1 / 35

Internationalization of R&D (IRD) Dr A R Kidwai Member of Parliament (Upper House) India

Internationalization of R&D (IRD) Dr A R Kidwai Member of Parliament (Upper House) India. INDIA’S S& T POLICY ON INTERNATIONALIZATION OF R&D.

dreid
Download Presentation

Internationalization of R&D (IRD) Dr A R Kidwai Member of Parliament (Upper House) India

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Internationalization of R&D (IRD) Dr A R Kidwai Member of Parliament (Upper House) India

  2. INDIA’S S& T POLICY ON INTERNATIONALIZATION OF R&D • TO PROMOTE INTERNATIONAL SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY COOPERATION TOWARDS ACHIEVING THE GOALS OF NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT AND SECURITY AND MAKE IT A KEY ELEMENT OF INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS. • SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH AND TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENT CAN BENEFIT GREATLY BY INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION AND COLLABORATION.

  3. INTERNATIONALIZATION TREND IN GLOBALISING R&D • R&D SPENDING ABROAD BY US AND OTHER DEVELOPED COUNTRIES RISING FASTER THAN DOMESTIC SPENDING. IBM AND HEWLETT-PACKARD SPENDING 30% ON R&D OUTSIDE USA. • 100 FOREIGN COMPANIES OF JAPAN, GERMANY, UK, FRANCE AND SOUTH KOREA HAVE ABOUT 250 R&D FACILITIES IN USA. • MORE THAN 100 R&D CENTERS SET UP IN INDIA BY MNCs.

  4. Cont.// • EMPHASIS NOW SHIFTING TO EXTERNAL TECHNOLOGY ACQUISITION TO COMPLEMENT INTERNAL EFFORTS. • FOR SUCCESS IN GLOBAL MARKET THE MOST IMPORTANT FACTOR IS TECHNICAL SKILLS TO PRODUCE SUPERIOR PRODUCTS AT COMPETITIVE RATES. • CONVENIENT MECHANISM FOR TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER INSIDE AND ACROSS COUNTRIES. • FREE AND FLEXIBLE MOVEMENT OF R&D PERSONNEL.

  5. Cont.// • SUITABLE TAXATION AND RELATED ARRANGEMENTS IN RESPECT OF R&D. • SUITABLE/APPROPRIATE LEGAL FRAMEWORK FOR FACILITATING COLLABORATIVE R&D AND DISPUTE SETTLEMENT.

  6. INDIA’S S&T AGREEMENT • S&T AGREEMENTS WITH MORE THAN 50 COUNTRIES. • S&T AND IPR AGREEMENTS WITH FRANCE, EU AND RUSSIAN FEDERATION. • JOINT R&D PROGRAMS ON MATERIAL SCIENCE, CELLULAR AND MOLECULAR BIOLOGY. • LASER AND ELECTRO-OPTICS • INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY • MEDICAL SCIENCES AND HUMAN GENOME RESEARH. • GEOPHYSICES

  7. WHY R&D ALLIANCE WITH INDIA ? • US GIANT GE HAS A LARGE R&D SET UP IN INDIA. IT’S CEO OBSERVED • “INDIA IS A DEVELOPING COUNTRY, BUT IT IS DEVELOPED COUNTRY AS REGARDS ITS SUPERB SCIENTIFICINFRASTRUCTURE. IT IS FOR THIS RERASON THAT WE WANT TO SHIFT A PART OF GE’S DEVELOPMENT EFFORT TO INDIA”. • LOW COST OF R&D.

  8. Cont.// • INDIA IS THE SECOND LARGEST WORLD MARKET. TEHREFORE, THE COMPANIES THROUGH THEIR PRODUCTS SALE EARN MORE THAN WHAT IS SPENT BY THEM ON R&D AND THEIR PRODUCTION CENTER IN INIDA. • INDIA ALLOW FOREIGN INVESTORS 100% FOREIGN OWNERSHIP AND FULL REPATRIATION OF CAPITAL AND PROFITS. • INDIA HAS ALSO ACCEPTED R&D PROGRAMS UNDER THE CHAPTER ON TRADE IN SERVICES OF WTO.

