The Defence Procurement Policy 2016 made public this week is a step
forward in increasing the participation of India’s private sector in
military manufacturing. It replaces the last DPP unveiled in 2013, and
has several recommendations for improving indigenous procurement.
The
DPP, the governing manual for all defence procurement, was part of a set
of military reforms undertaken to address the many deficiencies noticed
during the 1999 Kargil war. Since the first one in 2002, the DPP has
been revised periodically. The new policy places the highest preference
to a newly incorporated procurement class called ‘Buy Indian-IDDM’, with
IDDM denoting Indigenous Designed Developed and Manufactured. This
category refers to procurement from an Indian vendor, products that are
indigenously designed, developed and manufactured with a minimum of 40
per cent local content, or products having 60 per cent indigenous
content if not designed and developed within the country.
The policy has
also liberalised the threshold for offset liabilities for foreign
vendors — now the obligation to invest at least 30 per cent of the
contract value in India will kick in at Rs.2,000 crore, a significant
increase from the previous Rs.300-crore mark. The policy lays stress on
micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs), and on “Make in India”. A
10 per cent weightage has been introduced for superior technology,
instead of selecting the lowest bidder only in financial terms.
DPP 2016, however, falls far short of the expectations raised by the
Narendra Modi government’s ambitious “Make in India” push that aims to
transform the country into a global manufacturing hub.
India is the
world’s largest importer of defence equipment, and indigenising
production is key to such a plan. The DPP is noticeable for the absence
of Chapter VII, titled ‘Strategic Partners and Partnerships’, which the
Defence Minister said would be notified separately. Under Strategic
Partnerships, select Indian private companies were to be given
preferential status in major defence projects. The inability of the
Centre to finalise a credible policy to radically increase indigenous
military manufacturing is a sure sign that India will remain heavily
dependent on defence imports.
Given the country’s robust financial
growth, one of its greatest leveraging points is the annual spend on
procurement. India has all the necessary prerequisites for a robust
military-industrial complex: a diverse private sector, a large base of
engineering institutes, and a growing defence budget. The fact that
India faces a combination of security threats from both state and
non-state actors is an obvious reason why it needs to be self-reliant in
military equipment.
There is another important reason why India needs
an indigenous military-industrial complex: it will significantly reduce
the potential for corruption in military procurement. However, the new
procurement policy does not inspire hope that domestic defence
production will grow sufficiently. It may not be just an irony that the
policy has been released as India hosts yet another Defexpo event, in
Goa, where global vendors are hawking their war machines to a
technologically famished Indian military.
thehindu
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