Creation of Wealth By DR T.H. CHOWDARY * Director, Center for Telecom Management & Studies • Chairman, Pragna Bharati (Intellect India), Andhra Pradesh • Fellow: Tata Consultancy Service Ltd. * Former Information Technology Adviser, Government of A.P Chairman & Managing Director Videsh Sanchar Nigam Ltd., Bombay T: +91 (40) 6667-1191(O) 2784-3121® F: +91 (40) 6667-1111 (O) [email protected]Talk@ GITAM, VSK: 2 Jan 2014
43
Embed
Creation of Wealth By DR T.H. CHOWDARY * Director, Center for Telecom Management & Studies Chairman, Pragna Bharati (Intellect India), Andhra Pradesh Fellow:
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Creation of Wealth
By
DR T.H. CHOWDARY* Director, Center for Telecom Management & Studies
• Chairman, Pragna Bharati (Intellect India), Andhra Pradesh• Fellow: Tata Consultancy Service Ltd.* Former Information Technology Adviser, Government of A.P
Chairman & Managing Director Videsh Sanchar Nigam Ltd., Bombay
• Intellectual• Material, economic• Intellectual wealth does not diminish. The more you share, the more it grows• Material wealth has limits. We may be satiated but not satisfied.• Material/economic wealth diminishes on consumption• Intellectual wealth can’t be diminished or destroyed. eg. Germany, Japan, after the wars
S706_ Jan 2014THC_CTMS
3
Source of all wealth
• Nature• Whatever is in the Sun is on earth- 110
elements थो� असा�क्सा� पुरुषः सा� अहमस्मि�म• Intellect can create wealth even without
natural material resources eg: Singapore, Taiwan, South Korea, Japan
S706_ Jan 2014THC_CTMS
4
Land & Sea
• Adam Smith: Land labour & capital Unless there is a great land mass, there cannot be natural
wealth- ores, coal, oil & gas, forests, rivers, mountains Russia, Canada, USA, Brazil, China, India – vast lands• Urbanisation –masses of population • Pressure on land-• Density of population high to reduce commutation costs• Suburban land holders become wealthy by sale of land to
Realtors!• Skyscrapers and sub terraneons (Japan & Netherlands)
structuresS706_ Jan 2014THC_CTMS
5
Factors for wealth creation
Labour - Diminishing role Electricity, motor, machines, Robots Eg: Toyota Factory near Tokyo;• 360 Robots, 60 men 1000 cars/day Intellectual “labour” Innovation, invention• Scandinavia Now China too ( to be competitive)• USA- Robotizing to bring back manufacture
S706_ Jan 2014THC_CTMS
6
Capital is crucial
• Comes from savings• Savings in Banks• Banks lend & invest (Commercial & Investment
Banks)• Public Limited company –Great invention –
limited liability ; millions of investors - not dividends but capital appreciation
• Stock exchanges • Regulators (RBI; SEBI)
S706_ Jan 2014THC_CTMS
S706_ Jan 2014 7
Vision, entrepreneurship, risk & rewards (1)
We will make electricity so cheap that only the rich can afford to burn candles.
• “Genius is one per cent inspiration and ninety nine percent perspiration
• “When Sir M.Visveswaraiah saw the Cauvery water falls at Jog ( 1920s) he exclaimed “what a waste?”
• When Jamshetji Tata saw the waters of Roha river Roha cascading down he wondered , “All this water from the Western Ghats is wanted. We should harness it to produce hydro electric power”.