  9. Cont.// • INDIA HAS A LARGE POOL OF ENGLISH SPEAKING SKILLED MANPOWER. • INDIA’S TELECOM INFRASTRUCTURE IS COMPARABLE TO THAT IN MANY COUNTRIES. • INDIA’S GEOGRAPHICAL LOCATION ENABLES 24X7 SERVICE OFFERING. • GOOD REGULATORY FRAMEWORK. • MORE THAN 100 R&D CENTERS SET UP IN INDIA BY MNCs.

  10. R&D ORGAINZATIONS ORGANIZATION NUMBER STRENGTH CSIR LABS AND RES. 118 SCIENTISTS 10, 934 ICAR AGRI. UNIV. 43 SCIENTISTS 6,281 R&D INST. 89 ICMR R&D INST./CENT. 26 SCIENTISTS 732

  11. Cont.// DBT R&D INST. 8 SCIENTISTS 700 DRDO R&D INST. 52 SCIENTISTS 6,500 DAE. R&D INST. 17 SCIENTISTS 5,000 DOS ISRO SCIENTISTS 10,000

  12. INSTITUTIONS OF HIGER EDUCATION (2001) • HIGHER EDUCATION NUMBER STRENGTH UNIVERSITIES 253 FACULTY 411,628 COLLEGES 13,150 STUDENTS 8,399,433 SC STUDENTS 1,670,273 • ENGINEERING EDUCATION • HIGHER EDUCATION &RES. IITs 7 FACULTY 2,500 STUDENTS 23,000 • ENGG.COLLEGES STUDENTS 463,965 DEGREE 1347 DEGREE 262,882 DIPLOMA 1228 DIPLOMA 201,093

  13. Cont.// MEDICAL EDUCATION MEDICAL COLLEGES 189 STUDENTS 18,168 PG STUDENTS 3,181 PG DIPLOMA 1,316

  14. INDIAN SOFTWARE INDUSTRY • EXPORT EARNINGS IN 2003-04 US $ 12.7 BILLION GROWTH RATE 26% DESPITE SLOWDOWN. • EXPORTS TO 95 COUNTRIES. MAJOR COUNTRIES: USA, UK, GERMANY, FRANCE, JAPAN, CHINA HONKONG, TAIWAN AND SOUTH KOREA. • THE CLIENTS INCLUDE MORE THAN 250 OF FORTUNE 500 COMPANIES.

  15. ESTIMATED EXPORTS FOR 2008 SERVICES US $ IN BILLION __________________________________________ IT SERVICES 23 SOFTWARE PRODUCTS 8 IT-ENABLED SERVICES 15 E-BUSINESS 4 TOTAL 50

  16. Cont..// • The above data shows how development of software industry in India has greatly contributed to promotion of specialized services in sectors of finance, banking solutions, security knowledge, management and customer relation services where expertise is sought from India by overseas countries.

  17. SOTWARE ADVANTAGE INDIA • LOW COST QUALITY MANPOWER • HIGH QUALITY WORK DELIVERY. • WELL-DEVELOPED INFRASTRUCTURE SUPPORT TO AID CONNECTIVITY AND DATA TRANSFER. • GROWTH OF INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY ENABLED SERVICES (ITES)

  18. INDIAN PHARMA POLICY- 2002 • 100% FOREIGN INVESTMENT AUTOMATICALLY PERMITTED. • FOREIGN TECHNLOGY AGREEMENTS-AUTOMATIC APPROVAL THROUGH RESERVE BANK OF INDIA. • ABOLITION OF INDUSTRIAL LICENSING FOR ALL BULK DRUGS, INERMEDIARIES AND FORMULATIONS.

  19. Cont.// • DRUG CONTROL RESTRICTED ONLY TO ESSENTIAL DRUGS TO DEAL WITH DISEASES LIKE TB, MALARIA AND DIABETES (INSULIN). • THE ONLY EXCEPTION—THE DRUGS BASED ON DNA TECHNOLOGY HAVE TO BE CLEARED FOR POTENTIAL HEALTH AND ENVIRONMENTAL RISKS.

