Tuesday, January 19, 2016

Start up & stand up

by Harish Gupta, National Editor, Lokmat Group


Living in India and being exposed to the Indian media, it is difficult to win over the cynicism that has become an integral part of the Indian psyche. The country has improved beyond recognition in the last two decades or so. The share of people living below $1.25 a day was nearly a half (49.4%) in 1994; it is about a quarter (24.7%) in 2011 and is supposedly around 23% now. Between 2005 and 2014, the prevalence of underweight children under the age of five fell from 43.5% to 30.7%. The trend-line is therefore towards optimism, but the urban middle class, from where opinions filter down, is not much swayed by statistics. It is the poor growth of jobs since 2011 that turned Narendra Modi's election into a tornado, running the Congress ship aground. But 20 months in power, Modi and his NDA government is still battling with poor industrial production, steeply falling labour-intensity of farming and negligible job growth. No wonder, therefore, that the Congress' new boss, vice president Rahul Gandhi, is out on the road in style, as he did last week in Mumbai. As he marched from Bandra to Dharavi, many young men and women disappointed with Modi government walked with him.

As some of the figures of poverty alleviation cited above will show, India hasn't done badly in the recent years. But a few epochal changes have taken place in global economy that have turned some old Indian notions on their head, one of these being that industry still has the potential to employ many workers. Both industry and agriculture need much fewer hands these days. But one million workers are joining the work force each month. It is an existential problem. Traditional industry cannot expand (and thus pick up new jobseekers) because firms are hugely debt-laden, with total corporate debt being seven times the companies' net profit. It is clear that the conventional narrative of industrial growth and job creation must change.

Interestingly, Modi is the first to begin scouting for a solution out of the box, in promoting start-ups. In his Independence Day speech last year, he promised to launch Start-Up India, a campaign to remove all obstructions for entrepreneurship to blossom. Last Saturday, he presided over a day-long programme at Delhi's Vigyan Bhavan for which the motto was 'start up India, stand up India' and the guests included, apart from many Indian entrepreneurs, about 50 of their counterparts from Silicon Valley. Modi shared the dais with Uber founder Travis Kalanick and CEO of Japan's Softbank Masayoshi Son. Modi was at his sarcastic best when he declared the state's arms-length policy to start-ups. " We have done a lot (of controlling industry) for 70 years. Where have we reached?"

Start-ups were visible for a decade but it is picking up speed now, the number going up from a mere 501 in 2010 to 4,500 last year. Start-ups like Flipkart, Snapdeal, Paytm or OLX employ thousands of workers who work not only on their computer desks but are engaged in delivery and other logistic functions. Softbank is going big on solar and wind power. Modi spoke of new start-ups that he'd like to see in education and health sectors. At present, about 90 per cent of start-up finance comes from abroad. The government has now laid before the young dreamers a Rs. 10,000-crore 'fund of funds' (last resort financier) and Rs 2,500 crore credit guarantee fund. Son has in an interview spoken about $10 billion funding of Indian start-ups.

As records go, about 90 per cent of start-ups nearing success invariably migrate to the US or other Western countries because of India's multiple problems, notably high taxation. Modi has announced a three-year tax exemption for start-ups and other benefits. It is good news for scions of the owners of thousands of failed industries who want to move on. He said there would be easier exit with the proposed new bankruptcy laws and, impishly, suggested that the entrepreneurs lobby with India's opposition leaders to facilitate early passage of these laws.

The Modi administration has often been criticised for betraying a lack of original thinking. In December, the Prime Minister headed a meeting of 80 senior bureaucrats and sought to pick their brain for new ideas. The exercise was mostly one-sided. 'Digital India', which too has Modi's imprimatur, is still iffy because of low availability of wireless frequency which pushed up the cost of wi-fi which, in its turn, has kept fully loaded smart-phones beyond ordinary people's reach. Swachh Bharat, the cleanliness mission, had the potential to be a magnet for unskilled and semi-skilled jobs, but its employment success calls for state governments' cooperation which Modi hasn't been fortunate to get. The Ganga Action mission too is lost in sand.

Modi's start-up experiment is a bright spot on India's political 
terrain which is unfortunately greying up all too soon with 
leaders who have reduced their objective to winning elections at any rate.

Shifting gear to Start-Up, Modi is clearly moving to a safe zone without political opposition. Interestingly, Rahul Gandhi is twenty years younger than Modi but his politics so far is focused on bitter opposition to Modi, as if he is a usurper, but he has shown no vision of where the country’s young adults will be employed. “ To have start-ups”, he said in his speech in Mumbai on the day Modi was spending with entrepreneurs, “one needs a society without intolerance”. The observation is particularly jejune in the context of India’s critical employment crisis and the jobless growth that began when Rahul’s own party was in power.

Modi’s start-up experiment is a bright spot on India’s political terrain which is unfortunately graying up all too soon with leaders who have reduced their objective to winning elections at any rate. Thinking of larger issues is alien to them. Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal of AAP has nursed a “thinker” image, his masterstroke being the plan to reduce cars on Delhi roads by allowing odd numbers in one day and even numbers the next day. But the plan was only for 15 days, so the problem will be back soon though it did not go in the first 15 days either. As Kejriwal’s ambitious start-up, it is not sustainable 24x7. But Modi is seeking a lasting solution to the problem of unemployment.