S706_ Jan 2014THC_CTMS
9
Wealth Creators• Risk-takers• Entrepreneurs• Failures don’t deter• Leaders- Integrators of talents• Andrew Carnegie’s Tomb-stone “Here lies buried a man who knew how to hire people better than
himself”(Contrast: Sonia Gandhi – If a lowly person is given power, he
discards all able counsellors, Does the dog which relishes shoes (leather) know the sweetness of sugar cane - Vemana• Lee Iacocca: Chrysler Revival
S706_ Jan 2014THC_CTMS
10
Tatas & Wealth Creation (1)
• Cotton Textile Mills• Nagpur Swadesi• Tata Steel, Sakchi becomes Jemshedpur • Vivekananda Inspires Indian Institute of Sciences (IISc, Bglr)• Steam locomotives for Railways• Trucks• Tata Hydro• Tata Shipping • Tomco –Coconuts (Kerala)• Tata Chemicals
– Sea water• Indica & Nano
S706_ Jan 2014THC_CTMS
S706_ Jan 2014 11
The Tata Saga (>140 Y) • Over 100 companies• 450,000 people across the world• Foot print in 85 countries• Employees: EU – 50,000; North America- 22,000; China-4,000• Group revenue - $ 101 bln• Exports Products & services to 85 countries• 58% of Tata revenues come from abroad• Flagship – TCS- Associates- 250,000; Revenue- Rs. 72,000cr• 32 are listed companies • Market cap; $ 90.82 bln• Share holders: 3.9 mln• Revenue/Employee ; Rs. 14 mln• Invests 3% of net profit in CSR activities
THC_CTMS
12
Tatas & Wealth Creation (2)
• Andhra valley• Western Ghats• Artificial Lake• Air India• Intelligent Grid• Tata Tea• TCS• Taj Hotel
• Indian Institute of Science• TISCO: Free Schools, Hospital, Insurance, Pensions• Tata Trusts• Tata Scholarships (ICS…)• All wealth (dividends) goes to various trusts• Tata Institute of Fundamental Research ( TIFR) • BARC and ISRO• Tata Institute of Social Sciences
S706_ Jan 2014THC_CTMS
16
Sharing as an ideal• Saha yagna praja srushtva purovacha praja pathihi Anena prasavishyadhvam eshavaha tu ishtakamadhuk .
– BG 3.10• Devanbhavayathanena te deva bhavayanthu vah Parasparam bhavayanthaha sreya paramavapsyadaha.
-BG 3.11• Ishtanu bhogaan hi vo deva dasyanthe yagnabhavitaha Tairdatthana pradayaibhyo yo bhunkthesthena yeva saha
Sharing as an ideal• Eesavaasyamidam sarvam yatkincha jagatyaam jagat,• Tena tyaktema bhujithaah;• Maa grithah kasya swith-dhanam.• “Everything in the universe abides in the Supreme Being.
Realise this well; realising it cast off the desires that rise in the heart, for example, the thought of possessing what is enjoyed by another. Joy comes only by the giving up of desires and attachments.
• (Enjoy by renunciation of and sharing with others of what more is not needed by you; may you not accumulate; whose is this wealth?)
• -Isavaasya, Interpretation by Rajaji.• Let us all strive to live in the light of this wisdom.
S706_ Jan 2014THC_CTMS
18
Wealth Destroyers• Export of ores• Welfare before wealth • (NREGA, Fee Reimbursement, paavala vaddi, no vaddi, loans
waivers…A.Ps profligacy; give –aways (Radios, TVs, grinders, bicycles, shoes, sanitary napkins, tablet PCs, mobile phones, Haj & Jerusalem subsidies; Urdu ghars, shadi khanas; one-Rupee /Kg ; No Rupee-Rice.
• Since fiscal 2004 G.O.I spent Rs. 9.12 tln on various subsidies• On NREGA cumulative spend Rs. 1.66 tln• A PURA Hub requires Rs. 600 mln; upgrades 10 to 50 villages• 7000 PURA hubs @ Rs. 4,20,000 cr would create R-Urban areas• Gram-IT is part of it.
S706_ Jan 2014THC_CTMS
19
You cannot…
“You cannot bring about prosperity by discouraging thrift.You cannot strengthen the weak by weakening the strong.You cannot help the poor by destroying the rich.You cannot establish sound security on borrowed money.You cannot keep out trouble by spending more than you earn.You cannot build character and courage
by taking away man’s initiative and independence.You cannot help men permanently by doing for themWhat they could do for themselves.”
-Abraham Lincoln (Source: Freedom First, May 1989)
S706_ Jan 2014THC_CTMS
20
Tainted and tattered flag of Socialism (and “secularism”) (1)
• Sri Nani Palkhiwala• History will record that the greatest mistake of the Indian republic in the first
50 years of its existence was to make less investment in human resources- education, family planning, nutrition and public health- than in brick and motor dams and factories.
• We have too much government and too little administration; too many laws and too little justice; too many public servants and too little public service; too many controls and too little welfare.
• Indian liberalisation encounters formidable opposition from three quarters.• The top heavy bureaucracy reluctant to shed its enormous powers• Influential politicians who prefer to let socialism remain the opium of the
people and of whom it can be truly said that if ignorance is bliss, they should be the happiest men alive.
S706_ Jan 2014THC_CTMS
21
Tainted and tattered flag of Socialism (and “secularism”) (2)
– Quite a few Indian businessmen men who are much interested in their own personal prosperity than in the future of the country and who preferred to flourish in the non competitive environment.