  20. EMERGING TRENDS • FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT (FDI) PERMITTED UP TO 100% THROUGH AUTOMATIC ROUTES. • INDIA AGREED TO IMPLEMENT A PRODUCT PATENT REGIME WITH EFFECT FROM 1ST JUANUARY 2005 AS PER WTO AGREEMENT. • MNCs HAVE STARTED STRENGTHENING THEIR BUSINESS IN INDIA. THEY HAVE INCREASED STAKES IN EXISTING VENTURES OR SET UP NEW WHOLLY OWNED SUBSIDIARIES (e.g. PFIZER)

  21. Cont.// • INCREASED FOCUS BY INDIAN PHARMA COMPANIES ON R&D. • R&D CAN BE PERFORMED IN INDIA AT 15-20% OF THE COST IN EUROPE OR USA. ON DOLLAR BASIS THE COST ADVANTAGE IS ABOUT 10-15 TIMES. • THE INDIAN COMPANIES ARE PURSUING CONTRACT MANUFACTURING FOR SUPPLY OF BULK DRUGS/INTERMEDIATES FOR MNCs.

  22. Cont.// • WITH LOW COST OF PRODUCTION, INDIA HAS BECOME A BASE FOR OUTSOURCING DRUGS. • INDIAN COMPANIES SETTING UP SUBSIDARIES ABROAD OR SEEKING STRATEGIC ALLIANCES TO EXPLORE TREMENDOUS OPPURTUNITIES IN THE GENERICS MARKET EXPECTED IN THE NEXT 5-10 YEARS.

  23. INDIA--A GLOBAL HUB FOR TESTING AND DEVELOPMENT OF NEW DRUGS • PHARMA INDUSTRY TODAY TAKES $300-700 MILLION AND 10-15 YEARS TO INTRODUCE A NEW DRUG IN THE MARKET. • A LARGE POOL OF WELL QUALIFIED AND SKILLED MANPOWER AVAILABLE AT LOW COST. • AVAILABILITY OF LARGE NUMBER OF PATIENTS WITH ALL FORMS OF DISEASES. • ALSO PATIENTS AVAILABLE WHO HAVE NOT RECEIVED ANY OTHER MEDICAL TREATMENT.

  24. Cont.// • CLINICAL TRIALS COST HALF OR ONE THIRD OF A DEVELOPED COUNTRY AND TAKES MUCH LESS TIME TO COMLETE. • REGULATIONS PERMIT TESTING OF NEW DRUGS WITH NECESSARY PROTECTIVE MEASURES.

  25. BIOTECHNOLOGY IN INDIA • SKILLED MANPOWER GRADUATES 3,000,000 POST-GRADUATES 70,000 Ph.Ds 1,500 • CONVENTIONAL BIOTECH. COMPANIES 110 MODERN BIOTECH. COMPANIES 60 • BIOTECH ASSOCIATED INSTITUTIONS RESEARCH INSTITUTEIONS 241 INDUSTRIES 328

  26. Cont.// • CONSUMPTION OF BIOTECH. PRODUCTS IN 1999 US $ 1.79 BN. PROJECTED CONSUMPTION IN 2005 US $ 3.72 BN. PROJECTED CONSUMPTION IN 2010 US $ 4.27 BN.

  27. MAIN ACTITIVITES AND POTENTIAL • RICH BIODIVERSITY-INDIA HAS 7.76% OF TOTAL MAMMAL SPECIES 12.6% OF BIRD SPECIES, 11.7% OF FISH AND ROUGHLY 6.0% OF TOTAL FLOWERING PLANTS PRESENT IN THE WORLD WITH EXCELLENT AGRO-CLIMATIC CONDITIONS. THIS IS A GREAT RESOURCE FOR RESEARCH AND DEVLOPMENTAL ACTIVITIES IN BIOTECHNOLOGY. • FOCUS– GENOMICS, RECOMBINANT DNA, TRANSGENICS. STEM CELL RESEARCH AND NEW DRUGS DEVELOPMENT.

