Showing posts with label India. Show all posts
Showing posts with label India. Show all posts

Monday, May 30, 2011

Indo-Pak Defence secretary-level Talks Begins at New Delhi

IIPM Professor Arindam Chaudhuri on 'OBAMA and OSAMA'

After a gap of four years the 12th round of talks between Defence Secretaries of India and Pakistan is underway in new Delhi to find a solution to the contentious issue of the Siachen glacier region.

But a breakthrough is unlikely with both countries showing no sign of changing their known positions.

Pakistani defence secretary General Syed Athar Ali meets his Indian counterpart Pradeep Kumar for talks after a gap of three years.

For the talks - the main agenda is Siachen and obviously to reduce the trust deficit between the two countries but the question arises will they succeed as the fresh revelations in the 26/11 Mumbai terror attacks case, Pakistani-American David Coleman Headley has told the prosecutors in a Chicago court ISI was involved in 26/11 mumbai attacks

Pakistan is hopeful of moving forward through dialogue with India as responsible nations believe in resolving their outstanding issues through talks,Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani said on Monday

Gilani reiterated Islamabad's stand that it would not allow its soil to be used to plot terror strikes against any country.


Indian and Pakistani defence secretaries resume talks on the Siachen Glacier after a gap of three years.

"I personally have very good relations with the Indian leadership. Responsible nations believe in talks and dialogue and I hope we will move forward through the talks," he said.

Siachen, the world's highest militarised zone, has been a long pending issue between India and Pakistan over differences on the location of the 110-km long Actual Ground Position Line (AGPL) which passes through the Soltoro Ridge and Siachen glacier.

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Monday, March 14, 2011

Way past their vacation time!

IIPM in sync with the best of the business world.....

The tax holiday provided to Indian IT companies at the dawn of this century was historic and path breaking, as it enabled the industry to reach the enviable stature that it enjoys today. But retaining this tax holiday doesn't make sense from a futuristic perspective

It was one of the few instances when the Indian government actually played a key role as an enabler for business. The tax holiday given under the Sunset Clause u/s 10A and 10B of the Income Tax Act for companies operating under Software Technology Parks of India (STPI), which provided massive exemptions for the IT industry in India, was launched in the heydays of the dotcom boom in 2000-01. The incentives were available for providing software and IT enabled services for 100% exports including exports of physical services and included exemption in custom & excise duty, reimbursement of Central Sales Tax and exemption in corporate tax on 90% of export turnover (applicable for 10 years).

The dotcom boom fizzled out, but the tax holiday has been a major component of India's success as a global outsourcing hub, making more than 8000-odd IT units more competitive. In 1990, the Indian IT industry generated a mere $150 million in software and computer-related services. In FY 2008-09, the Indian IT-BPO sector had reached $71.7 billion in aggregate revenue. Software and services exports (includes exports of IT services, BPO, Engineering Services and R&D and Software products) reached $47 billion, contributing nearly 66% to the overall IT-BPO revenue aggregate.

Ever since the golden decade came to an end in 2009, a debate has been raging on whether it needs to end at all. IT companies pressed for an extension by three years, but were granted only one. In the 2010 budget session, Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee declared that the holiday will not be extended. Industry association NASSCOM and a number of players feel this will seriously hamper India's competitiveness. Arvind Goyal , Director-Finance, Pitney Bowes India Pvt. Ltd. cautions that this will also reduce India's attractiveness as he says, 'Local duties and tax structure do play a. vital role in swaying decisions of global IT players in favor or against of setting up captive center in one of the countries.' Infosys Chief Mentor Narayana Murthy however feels that the extension isn't needed from Infosys' perspective. It's been almost 20 years since the sector has been awarded some or the other kind of benefits. These benefits made sense when the industry was at a nascent stage. In 2009, IT services alone have grown up from $13.5 billion to $35.2 billion since 2005 with exports contributing 76% (CAGR of 32% in 2000-2009 period). Direct employment in Indian IT-BPO sector crossed the 2.2 million mark, an increase of about 226,000 professionals over FY 2008 and indirect job creation is estimated at about 8 million. As a proportion of national GDP, the sector's revenues have grown from 1.2% in FY1998 to an estimated 5.8% in FY2009. Net value-added by this sector, to the economy, is estimated at 3.5-4.1% for FY 2009.

