English, asked by keya8267, 1 year ago

Made in China, made in India concept. Essay within 250-300 words.

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
7

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While ‘Make in India’ was a call to establish world’s biggest manufacturing hub and increase share of manufacturing in GDP from 15 per cent to 25 per cent, ‘Made in China’ was to rebuild China’s manufacturing sector into a qualitative workshop with production of more hi-tech products. So far China’s manufacturing sector served as turf for volume production. While India made attempts to woo both domestic and foreign investors to make the manufacturing hub, China reposed the responsibility on foreign investors. Diagonally, both are different in two ways. First, structurally ‘Make in India’ is the first stage for India to set up the manufacturing hub. ‘Made in China’ is the second stage for China after accomplishing the first stage of world’s biggest manufacturing hub. After the appreciation of Chinese renminbi, China lost the paradise of low wage. China seems to vacate the area of low cost and volume production and shift to hi-tech production. This will translate into a transition of people from poverty to middle class and will help in enlarging middle class market.

In contrast, China gave thrust on incentives. Even at the first stage of building up global workshop in China, tax incentive was the main tool to woo the foreign investors. It ceded 50 per cent tax breaks to the foreign investors. In its second stage of ‘Made in China’ programme, China will accelerate tax breaks to encourage enterprises to upgrade their equipment and increase research and development to improve the manufacturing industry. Imported high- tech equipment will enjoy tax deductions and will have tax holidays. Given the global definition of industry friendly investment destinations, will Modi mantra impel the investors, which focus on 3D (democracy, demographic dividend and demand)? Besides wages, investor’s charm for investment are driven by three main factors. They are high demand, low infrastructure cost of manufacturing such as land, power, water and corporate tax. India has always been compared with China and South East Asian countries in the perspective of investment. Notwithstanding India’s huge domestic demand driven by large demography, its competitiveness for manufacturing is far below than China and South East Asian countries. In China, wages might have been uncompetitive after appreciation of renminbi, but, the land rates, electricity tariff and corporate tax are far more competitive than in India. For example, the land rates of $2.40-3.58 per sq metre in Guangzhou and Shanghai in China, 2.06 per sq metre in Taipei (Taiwan), $0.17 per sq metre in Hanoi (Vietnam)  and $0.5 per sq metre in Yangon (Myanmar) are lower than in important industrial towns in India. In Gurgaon and Bangalore, the land rent in the industrial estates were between $3.93 to 5.29 per sq metre in 2013. Similarly, high corporate tax dampened the manufacturing competitiveness in India. The corporate tax in India is 33 per cent. Against this, the corporate taxes are 25 per cent in China, Malaysia, Vietnam, Myanmar, 20 per cent in Thailand and 17 per cent in Taiwan. Can Prime Minister Narendra Modi mesmerise the investors with his philosophy of large demand only? The cost competitiveness is a driving force for the global investors. The Indian MNCs are at par with global investors. Investors depend upon bank finances and shareholders’ interests, which are profit oriented. Modi mantra of ‘Make in India’, based on 3D and enlargement of employment opportunities, embraces longer time to create a big and sustainable middle class market. Will the bankers and the shareholders wait for long period before the companies reap the profit? Further, high cost of production in India cannot match with the demand even though high tariffs protect the domestic market. China’s gushing export to India is a case in point.    Investors harp on incentives. China’s emergence as a manufacturing powerhouse has been possible with large doses of tax incentives, in addition to low labour cost. In 2004, China dashed with plethora of tax incentives to establish the manufacturing base. Foreign investors, who were setting up their factories in special economic zones and start new and hi-tech industrial zones, were to pay corporate tax at 15 per cent against the normal corporate tax of 33 per cent. In 2010, China unified corporate tax and weaned away the preferential treatment to foreign investors. Therefore, at the initial stage of building up the manufacturing base and given India’s cost disadvantages, tax and fiscal incentives are imperative. They will work as stimulant to the investors and will offset the cost disadvantages as well.  

Answered by ankita2221
2
Hey MATE...*_*

Concept of made in India and made in China....

I would like to sum up the difference between two in one line. "Made in Indian" is merely manufacturing of assembling the parts in India,which has nothing to do with technology or innovation.On the other hand in "Make in India " we are mainly concerned with manufacturing along with technology transfer, product innovations, revolution in technology and providing easy tax regime and facility to FDI.
Made in India is merely a  tag line . It dose create only job because foreign companies found cheap labor in India.
Another face of Make in India is it aspires our young and talented mind for start-ups,I would say this is skeleton for "Make in India" because start-up are true platform for innovation and technology development. Many companies like Flipkart, snapdeal, foodpanda  are true example of Make in India program,though they have started before starting of campaign but concept and goal is same.

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