Ministry of Defence (MoD) recently unveiled the
Defence Procurement Procedure (DPP) 2016, which will be effective from March.
The new policy aims at giving a boost to the
Make in India initiative, a greater role for the private sector, and a big push
to the medium and small scale sector.
What
are the key features in it ?
- It has also brought down the Acceptance of Necessity (AoN) validity to six months from earlier one year, which means that the forces will have to issue tenders faster.
- The significant change in the DPP has been the decision
to raise the contract threshold of Rs 300 to Rs 2,000 crore for offsets.
This means that only those deals which are worth over Rs 2,000 crore will
have an offset obligation. (Reason given :- offsets increase
the cost of the product by 14-18 per cent.)
What are ‘offsets’? Offsets are basically
benefits provided to a buyer by a seller. For example, the technology provided
to domestic industries by a foreign vendor selling equipment to India. In
India, the offsets policy was introduced first time in Defence Procurement
Procedure (DPP) 2005. Later several revisions were made. The DPP 2013 states
that the objective of the defence offset policy is to development of domestic
defence industry to make them internationally competitive enterprises.
- to fund Indian private entities in Research and Development to encourage more local development.
- Department of Defence Production will fund up to 90 per cent of the R&D. Remaining 10 per cent of the development cost would be reimbursed, if the RFP for the equipment developed is not issued within 24 months from the date of successful development of prototype.
- a new category called the 'IDDM' or 'Indigenously Designed, Developed and Manufactured' platforms has been created. This category, with at least 40 per cent indigenous content, will get top priority and will be first to be chosen for tenders.
- Under the new DPP, Make (Indian) category has been
divided into three parts.
1. In the first, government funding has been increased to 90 per cent
of the project cost.
2. In the second category, companies would put their own money into a project
(and thus be spared the ministry's oversight), while being assured of orders
for a successful development.
3. The third category reserves projects worth less than Rs 3
crore for the small-scale industry, which is where high-technology
innovation traditionally occurs in defence.
- only firms with majority stake and controlled by
resident Indians will be eligible for projects under Make category.
Now lets do the ANALYSIS which UPSC expects us to do !!
Ok lets talk about the GOOD
part of it first !
- Perhaps the most far-reaching change in DPP-2016 is the recognition of indigenous
design and development as more important than manufacturing components as per blueprints given by foreign
vendors. While manufacturing indeed creates blue-collar jobs, and a
manufacturing ecosystem is essential for a defence industry; it is the
design and development of systems and weapons platforms that create strategic and
technological autonomy, and
long-term self-sufficiency in defence. It is one thing to manufacture
aerospace and defence components for global defence supply chains, and
quite another to design and develop a fighter aircraft, even one with many
foreign components, systems and sub-systems. Besides strategic autonomy, indigenous design and development create intellectual property and
white-collar jobs for India's large scientific and technological
community.
- The incorporation of a new procurement category into DPP-2016 - termed Indigenous Design, Development and Manufacture (IDDM) - and the top priority it will enjoy in the procurement hierarchy, signals new intent.
Abhi thoda gaali dena toh banta hai ....so herez the Criticism !!
- Business standard has questioned
the ministry's decision to raise the offset threshold
from Rs 300 crore to Rs 2,000 crore.
According to it, there will be few buyers for the
ministry's rationale that offsets raise the cost of equipment by 20 per cent.
If that were indeed so, why have offsets been imposed on contracts worth more
than Rs 2,000 crore? The reality is that the
defence ministry has not been able to formulate suitable offset demands,
contract them effectively and account for the fulfilling of offsets obligation.
It would be a pity if defence manufacturers are denied orders because of this
inefficiency.
- The Hindu says the DPP is an incremental
improvement over recent
efforts to reduce India’s import dependence, which stands at 65 per cent
of total defence procurement, to help create a robust military industrial
complex within the country so this INCREMENTAL STEP is not enough.
It says it is imperative that India succeeds at the earliest in
creating a cutting-edge domestic military industrial base.
There are two key impediments to India’s private sector becoming
active participants in defence R&D and production:
1. the monopoly enjoyed by defence public sector
units, and
2. the favours that foreign suppliers enjoy.
DPSUs are the workhorses of the sector as well as the biggest
drag on indigenous military research. A significant number of them are merely assembling foreign kits. Given India’s over-dependence on foreign military vendors,
several biases have crept in favouring them in procurements.
- A foreign vendor gets most of his payment on self-certification of project progress, while Indian vendors have to wait for a government inspector’s certification, which can delay payments by several months.
- A foreign vendor enjoys upfront customs duty exemption, while the
excise duty exemption for a local supplier is a reimbursement months after he has supplied
an item.
The new DPP may work towards expanding the number of
participants in military tenders, but it may not help dramatically improve the
present environment for all participants. Going
by the present trend, the $100 billion and more that India will spend over the
next decade will mostly end up in foreign markets. Political boldness and
radical reform are needed in defence procurement. Neither is visible in the new
DPP.
IAS OUR DREAM ka view !!
The DPP 2016 is truely a sincere effort towards indigenisation of the
defence sector in terms of design, research and development. This policy has
raised the ANIMAL SPIRITs of the domestic players mainly SMEs who want
something to do in Defence sector. The prudence now lies in making this policy
be functional and implemented with flexibility. This policy also has the
potential to turn our PSUs which have turned in White Elepants into Golden
Gooses. This can be a first step towards turning India into a defence equipment
exporter from a defence equipment importer and definitely it boosts MAKE IN
INDIA (need not tell that )..!!!
Manohar Parrikar proves himself to be the next Yashwant rao Chawan of India who to took to indigenisation of defence (post 1962 defeat) , he too was someone new Delhi like Parrikar and handpicked by Nehru as Parrikar by Modi !!