Understandably, the government's point of view is that the sector is self sustaining and its time to provide incentives to other sectors that need them more. The total revenues foregone by the government due to tax holidays for the'IT and ITES Sector are Rs.269.76 billion for the fiscal year 2009-10 while overall revenues foregone on account of corporate and non-corporate tax concessions are estimated to'be Rs.842.97 billion. After all, the government needs to scale up its budget size, cut down expenditure on interest payments and invest in agriculture and other unorganized sectors, which constitute 90% of the workforce in India.

Still the IT industry is moving to the SEZ's now to grab tax benefits. But small and mid -sized companies will never be able to make it there because of high land cost and higher tax rates. BPOs will have to look for newer destinations as it will be a tough survival call for them indeed. Companies who deal in volumes are moving to the special economic zone. Praveen Bhadada, Manager-Consulting, Zinnov Management Consulting Pvt. Ltd. feels the impact is minimal at around 2-3% as he says, 'Cost savings that the companies are able to generate operating out of India are far greater as compared to the tax burden that this withdrawal may result in.' Moreover, Indian IT companies need to urgently move up the value chain and provide lines of business and executive management related offerings. This decision against extending the tax holiday could actually push the fitter ones to make the inevitable evolution. So it does appear that the IT industry is raising unnecessary alarm on the issue; though it may be argued that smaller players may need protection. Goyal of Pitney Bowes India agrees, 'Indian industry should be able to reap the dividends of the reference architecture they have created by early mover advantage.'

Financial subvention for weak industries is logical and desirable, so that they may achieve their potential. But after these industries reach a certain scale, it enters the realm of protectionism, which helps no one. The Indian IT sector must take several key steps to take the next leap forward. In our view, pushing for STPI extension isn't one of them.

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Friday, February 25, 2011

INDIA INDUSTRIAL HAZARDS: Land of work disasters

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India has no structured processes to handle industrial hazards

India is perhaps becoming the epicentre of work related health diseases. Across the nation, industrial centres are spewing toxic material that harms workers much faster and worse than it does any other group in the society. Gujarat, for example, is the epicentre of asbestos related diseases in India ' one in Alang (one of the largest ship breaking yards in the world) and the other in Ahmedabad. Lethal diseases, including lung cancer and skin diseases affect the exposed 55,000 workers in Alang, where they are exposed to toxic asbestos fiber ' and unmindful of the grave danger, they work there at their own peril. Although the International Agency for Research on Cancer is trying to develop an alternative product to asbestos because of its health risks, the fact is that right now, the material is extremely risky.

In the city of Ahmedabad, hapless workers toil in sordid conditions to produce asbestos required in the construction industry. In reality, the asbestos industry is booming in India ' factories have obtained permission forcefully from the authorities and the government is turning a blind eye to the health hazards being created. The fact that the government supports asbestos manufacturing is not without reason as it provides livelihood to thousands of people in India (annual production turnover of the industry is 1,25,000 mn metric tons).

Another example comes from the recent episode in New Delhi involving the radioactive material Cobalt 60. Six people were hospitalised in Delhi after they were exposed to Cobalt 60! Close on the heels of this comes the news that a major radioactive disaster was averted at Tarapur Atomic Power Plant, as scientists there fixed a technical snag at just the right time to save the nearby villages from a catastrophe.

The spate of calamities continue unabated ' a cylinder with chlorine gas leaked in Mumbai Port Trust (MPT) and enveloped a nearby college ' 98 people, mostly port labourers, suffered. The fire brigade was rushed in to save the situation. Post the incident, experts found and cleared more than hundred chlorine cylinders lying in the MPT area since 1997! As if that was not enough, a day after this episode, 25 people (mostly workers) were hospitalised in the steel city of Durgapur in West Bengal, as they complained of breathlessness and nausea! The happening was because of carbon monoxide leakage from the nearby steel plant.

These industry hazards not only affect the workers directly but also contaminate the natural resources. From water to air to soil ' everything in the vicinity of an industrial area is found to have traces of toxic and harmful metals.

Natural calamities can and do happen, but preventable calamities taking place because of human error or negligence. In the US, one keeps hearing about products, toys and equipment being recalled after being found to have toxic material. When was the last time such an episode occurred in India?

The closest we came to was when a US ship carrying radioactive material was sent back by Minister Jairam Ramesh late last year. But even that was caught by accident rather than by a structured process in place. Unless India develops a structured procedural action plan to catch such happenings and occurrences, India will remain flying on a plane which is guaranteed to crash ' sooner rather than later ' with untold negative effects.

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