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About 200 US companies seeking to move manufacturing base from China to India: USISPF

By PTI |Last Updated: Apr 27, 2019, 04.44 PM IST

The firms have been making queries on how to set up an alternative to China by investing in India.

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About 200 American companies are seeking to move their manufacturing base from China to India post the general elections, a top US-based advocacy group has said, observing that there is a fantastic opportunity with firms looking at alternatives to the Communist giant.

The US-India Strategic and Partnership Forum's (USISPF) President Mukesh Aghi said that the companies are talking to them about how to set up an alternative to China by investing in India.

Aghi said that USISPF's recommendation to the new government would be to accelerate the reforms and bring transparency in the decision-making process.

“I think that's critical. We would advise to bring more transparency in the process and to make it more consultative because in the last 12 to 18 months, we are seeing US companies look at some of the decisions being made, either e-commerce or data localisation, as more domestic-oriented than global,” he told PTI in an interview.

In his reply to what the agenda of the new Indian government should be to attract investment, Aghi suggested that New Delhi needs to accelerate reforms, be more transparent in the process and engage more.

“We need to understand how we can attract those companies. And that means all the way from land issues to customs issues to being part of the global supply chain. Those are critical issues. There's a whole plethora of reforms that need to go further down, and I think that is also going to create a lot of jobs,” he said.

He said that Mark Linscott, the former Assistant US Trade Representative for South and Central Asian Affairs, is working with USISPF member companies to come up with a recommendation as to what India needs to do to enhance its exports and work up from that perspective.

“One recommendation, which I strongly believe is going to help India is that we should now start thinking of a Free Trade Agreement (FTA) between India and the U.S," Aghi said.

"I think if India is concerned about cheap goods coming from China, an FTA will eliminate that need. You can put barriers to Chinese goods and still have the U.S. providing access to the Indian market and Indian companies having more access to the US market, and issues like GSP would diminish,” he said.

Aghi said that they have formed a high-level manufacturing council within the member companies, led by John Kern, Senior Vice President of Supply Chain Operations at Cisco who are putting a document together detailing what India needs to do to turn it into a manufacturing hub.

"We plan to have the document ready by the time elections are over as part of recommendation,” he said.

“What they're saying is we want a backup strategy to start manufacturing in India. There are small-small issues, which can slow them down. And at the moment most of them are waiting for elections to be over. But there's a large deluge of companies keen to not only manufacture in India but also who want to go after the domestic market,” he said.

On the amount of investment these companies would bring to India, he said the number in question is substantial.

“If you look at, our member companies in the last four years have invested over USD 50 billion,” he added.

About 200 US companies seeking to move manufacturing base from China to India: USISPF
 
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Sure.

Someone here was also teaching me that taxes goes to "consolidated fund of India" so public money is not used to bail out banks. Plenty of online hakeems with google around.

Blinding calling them suit-boot ki sarkar like rahul gandhi dosen't make sense when the current dispensation are the ones who brought in IBC and recovered closed to 3L crores from the very same corporates which you accuse them to help . Criticism on IBC and how it can be improved is always welcomed rather the non-stop chanting of suit-boot ki sarkar

 
Blinding calling them suit-boot ki sarkar like rahul gandhi dosen't make sense when the current dispensation are the ones who brought in IBC and recovered closed to 3L crores from the very same corporates which you accuse them to help . Criticism on IBC and how it can be improved is always welcomed rather the non-stop chanting of suit-boot ki sarkar

Lol where did I used that term you are attributing to me?

And as for IBC I have first hand account of its workings. One rookie CS and one fresh graduate grossing 30,000pm each are looking after insolvency of 600-700crore debt of a company as a part time project.

Talk to some IP about IBC in private you'll see the difference between headlines and implementation.
 
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Lol where did I used that term you are attributing to me?

And as for IBC I have first hand account of its workings. One rookie CS and one fresh graduate grossing 30,000pm each are looking after insolvency of 600-700crore debt of a company as a part time project.