– These three are the obstructionist forces…India continues to remain the only significant country in the free world to hold aloft the tainted and tattered flag of socialism.
• “ We shut our eyes to the fact that socialism is to social justice, what ritual is to religion and dogma is to truth”.
• Over taxation corrupted the national character overtly. The nation survived only because the tax system continued to breathe through loopholes and the economy used to breathe through window of tax evasion.
S706_ Jan 2014THC_CTMS
S706_ Jan 2014 22
Socialist’s service to the poor and aam aadmi ( one example)
Power bills (July 2012) of A.P MinistersMinister Galla Aruna M.Mukhesh
Goud DK Aruna
Danam Nagender
E.Pratap Reddy
Amount (Rs.)
62,657 33,188 25,013 17,231 11,021
N.Chandra Babu Naidu
Kiran Kumar Reddy
84,352 100,000
•Some have 12 air conditioners in their house . Rule:2
•MLAs ( from allover the state) have private houses in government allotted sites in Jubilee/Banjara Hills.
THC_CTMS
S706_ Jan 2014 23
Books for Reading (1)
• The Reckoning• Vitality in a Business Enterprise:
-Frederick R. Kappel• Big Business & Human Values
-Theodore V. Houser: Chmn sears Roebuck • The Uncommon Man -
Crauford H. Greenwall, President E.Idu Pont de Nemoars & Co• Freeman & The Corporation -
Roger M. Blough: Chmn United States Steel Corpn• New Frontiers for Professional Managers -
Ralph J. Cardiner : President General Electric Company.
THC_CTMS
24S706_ Jan 2014
Books for Reading (2)
•How to Win Friends & Influence people – Dale Carnegie •The Human side of Enterprises - Douglas Mcgregor• My years with General Motors – Alfred P Sloan•A Japan which can say “No” to America•Kautilya’s Artha Sastra•Are You Listening – Dr T H Chowdary •The Creation of Wealth – R M Lala (The Tatas from 19th to the 21st Century) •Vincent People•Peter Drucker•It Couldn’t be Done - Published by the USIS, New Delhi •Heidi & Alwyn Toffler–The Future Shock–The Third Wave–A new civilisation in the making
THC_CTMS
25S706_ Jan 2014
Books for Reading (3)
• Shantiparva in Mahabharata• Sundara Kanda (Ramayana) – Hanuman to Sita• Gita Rahasya by Lokamanya Tilak• Bharthrihari’s Subhashitas• Sumathi & Vemana Satakas• Rama Charita Manas – Tulasi Das• Krishnavatara – KM Munshi• Women in the Bible• Life and Times of Jamshedji Tata (For the Love of India by R M
Lala)• JRD Tata Letters THC_CTMS
S706_ Jan 2014 26
Lives of great men…
Lives of great men all remind us we may make our lives sublime and departing leave behind us foot prints on the sands of time.
– Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
THC_CTMS
27
Innovation & Entrepreneurship• Innovations in production processes – Avoid rejects, re-engineering,
wastes• Entrepreneurship• Ideas, mentoring, incubation• Stanford – hundreds of companies incubated• Venture capital• How many succeed ? <10% in the USA• 15/20,000 companies fold up every year in Japan .• Institutional investors put less pressure on companies dividends; not so
retail investors.• Government must assist & stimulate R&D by direct support and
incentives ( tax, land, interest, researchers & teachers exempt from IT in Belgium)
S706_ Jan 2014THC_CTMS
S706_ Jan 2014 28
Technology & IPR for Wealth Creation
THC_CTMS
S706_ Jan 2014
Ten-Year Trend in Engineering and Technology Master’s Degrees in the United States, China and India (Actual and Estimated Data)
0
10,000
20,000
30,000
40,000
50,000
60,000
70,000
1994-95
1995-96
1996-97
1997-98
1998-99
1999-00
2000-01
2001-02
2002-03
2003-04
2004-05
Academic Year
Gra
du
ate
s
USA (Engr/Techl) China (Engr/Techl) India(Engr/Techl) India(MCA)
Source: The India Economy Review, 30 Sept 2007, Vol.4; www.iipm.thiktank.com
THC_CTMS 29
S706_ Jan 2014
Ten-Year Trend in Engineering and Technology PhD Degrees in the United States, China and India
-
1,000.00
2,000.00
3,000.00
4,000.00
5,000.00
6,000.00
7,000.00
8,000.00
9,000.00
10,000.00
1994-95
1995-96
1996-97
1997-98
1998-99
1999-00
2000-01
2001-02
2002-03
2003-04
2004-05
Academic Year
Gra
du
ate
s
USA China India
Source: The India Economy Review, 30 Sept 2007, Vol.4; www.iipm.thiktank.com
THC_CTMS 30
31S706_ Jan 2014
25,000
20,000
15,000
10,000
5,000
01980 1990 2000
Number of Research Papers Published
India China South Korea Israel Brazil
Years
No.
