missing wonders?
Devangshu
Dutta
This
is a brief note to share an impromptu impression (and some anguish)
about our apparel exports that came up after reading a magazine
article recently. But let me start by sharing quotes from that article:
Quote
1: India is an ideal sourcing base...Company A has a global
purchasing process in place, which helps to source from any best
"QSTP base" (thats quality, service, technology
and price) across the globe. "Some of the Indian suppliers
are providing the best QSTP", points out the vice-president
of corporate affairs for Company A.
Quote
2: Exports today make up 12-15 per cent of Company Bs
US $ 200 million (Rs 1,000 crores) turnover, and are expected to
contribute 25 per cent of revenues in three years..."We recently
won the bid for a specific product. This is a product that we do
not make in India, yet our facility won the bid," explains
the director of exports in Company B which made US $ 1 million from
the product and will start exporting it to Canada soon.
Quote
3: "The advantages of sourcing from India are assured quality
to meet customer requirements, a wide product range, availability
and competitive pricing. India is a perfect sourcing base."
Quote
4: "I believe India should aspire for an export growth
of 20 per cent per annum over the next decade - nearly double the
current target of 12 per cent in our Tenth Plan."
Do
the above sound like anything you have recently heard from our customers?
If so, congratulations! If not, you need to seriously ask yourselves.
Why not! Would you believe it if I told you that the four quotes
above are from industries where India had virtually no competitive
advantage even five years ago (and I am not talking about software),
and hardly any presence in the world market?
But
that is actually the case. The industries and the companies are
automobiles (General Motors), consumer durables (Whirlpool), speciality
chemicals (Clariant) and fast-moving consumer goods (Unilever/Hindustan
Lever). Cast your mind just 15 years ago to Premier Padmini and
Ambassador. I still remember the ad launching the Ambassador Mark
IV with its "sleek" looks (that was what the ad said!).
And here we are in 2002, when two of the largest car companies in
the world, Ford and General Motors are exporting cars and components
to other markets. The very same country, the very same industry,
and a much more competitive time. And yet, the India supply base
is managing to shine! The same is true of the three other industries
quoted above. And I havent even started talking about the
software industry, let alone many other sectors.
So,
in that context, let us talk about our traditional (centuries-old)
strength, with over 30 lakh people under employment base -- the
textile and apparel industry. Once upon a time India used to have
a market share of 25 per cent in the global trade. People within
the industry can readily prepare a long list of problems to share
with anyone willing to listen, explaining why we are no longer in
that dominant situation. Most people think that the problems the
industry is facing are very recent.
In
the context of the (correct) view expressed in the government that
future growth will be garment-led, let me quote another fact. Indian
garment exports missed the target not just in 2001, but also in
1997, 1995, 1993 and 1991. In 1996, we barely scraped past. Does
this mean that the apparel export growth target unrealistic? Or
is it that the industry is slipping up in terms of taking enough
action, and is only reacting to external events? Is there a way
to take the industry successfully into the future?
It
seems that every time there is some external adverse factor, the
Indian industry seems to get badly hit, otherwise it seems to do
just fine. Even global trade statistics and Indian export statistics
suggest that India is riding piggy back on the growth in global
trade. That means when the going is good, it rides the wave, and
when the going gets tough, there is very little internal strength
for it to sustain itself.
September
11, market recession. Maybe WTO quota-free environment in 2005 will,
therefore, do the same thing? As individual companies, some firms
(I wont name them) have invested wisely and may be still around
as a growing part of a diminishing base of companies. Others will
have to think hard now, if they still want to be around and growing.
My suggestion. Dont think only about "price" or
"cost".
The
thought process, and the actions that we take, need to reflect -
Product, people, process and technology. Why? Because, if business
trends are poor, buyers tend to first dump the worst suppliers.
If the business trends are good, buying from the best suppliers
increases the most. Its really a very obvious choice. Only
companies that take into account all the above factors, will migrate
towards the better end of the scale and therefore survive.
H&M
is one of the larger sourcing companies in India. Yet, I remember
sharing the stage at a CII conference a few months ago with their
global sourcing head, and he said (with some regret, I believe)
that Indias share in their sourcing was going down. This is
from a company whose own business has been growing rapidly. It is
our misfortune that we are not able to capture the growth equally
in our exports to this company.
The
government also presents a mixed bag of actions and inaction, because
there is no clear growth vision that is strongly lobbied by the
entire industry (from fibre to apparel as a supply chain), or even
from an entire sector (for example, all apparel exporters). A journalist,
I was speaking to just about one year ago, quoted a prominent north
Indian garment exporter who was extremely pessimistic about his
companys and the entire industrys business prospects.
If there is such "confidence" within the industry, what
kind of a picture can we present to external parties? (A short story
break: A poor man prayed for years and years to his familys
deity, asking for help in managing his household expenses. Finally
he got sick and tired of the whole thing and started to throw the
sacred idol out of his house, when the god appeared and asked him
why he was so angry. The man vented his frustration about not getting
any help from god, despite the years of prayers and meditation.
The lord said, "My child, you also need to make some effort
to give me the means to help you. The least you could do is to buy
a lottery ticket!!")
Substitute
"government" for "god" and "industry"
in the place of the man, and we find a similar situation in real
life.
People
actually sit up when I say that the Indian industry exports about
Rs 30,000 crores of garments, and a total of almost Rs 60,000 crores
in all textile products. People, even within the industry (surprised?)
are not aware of the magnitude of the importance and the impact
of the apparel industry. It is one of the best kept open secrets.
There is very little hype, and very little interest. Therefore,
there is very little support from anyone else that the industry
needs support from. The only time the Indian fashion industry hits
the news is when a "Fashion Week" comes to town, representing
the interests of a segment that does a total of less than Rs 200
crores of business! So will the Indian apparel export industry be
around in 2005, or will it be one of the seven missing wonders of
the world?
A
6-year old quoted the following in his school assembly a few days
ago, "The real difficulty lies within ourselves, not in our
surroundings." I think that is a very good introspection with
which to end this note (although I have many more thoughts to share),
and a good starting point for the rest of our thought process.
(The
author is director of Creatnet Services Ltd. The opinion expressed
here is his personal one)
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