Talk to some IP about IBC in private you'll see the difference between headlines and implementation.
How does someone's salary relevant here? If they are qualified enough what is the problem?
 
How does someone's salary relevant here? If they are qualified enough what is the problem?
Salary is not reflection of how good you are at your work?

Did you miss that they are doing it as side project, the experience part, the amount they are dealing with, qualification of other guy? What part of that replied make you feel them qualified enough?
 
Govt starts desi version of Flipkart and Amazon e-retail chain for rural India

The plan is being led by the Common Service Centres, the rural digital arm of the Centre.

By Pankaj Doval, TNN | Updated: Apr 29, 2020, 12.20 PM IST
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Customers can go online and order supplies through a specially curated app that has been provided to village-level entrepreneurs (VLEs) or those given the charge of retail and other CSC activities.

NEW DELHI: It’s the desi, rural version of Flipkart and Amazon, and is promoted by the government. Concerned over the severe restrictions on mobility and lack of adequate supplies in times of Covid-19, the government has facilitated the creation of a village-level online retail chain, planning massive supplies of essentials through fast-expanding outlets that are taking orders online and offline, and carrying out home deliveries.

The ambitious plan is being led by the Common Service Centres, the rural digital outreach vehicle of the government that reaches over 60 crore people through its nearly 3.8 lakh outlets.

The outlets are set up and run by private individuals but under the aegis of the ministry of electronics and IT. The CSCs have been tasked with engaging in sale and supply of essential commodities like vegetables, milk, pulses, fruits and other products, CSC CEO Dinesh Tyagi told TOI.

Customers can go online and order supplies through a specially curated app that has been provided to village-level entrepreneurs (VLEs) or those given the charge of retail and other CSC activities. The VLEs, who also take offline orders, then make arrangements to transport the goods within a period of a few hours to a day at most.

“These are like Amazon and Flipkart, but for the rural folk. We started with the initiative about three weeks ago and have already onboarded about 2,000 CSC centres ,” Tyagi said.

online shopping of essentials: Govt starts desi version of Flipkart and Amazon e-retail chain for rural India - The Economic Times
 
India pharma manufacturing hub back up and running after COVID-19 lockdown: report

by Kyle Blankenship|Apr 27, 2020 3:20pm
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The shutdown of an Indian hub responsible for 35% to 40% of domestic drug production caused shock waves abroad. (Pixabay)

With the spotlight on the global pharmaceutical supply chain, a lockdown at a major Indian manufacturing hub earlier this month caused waves of unrest. Now, weeks later, that hub is back up and running—but concerns about India's control of the U.S. drug supply tap are still alive and well.

A manufacturing campus in Baddi, India—responsible for 35% to 40% of the nation's pharmaceutical output—is back online after being locked down as part of a COVID-19 containment zone earlier this month, Business Standard reports.

Some of the world's biggest generics and active pharmaceutical ingredient (API) providers have factories in Baddi that were shut down partially or in full as part of the lockdown, including Sun Pharma, Abbott Laboratories and Dr. Reddy's.

To help keep the facilities running at full capacity, the Indian government has allowed a one-time movement of employees from Chandigarh state to Baddi to help staff the plants, according to Business Standard, as well as a resumption of intradistrict movement within Himachal Pradesh, where Baddi resides.

With the lockdown restrictions eased, tensions over the supply of U.S. generic drugs and APIs may relax at a time when the nation's dependence on foreign pharmaceuticals has come under increased scrutiny.

Earlier this month, Bloomberg reported the Indian government is planning to escalate domestic production of pharmaceutical ingredients to counteract a perceived over-reliance on Chinese imports now hampered by COVID-19 shutdowns.

India has identified and prioritized production of 53 raw materials and APIs as part of its "China-plus-one" policy to fill in supply gaps of affordable medicines, sources told the outlet. The plan includes investing $1.3 billion in domestic pharmaceutical producers and potentially reviving state-run companies to ramp up cheap generic production.