of
Pap
ers
Sou
rce:
Bus
ines
s W
orld
, 30
Jan
2006
Quality of Education (1)
THC_CTMS
32S706_ Jan 20141975 1975 1999
4,000
3,000
2,000
1,000
500
0
Number of PHD Degrees in Engineering
India China South Korea Japan Taiwan
Sou
rce:
Bus
ines
s W
orld
, 30
Jan
2006
Years
No.
of
Deg
rees
Quality of Education (2)
THC_CTMS
33
Contribution to World’s Research Papers
India China USA
3.7% 10.6% 27.7%
(Source: UNESCO SC Report 2010)
S706_ Jan 2014THC_CTMS
34
Patents applied and granted in the period
2004 to 2008
Country Applied Granted Japan 391,002 176,950USA 456,321 157,772China 289,838 93,706Korea 170,632 83,523Europe 146,150 59,819UK 59,819 23,379India 36,812 18,230
S706_ Jan 2014(Source: Forbes India, Nov5,2010)THC_CTMS
35
Global PatentsIndia China USA
USPTO* 0.5 4.7 52.2Triadic+ 0.2 0.5 41.8(Source: UNESCO SC Report 2010)•United States Patents and Trademark Office+ Triadic patents are a series of corresponding patents filed at the European Patent Office (EPO), the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) and the Japan Patent Office (JPO), for the same invention, by the same applicant or inventor.[1] Triadic patents form a special type of patent family.@ The Trilateral Patent Offices, or simply the Trilateral Offices, are the European Patent Office (EPO), the Japan Patent Office (JPO) and the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO). In 1983, these patent offices set up a programme of co-operation in an effort to "improve efficiency of the global patent system".[
S706_ Jan 2014THC_CTMS
36
Patents
• In Y 2010, China filed for 400,000 patents; 75% were by Chinese companies; 25% by foreign companies working in China
• The total number of filings in India is yet to exceed 50,000 a year; only 19% are by Indian companies; foreign companies in India filed 81%
• India’s patent office has 250 patents examiners; China has 4,500; it would increase them to 9000 by 2015; by then India will have 1000 patent examiners
(Source: Page 106, Tata Review, Dec 2011)
S706_ Jan 2014THC_CTMS
37
Scientific Publication
2002 2008
India 18,911 36,261
China 38,206 1,04,968(Source : UNESCO Science Report 2010)
S706_ Jan 2014THC_CTMS
38
Scientific Researchers in the World India Share – 2.2%
Researchers / 1000,000 Population
India China USA Japan
137 1070 4663 5573
(Source: Every Mans Science: June-July 2011)
S706_ Jan 2014THC_CTMS
39
Civilian R&D Expenditure (2000-2005)
Source: The book, Start-up Nation- The Story of Israel’s Economic Miracle by Dan Senor and Saul SingerSource: UNDO (United Nations Development Programme) Report, 2007/2008
Perc
enta
ge(%
) of G
DP
S706_ Jan 2014THC_CTMS
40
Venture Capital Investments per Capita$
US
Source: The book, Start-up Nation- The Story of Israel’s Economic Miracle by Dan Senor and Saul Singer(Source: Dow Jones, Venture Source: Thomson Reuters; U.S. Central Intelligence Agency, World Fact Book, 2007, 2008 ) S706_ Jan 2014THC_CTMS
41
R&D Spending as % of GDPCountry %India 0.9Israel 4.86Sweden 3.75Finland 3.56Us 2.82Denmark 2.72China 1.4
(Source: Mint, 23-03-2012)
S706_ Jan 2014THC_CTMS
S706_ Jan 2014 42
From Developing to DevelopedGrowth of Population & GDP
GDP POP PCI PCI time to double
Nehruvian socialism
3.5 2.8 0.7 More than 50 Y
P.V Naraishma Rao & After
6 to 8.5 1.4 4.6 to 7.1 (10 to 15) years
With one child norm since 1978 China in the last 10 years alone•Increased PCI from $800 to $4000•Became the 4th largest economy•World’s largest [email protected] in 2011•Has the world’s largest foreign exchange reserves @ 3.3 tln (c.f India $ 295bln)