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Let's Manufacture
 

 
Ibrahim Ahmad
 
Thursday, January 03, 2008

 

As 2008 arrives, it is time for India to once again consider its position vis-a-vis China, the big economy that everybody will be watching. And it starts with manufacturing.

One big difference in the strategy between India and China is that India is going after one part and China is going after the whole.

China has taken an interesting approach for global dominance. China thinks that manufacturing is the last, most vital, and the culminating point in the lifecycle of any product. If manufacturing can be controlled, you can control product design, outsourcing, and manufacturing costs on the pre-production side, and pricing and distribution on the post-production side. Effectively, if
China gets control over manufacturing, it will have control over everything.

For instance, one of the world's biggest mobile phone company has got a huge manufacturing base in China. Because of this, lots of ancillary units, which provide handset components, are also getting set-up. This mobile phone company is now seriously looking at getting design and development work done from the Chinese, because this country is also getting stronger in embedded software skills. Since China is a huge market in itself, this comes as a deadly combination-design, outsource, manufacture, sell-all in the same place. In the case of India, it would be just design, and then we get out of the loop.

Ibrahim Ahmad

The Chinese USP will thus be-good design skills, reliable and cost effective outsourcing options, global manufacturing strengths, huge home market, and so on. India will just have software designing and after that, BPO to offer. And the way China is now encouraging and promoting education-specially of English language and engineering skills-their grip over the entire design to manufacture to support cycle will only get stronger. And India may be reduced from the position of producer to consumer.

Those of us who believe that BPO will be our answer to China, should remember that the world is moving BPO to India because of low costs and English language skills. However, China as a destination offers not just lower costs, but stability, fast growing domestic market, unlimited government support, big investments in education and infrastructure. That is long term planning, and the Indian IT industry and the government need to think on these lines.

ibrahim ahmad
ibrahima@cybermedia.co.in

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