According to Bloomberg, 70% of India's imports of APIs come from China, totaling $2.4 billion of India's $3.56 billion in import spending for those products each year.

India and China's dominance in supply has been at the center of U.S. politicians' calls for a pivot toward American domestic manufacturing, which could build up drug production capacity to counteract shortages in times of crisis.

Last week, the FDA said it would temporarily allow hospitals to source hard-to-find drugs from compounding pharmacies to treat certain patients hospitalized with severe COVID-19.

The new regulations, meant to last as long as hospitals continue to encounter shortages of key drugs, apply to compounding pharmacies that aren't already sanctioned by the FDA as "outsourcing facilities." To qualify, the copycat drugs must be listed on the FDA's shortages list, and hospitals must have exhausted all other options to access a commercial version of the drug.

Hospitals, in particular, have been hard hit by cascading shortages of key drugs, particularly anesthetics and painkillers used for patients that require ventilation.

India pharma manufacturing hub back up and running after COVID-19 lockdown: report
 
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HP to expand India manufacturing to address surge in PC demand

By IANS On Apr 28, 2020
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(Representative Image)

In another fillip to Make in India in the tough COVID-19 times, PC and printing major HP Inc on Monday announced it is expanding its manufacturing footprint in India with setting up a new facility in Chennai with electronics giant Flex Ltd.

Flex will manufacture HP Desktops and Workstation PCs at the plant on a contractual basis. The facility is scheduled to be operational from August this year.

The plant will have the flexibility to scale up manufacturing capabilities on demand.

“We have a long-standing and successful relationship with Flex in other parts of the world. Having a strong presence in Chennai also has several geographical advantages, such as proximity to the port that allows us to get raw materials from other parts of Asia more quickly,” Vinay Awasthi, Managing Director, HP Inc. India, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka, told IANS.

“It is also near a spare parts facility in Bengaluru. This move supports HP’s deep commitment to India and will position us well to continue meeting customer needs throughout the country,” Awasthi added.

The move is crucial at a time when organisations are revisiting their global supply chain and logistics strategies in COVID-19 times.

HP has been growing in India, consistently registering double digit revenue growth. According to the IDC, almost every third PC and every second printer being sold in India belongs to HP.

The company has been present in India for over three decades and has been a partner in India’s journey of technology adoption, innovation and digital transformation.

According to Awasthi, the Chennai manufacturing facility is also closer to the spare parts facility in Bengaluru that can further improve the company’s operational efficiency.

“We are focused on getting this facility operational by August 2020. We are transforming our business into a more digitally enabled, data-driven organisation to deliver hyper-targeted and personalized offers to better serve our partners and customers,” he informed.

HP India has more than 7,000 employees in India and after recent restructuring, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka businesses have become part of India market operations.

The company has a Print R&D center in Bengaluru and a manufacturing plant in Pantnagar in Uttarakhand since 2006.

It enjoys close to 600 exclusive HP World stores and a strong network of 10,000 partners and resellers in the country.

According to industry sources, HP India has close to $2 billion annual revenue from India.

Awasthi said that PC adoption in India will pick up momentum in the coming years.

“Enterprises, SMBs and almost all consumer segments will drive momentum of PC adoption in India,” said the senior company executive.

HP to expand India manufacturing to address surge in PC demand - Express Computer
 
Salary is not reflection of how good you are at your work?

Did you miss that they are doing it as side project, the experience part, the amount they are dealing with, qualification of other guy? What part of that replied make you feel them qualified enough?
Of course, it's not. Totally depends on the industry. A nurse could be earning so little yet contribute hugely to saving lives. A local judge can take a call on billion-dollar worths of case.

Qualification just has to cross the minimum prescribed. My friend who was then a rookie civil engineering graduate supervised building a public bridge. Or my little cousin who just passed MBBS last year is now saving people from the corona.
 
