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Despite a growing domestic demand, manufacturing remains the weakest link in India’s telecom industry value chain
Ravi Shekhar Pandey
Tuesday, May 11, 2004
What do you think could be the biggest export to India from the US? Those pretending to be in the know are mostly likely to say computer products or defense equipment (the later perhaps influenced by the newfound Indo-US strategic bonhomie) or still others are likely to consider education as the biggest import by India from the US. None of these, if we were to believe the latest India Country Commercial Guide (2004) prepared by the US Foreign Commercial Service and US Department of State. The guide ranks the telecommunications equipment sector as the number one prospect for US exports and investment in India. While job exports (thought to be the biggest exports from US to India currently) is not the opportunity that Americans would like to rank as such, education services come second, computers and related products third, and defense equipment only a distant 11 in the guide’s ranking for opportunities.
Now consider the case of Finnish mobile handset and infrastructure vendor Nokia. According to its annual report, Nokia registered a 97 percent growth in revenues from its Indian operations at 1 billion in 2003, making it the biggest growth market for the company after the UAE. India is now among top ten markets for Nokia in the world. Nokia’s sales turnover from India in 2002 stood at 539 million. Its sales in India have more than tripled since 2001, when Nokia got just over 216 million. India’s share in Nokia’s total sales has also gone up from 0.8 percent in 2001 to 3.6 percent in 2003.
Only the cynics and chronically ignorant would disbelieve what the US commercial guide says or Nokia’s annual report says. After all, for the past few years India has been one of the two brightest spots (the other one being China) in the telecom business. The tremendous growth witnessed in telecom services in the recent years has been the most crucial factor that has defined India’s current primacy on the global telecom stage. While the cellular services have been the fastest to grow (more than 100 percent annually), services like fixed voice and broadband too have shown positive trends. No doubt, as India’s telecom infrastructure got a new push after 1994, telecom equipment vendors were one of the biggest beneficiaries and the country emerged as one of the fastest growing markets for global telecom equipment vendors like Alcatel, Ericsson, Lucent, Motorola, Nokia, and Siemens. And not just the equipment vendors, the growth in the telecom industry also heralded new opportunities for scores of large and small application developers, OSS/BSS vendors, turnkey service providers, and network integrators.
Too Few Shop Floors
There are three distinct parts of the value chain in the telecom equipment business. Top most in the value chain is product design where in the intellectual property (IP) is developed by the company. The next is marketing, sales and systems integration and support and the last is the actual manufacturing, where the global trend is towards outsourcing to specialized contract manufacturers who bring in economies of scale. Except for a few start-ups, Indian companies are yet to master any of these elements of the value chain.
What Indian manufacturers must do
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Process Innovation: Improving the efficiency of transforming inputs into outputs
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Product Innovation: Improving quality and differentiated products and up-gradation of models
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Functional Innovation: New ideas like contract manufacturing, outsourcing of marketing networks, and production logistics
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Inter-chain Innovation: Moving to new and more profitable product segments
Why there is an opportunity for India
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Internationalization of the production process across the countries
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Movement towards more efficient and low-cost locations
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Opportunities for developing countries, including India, to join in this model
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Increase in inter-dependency of countries
Source: An EXIM Bank Presentation
Event though the domestic telecom equipment-manufacturing sector has seen a growth during the past many years, the growth appears insignificant when one looks at the tremendous growth telecom services have seen during that period. According to the latest available estimates, domestic manufacturing would not be worth more than Rs 11,000—12,000, with exports accounting for around five to eight percent of it. In other words, despite a growing domestic demand, manufacturing remains the weakest link in India’s telecom industry value chain. This is ironical when compared to China where domestic industry demand has driven the growth in manufacturing. It is true that a significant portion of the telecom infrastructure being built in India is being fed with indigenous production. However, the equipment manufacturing industry does not have an impressive profile, neither in terms of quality nor quantity, particularly when it comes to competing in the global market. There are around 20 companies manufacturing small- and medium-sized switches and seven joint ventures are producing large-capacity switches. Most of the Indian equipment vendors make a living by mostly selling to incumbent operators like BSNL and MTNL, as the business from private telecom operators—as well as exports—is insignificant. There are a few manufacturing success stories like D-link or MRO-Tek but then, they are more into networking products. A significant amount of telecom equipment is imported as finished goods (or in SKD condition) and the �manufacturing’ that happens in India is based on transfer of technology from overseas companies. Since there are very few Indian companies who own all the three pieces of the value-chain described above, international companies, who are the original technology providers, are reaping the real benefits of the growth in Indian telecom market and the local telecom equipment manufacturers haven’t gained much. Also, foreign companies have not shown much interest in investing in manufacturing in India. None of the large global vendors like Lucent,