Paris: Anand Mahindra, one of India's most well-known entrepreneurs, has defined his vision for the ambitious ‘Make in India' initiative as a “jugalbandi” between the country's IT and manufacturing prowess.
The chairman and managing director of the USD 16.9-billion Mahindra Group believes that it is the diversified business houses like his that need to take the lead and work with the Narendra Modi-led government to achieve the right kind of policy framework for such a cross-sector collaboration.
“Make in India will not work if we take a conventional linear approach. It has to be a leapfrogging into the future and India is ideally placed to do this,” the 60-year-old businessman told PTI in an interview on the sidelines of the Paris Air Show, which concluded in the French capital today.
“It requires a different holistic approach and a recognition that it's not simply a question of stepping into China's shoes. Our ‘Make in India' has to be different from China's in the sense that we have to do a ‘taal-mel' or ‘jugalbandi' of our IT skills that exist and our evolving manufacturing skills and become intelligent manufacturers.”
“It is up to us to create a ‘jugalbandi' within our own group and create a template which becomes almost like a construct for Make in India's success in future,” he said. In reference to the Modi government, Mahindra said, “There is a huge amount of support for this and that goes from the Prime Minister downwards.
He is remarkably sensitive to these kind of arguments despite his background not being that of an economist—maybe because his background is not of an economist that he is able to make these leaps of faith.” “Is the policy framework perfect? No, I think that's where we have to work with them.
This is a whole new area and we have to come up with ideas as to how the landscape of regulation and incentives can change in order to create this kind of ‘jugalbandi'.”
The Mahindra Group, with interests across IT, automotive, finance and defence, struck up a series of high- profile deals with international aerospace players at the Air Show here. Besides a multi-million-dollar aero-components manufacture and supply contract from European aerospace consortium Airbus, the company also clinched pacts with GE and Magellan Aerospace earlier this week.
“It's pretty ironic that Airbus in particular has a much greater potential to buy out of India, which is a huge unexploited upside opportunity for Make in India. It is not a company whose future is in any fragile condition. It is a company that in fact is scrambling at the moment to enhance its supply chain and raise its sources of procurement from around the world,” Mahindra said.
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