Ok let's examine.

A nurse could be earning so little yet contribute hugely to saving lives. A local judge can take a call on billion-dollar worths of case.
A nurse earning little is usually limited to dressing of wounds, taking care of patients, they don't perform live saving operations, not even minor surgery is allowed.

A rookie judge never rules on Billion Dollars case, if the amount is big enough (in lacs) it automatically starts at senior level where judges have spent decades in service and if it's in crores it will directly go to High Court and no local judge have pecuniary jurisdiction over the matter.

My friend who was then a rookie civil engineering graduate supervised building a public bridge.
Entery level for Civil Engineerings is JE (some directly becomes AE). No JE has Technical Sanction power and power to sanction any bill is vested in XEN (Executive Engineer) which 2 rank above JE and 1 above AE.

Or my little cousin who just passed MBBS last year is now saving people from the corona
MBBS 5.5yrs and it includes 1 yr of internship as a part of degree and even during those 4.5yrs they are on training. Still after 5.5yrs of grilling they are not assigned serious cases immediately but train more under supervision of Senior Doctors.


Unless you forcibly want to somehow fit your argument, examples you have quoted are ignoring the reality.

A judge become District Judge(DJ) after decades of service with integrity. One misconduct and he has to retire from ADJ. Amount ranging few crores goes beyond his jurisdiction even after this much experience and service.

IBC is full of flaws, tons of grey areas, lacks accountability of Insolvency Professionals and even rules are not devised yet.

P.S. I am not trying to demean any profession here.
 
Indian economy will be damaged
Very badly by this lockdown

We will see a 30 percent contraction in GDP this year

Depends on how long the lockdown will extend to.

Mumbai is definitely screwed. But I think most other places will bounce back relatively quickly due to the low active numbers and a very high doubling rate.

In Karnataka, 14 districts considered green zones are now working at 50% capacity since these districts haven't seen any new cases for more than 28 days. In 10 orange zone districts, with no new cases in the last 14 days, restrictions are being lifted in unaffected taluks. Very muted economic activity is ongoing in 6 red zone districts, with only affected wards considered as containment zones being sealed off. By May 3rd, the govt plans to lift all curbs in green and orange districts. So economic activity in Karnataka will likely go back to normal by the 7th in most districts.
 
Depends on how long the lockdown will extend to.

Mumbai is definitely screwed. But I think most other places will bounce back relatively quickly due to the low active numbers and a very high doubling rate.

In Karnataka, 14 districts considered green zones are now working at 50% capacity since these districts haven't seen any new cases for more than 28 days. In 10 orange zone districts, with no new cases in the last 14 days, restrictions are being lifted in unaffected taluks. Very muted economic activity is ongoing in 6 red zone districts, with only affected wards considered as containment zones being sealed off. By May 3rd, the govt plans to lift all curbs in green and orange districts. So economic activity in Karnataka will likely go back to normal by the 7th in most districts.
In my neighborhood homes we have got 14 cases confirmed in last three days.
 
Depends on how long the lockdown will extend to.

Mumbai is definitely screwed. But I think most other places will bounce back relatively quickly due to the low active numbers and a very high doubling rate.

In Karnataka, 14 districts considered green zones are now working at 50% capacity since these districts haven't seen any new cases for more than 28 days. In 10 orange zone districts, with no new cases in the last 14 days, restrictions are being lifted in unaffected taluks. Very muted economic activity is ongoing in 6 red zone districts, with only affected wards considered as containment zones being sealed off. By May 3rd, the govt plans to lift all curbs in green and orange districts. So economic activity in Karnataka will likely go back to normal by the 7th in most districts.
Mumbai is the financial capital of India. Along with Mumbai, Delhi , Ahmedabad, Chennai & by the looks of it Kolkata is in deep waters too. So, whatever you say, even if the rest of the nation is up & running in a month's time with the absence of these major cities, the rest can well sit on their Haunches & play the tabla for apart from agriculture, manufacturing & finance is down the drain.
 
