India's reverse Brexit: GST will create million of formal jobs
Imagine a
warehouse of more than one crore square feet in Central India - around five
times the
size of
the largest football stadium in the world. It would
have an eight lane
highway that is connected to all four corners of the country on one side. It
would have one of India's
largest railway container terminals for handling enormous goods trains on
another side.It would
have an all-cargo airport terminal operated by a partner on another side. And
on the fourth
side would be a cluster of manufacturers supplying the warehouse in real time
based on
big data analytic s of national demand and inventory for their products.
This
warehouse is not even on the radar today but can become a reality with the GST
Bill.
Passing
the GST Bill - India's reverse Brexit moment that will end state-by-state rules
and create a national
market for goods to be supplied from anywhere to anywhere - will create
millions of formal
jobs.Currently
, supply chains for e-commerce companies are not optimised but distorted by regulatory
cholesterol that prevents us from offering customers the lowest cost or fastest
delivery.
We are
unable to supply goods worth more than Rs 5,000 to UP because our customers
have to go to a
tax office and complete paperwork. We are unable to keep goods from our 90,000
suppliers
in our warehouses across Karnataka due to double taxation. We often face
confiscation of goods
and cash in Kerala because of their approach to tax domicile, which conflicts
with supplying
states.
With GST,
all of this will be history .
A seamless
national supply chain that is agnostic to supply or demand destination is
urgent,
important
and overdue for three reasons. First, it is India's development trajectory to
reduce
poverty .
Second, it will improve enterprise productivity . Finally , it is about empowering
consumers
and producers
Let's look
at each of them in more detail.
We need to
evolve very differently from China as we do not have the same global
manufacturing and trade
opportunity China had in 1978. Plus, democracy imposed some very desirable but
real fixed
costs on infrastructure building and growth. Harvard professor Ricardo Hausmann
suggests that the
best predictor of sustained prosperity is "economic complexity" and
India's economically complex
economy is a great opening balance for building on domestic consumption growth
to reduce
poverty. Essentially, .. We need to evolve very differently from China as
we do not have the same
global manufacturing and trade opportunity China had in 1978. Plus, democracy imposed
some very desirable but real fixed costs on infrastructure building and growth.
Harvard professor
Ricardo Hausmann suggests that the best predictor of sustained prosperity is "economic
complexity" and India's economically complex economy is a great opening
balance for
building on domestic consumption growth to reduce poverty.
Essentially,
instead of the traditional formula of large manufacturing, exports and large
enterprises,
i think India's destiny lies in services, domestic consumption and small and
medium enterprises.
The second
point of enterprise productivity is important because poverty can be eliminated
by
improving
productivity . We are thinking hard about individual productivity like skills
and
education,
but we must recognise that India's problem is not jobs but wages.Our official
unemployment
rate of 4.2% is not fudged. Everybody who wants a job has one, just not at the
wages they
want. India's enterprise stack is largely informal, unproductive and built on
self-
exploitation.
Of our 63 million enterprises 12 million don't have an office, 12 million work
from
home, only
8.5 million pay taxes, only 1.5 million pay social security, and most
tragically, only
18,000
have a paid-up capital of more than Rs 10 crore
Drying
this swamp is key . The US economy is nine times our size but only has 22
million
enterprises.
Ninety per cent of India worksBSE -2.37 % informally (this is the same number
as
1991 and
means that 100% of net jobs in the last 20 years have been created in informal
enterprises).Many
factors go into enterprise productivity but the main one is market access:
connecting
with buyers
The final
point is about consumer and producer empowerment. The majority of India's 600-
million-strong
transacting consumers do not have access to quality products at affordable rates.
Similarly,
lakhs of producers are denied market access. Because of geographical
constraints and artificial
restrictions placed by the current tax regime, quality products are expensive
and
affordable
products suffer from poor quality.
Here
technology can come to the rescue post-GST. The `India stack' framework for
transactions
(paperless,
presenceless and cashless) is being first applied magnificently to finance but
has huge implications
for production and consumption once GST is passed. An unintended consequence of
implementing the India stack across supply chains will be big data analytics
for government that will
not only improve compliance but greatly expand formal economic activity and
create a virtuous
cycle for credit, employment and wage rises.
One of the
most remarkable books about India is The Integration of Indian States by V P
Menon.
It
describes wonderfully how the 562 maharajas that administered more than 40% of
India's land and 25% of
our population in 1947 were brought into the Indian state by 1951 in a project
led by Sardar
Patel, which secured the political unity of India. Passing GST will have
similar impact on our
economic unity . It will be a gift to first-generation entrepreneurs who don't
have connections or money but
just the courage of their hearts, the sweat of their brow and the strength of
their back.
Coming soon after Brexit - the UK's economically baffling decision to leave the
European Union -
passing GST would also signal to the world that India's economic ambitions have
new rocket
fuel. India's regulatory cholesterol has been hostile to small
entrepreneurs.GST rights that wrong and
makes a new appointment with India's missed tryst with destiny. This is one
that she must keep.
(The
writer Mr.Bansal is Executive Chairman and co-founder of Flipkart)
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