Page 80 - DMGT401Business Environment
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Unit 2: Industrial Policy and Regulatory Structure




                                                                                                Notes
             excise duty with older machinery. The new economic policy reforms of the nineties have
             changed the situation drastically by reducing the importance of fiscal concessions on the
             one hand and by raising the market competition on the other. Industry is now facing
             direct competition from the  international players. In order  to deal  with the situation,
             Indian component manufacturers including the dominant players have to improve their
             technology as also quality and have to get into the global supply chains of the vehicle
             manufacturers or into the dealer network for the replacement market. In particular, small-
             scale units have to phase out their older and manual machinery and to go in for new and
             automatic machinery as also  to improve their organizational  methods so as to supply
             quality products in time.
             Questions
             1.  How has the SME progressed in India?
             2.  Critically analyse the progress of garments and automotive industry.

             3.  Do you think Globalisation has any role in development of SMEs?

          2.6 Summary

               Industrial policy is one of the important government documents, which has a  lasting
               impact on a country's industry. It is a policy document prepared by the government which
               states how the industrial environment of the country will take shape in the future.
               Before independence, the industrial policy of British India was formulated with the sole
               purpose of exploiting the resources of the country for Britain's advantage. Soon after
               independence, in 1948, India's first industrial policy was unveiled, and in 1956 a second
               and more comprehensive industrial policy was announced.
               Industrial policy strives for a balanced regional development, i.e., it tries to ensure that
               industries are not clustered in specific areas but develop in all parts of the country and to
               ensure that the scarce resources of the nation are utilised in the interest of the nation and
               not in the interest of profit.
               The first industrial policy in 1948, itself paved the path for mixed economy in the nation.
               It accepted the existence of both “public and private sectors in the economy. It assigned a
               progressive role for the State, for investment in industrialisation, and in regulating the
               private sector.
               The draft of the 1956 industrial policy was very comprehensive. This laid emphasis on the
               establishment of a socialist pattern of society. This policy also emphasized that industrial
               development  of  the  country  should  be  guided  by  the  Directive  Principles  of  the
               Constitution.
               In March 1977 the first non-Congress government was at the centre. The Janata Party
               assumed power and Morarji Desai, a die-hard Gandhian, became the Prime Minister. The
               new government declared a new industrial policy.
               The industrial policy of 1977 stated that funds of the public sector financial institutions and
               banks should be devoted to the growth of the small scale and medium scale units.
               The New Industrial Policy (NIP) was a big departure from the erstwhile industrial policy.
               When all the earlier industrial policies talked about how to regulate the private sector in
               a so-called national interest, NIP talked about deregulation and delicensing.







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