Ok let's examine.


A nurse earning little is usually limited to dressing of wounds, taking care of patients, they don't perform live saving operations, not even minor surgery is allowed.

A rookie judge never rules on Billion Dollars case, if the amount is big enough (in lacs) it automatically starts at senior level where judges have spent decades in service and if it's in crores it will directly go to High Court and no local judge have pecuniary jurisdiction over the matter.


Entery level for Civil Engineerings is JE (some directly becomes AE). No JE has Technical Sanction power and power to sanction any bill is vested in XEN (Executive Engineer) which 2 rank above JE and 1 above AE.


MBBS 5.5yrs and it includes 1 yr of internship as a part of degree and even during those 4.5yrs they are on training. Still after 5.5yrs of grilling they are not assigned serious cases immediately but train more under supervision of Senior Doctors.


Unless you forcibly want to somehow fit your argument, examples you have quoted are ignoring the reality.

A judge become District Judge(DJ) after decades of service with integrity. One misconduct and he has to retire from ADJ. Amount ranging few crores goes beyond his jurisdiction even after this much experience and service.

IBC is full of flaws, tons of grey areas, lacks accountability of Insolvency Professionals and even rules are not devised yet.

P.S. I am not trying to demean any profession here.
It's not about what's serious or the value of the case but they are qualified.

A junior judge can preside over a case against a billion-dollar company.

Of course, he/she will be on the supervision of others. Your problem was that someone with 30,000 pm salary is looking into it. I do not agree to value someone based on their salary. A school teacher or a nurse with a low salary contributes immensely to the society.
 
India's jobless rate tapers to 5-week low as economy reboots in patches

Updated: 29 Apr 2020, 12:06 PM IST
By Prashant K. Nanda
  • Unemployment rate fell to 21.05% in week ended 26 April from the previous high of 26.19% in the week to 19 April
  • In the week ended 26 April, urban joblessness fell to 21.45% from a high of 30.93% in the week ended 5 April
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NEW DELHI: India's unemployment rate has tapered to a five-week low in the week ended 26 April as the country eased the lockdown in patches and rural economy reopened gradually to salvage the harvesting season.

According to the Centre for Monitoring of Indian Economy (CMIE), unemployment rate in India fell to 21.05% in week ended 26 April from the previous high of 26.19% reported in the week to 19 April.

The rural economy that deploys a lion's share of work-force also saw a fall in unemployment rate by almost six percentage points to 20.88% from 26.69% between 19 April and 26 April. This is also for the first time since the first week of April that the rural unemployment figures showed a de-growth.

Though the numbers are still not very comforting for any economy, the development is significant as the unemployment rate in India continued to accelerate from 15 March when the coronavirus outbreak started to impact lives and businesses, and brought the entire economy to a halt due to the nationwide lockdown later.

The CMIE data showed that India's overall weekly unemployment rate started its climb from 6.74% on 15 March to 26.19% in week ended 19 April. The unemployment figures, however, decreased to 21.05% in the week after. The numbers are significant as India reopened several sectors, including agriculture activities, in non-red zones from 20 April to bring on track the economy that had come to a standstill post the covid-19 lockdown.

Urban unemployment rate also showed a decreasing trend. In the week ended 26 April, urban joblessness fell to 21.45% from a high of 30.93% in the week ended 5 April. In the week ended 19 April, this figure was 25.08%.

While economists hailed the positive pointers, they cautioned things may slip back to a more severe situation as states gear up to bring millions of stranded migrants home.

“It’s a positive thing but too early to clap. Yes, the reopening of rural economy in parts has helped absorb people to some extent but remember as states take back their people stranded on roads and shelter camps, this may change. It will add to the rural labour market and increase the struggle to land a job if not planned well by governments," said K.R. Shyamsundar, a labour economist.

India's jobless rate tapers to 5-week low as economy reboots in patches