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Unit 14: Sickness in Small Business Enterprises




                                                                                                Notes

              Task       Visit website  www.lagu-udyog.com to know  more about the latest
                        amendments and news about small scale industry in India.

          Self Assessment

          Fill in the blanks:
          11.  ……………….        had   overtaken   the   units  slowly   and   in   stages
               spread over a considerable period of time.
          12.  ………………. of a sick unit comes under process only after the viability study of the
               concerned small unit recommends for its revival along with the suggested reliefs or
               packages or any other way out.
          13.  Industrial sickness is a part of the process of……………….
          14.  If any sick or closed unit wants to avail the benefits under the ………………. -for the
               second time it will avail only the difference between the prior availed amount and the
               proposed amount under new policy.

          15.  Sick Industry means such industry, which has been registered by the……………….



             Case Study  The Button Industry


                  aking the case of the button industry might surprise readers, but it is worthy of
                  consideration because it represents rather an unusual case but also one that illustrates
             Tvery well the diffusion of small-scale technology. The discovery in developing
             countries of similarly specialized technological areas could have important consequences
             for economic and technological development.
             Buttons began to be imported around the time Western-style uniforms gained currency
             with the military, railways, the police departments, and similar groups. Besides buttons
             made of metal and bone, those made from shells, which were used for underwear, were
             also imported, although India had abundant raw materials of good quality.

             Button manufacturing on a modest scale started in India from around 1878. They were
             expensive but of high quality, made by metal workers (such as goldsmiths and silversmiths)
             using files, whetstones, and punches. The market was extremely small, however, because
             of the continued dominance of traditional Indian wear, and, in order to establish a stable
             industry, button makers were compelled to turn to exporting their product.
             Having noticed the existence of rich raw materials in India, a factory was opened, complete
             with an array of machines for making buttons around 1910. It was supplying the Indian
             market with “German-made buttons”. The bleaching process used in button manufacturing
             had been kept confidential by the engineers, but a Indian processor’s solution to the
             problem of bleaching gave Indian buttons, which had been treated as semi-finished goods,
             an advantage, thus forcing the factory out of business.

             The answer to the question of how this was possible is to be found in the thorough
             division of the production process. Production at the factory was broken down into more
             than two dozen microprocesses, each of which became a separate job performed by a
                                                                                 Contd...



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