  28. Cont.// • VACCINE MARKET AROUND US $ 100 Mn. VALUED GROWTH 20% RATE • DIAGNOSTICS MARKET DEMAND US $ 50 Mn. DEMAND GROWING RAPIDLY • ANIMAL HEALTH BIOTECHNOLOGY MARKET RAPIDLY GROWING • ENZYMES 70% REQUIREMENT IMPORTED MARKET GROWING WITH INCREASING AWARENESS

  29. Cont.// • PHARMA TODAY 40-45% OF ALL DRUG ORIGINATE INDUSTRY IN BIO-TECHNOLOGY BUT IN THE NEXT DECADES BIOTECHNOLOGY WILL HAVE A MUCH GREATER ROLE ON THE PROD- UCTION OF DRUGS AND PHARMACUET- CALS. • FERMENTATION MODEST FERMENTATAION INDUSTRY INDUSTRY MAINLY BREWERIE, ANTIBIOTICS AND CHEMICALS BUT GREAT POTENTIAL IN THE AREAS OF –FOOD PROCESING, PHARMA AND CHEMICALS.

  30. Cont.// • FOOD INDIA IS THE LARGEST PRODUCER PROCESSING OF MILK AND SECOND LARGEST INDUSTRY PROCUCER OF FRUITS, VEGETABLES AND FOODGRAINS. BUT PROCESSING IS LIMITED TO ONLY 2% OF FRUITS AND VEGETABLES AND 15% MILK. THUS, TREMENDOUS SCOPE FOR THE DEVELOPMENT OF PROCESSING OF MILK FRUITS &VEGETABLES, MEAT, FISH AND FOODGRAINS

  31. Cont.// • AGRI-BIOTECH. -GENETICALLY ENGINEERED SEEDS AND PLANTS HAVE A MARKET OF US $ 250 Mn.. -DEVELOPMENT OF TRANSGENICS FOR QUALITY AND CHARACTERS. -DEVELOPMENT OF TRANSGENICS WITH RESISTANCE TO DROUGHT AND OTHER ABIOTIC STRESSES. -TISSUE CULTURE FOR PROPAGATION OF PLANTS. -DEVELOPMENT OF MEDICINAL AND OTHER AROMATIC PLANTS.

  32. ADVANTAGE INDIA • NO INDUSTRIAL LICENCE REQUIRED FOR FOODS EXCEPT ALCHOHLIC PRODUCTS. • NATIONAL POLICY TO INCREASE FOOD PROCESSING FROM PRESENT 2% TO 10% BY 2010. • INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITIES: UPTO 51% FOREIGN EQUITY—AUTOMATIC APPROVAL. • UPTO 100% EQUITY ALLOWED ON APPROVAL UNDER FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT (FDI) SCHEME EXCEPT MALTED FOOD, ALCHOHOLIC BEVERAGES. • CUSTOM DUTIES SUBSTANTIALLY REDUCED ON PLANT AND EQUIPMENT, RAW MATERIALS AND INTERMEDIARIES.

  33. CHEMICALS PESICIDES AND ALLIED INDUSTRIES • INDIA IS SELF-SUFFICIENT IN MEETING LOCAL DEMANDS. • CHEMICAL INDUSTRY IS HIGHLY HETEROGENIOUS COVERING SECTORS LIKE ORGAINIC, INORGANIC CHEMICALS, DYESTUFF, PAINTS , PESTICIDES, ETC. • THE PESTICIDE INDUSTRY HAS DEVELOPED SUBSTANTIALLY CONTRIBUTING TOWARDS AGRICULTURE AND HEALTH.

  34. PETROCHEMICALS INDUSTRY RAPID STRIDES IN TERMS OF PRODUCTION AND CONSUMPTION (FIGS IN KT) CATEGORY 1997-98 1998-99 1999-2000 (Actual) (Actual) (Actual) Prod. Cons. Prod Cons Prod. ________________________________________________ SYNTHETIC 1246 1257 1379 1420 1525 FIBRE POLYMER 2016 2398 2189 2719 2805 SYNTHETIC 62 105 54 106 55 RUBBER SYNTHETIC 251 245 282 272 320 DETERGENTS

  35. EXPORT OF CHEMICALS STEADY GROWTH IN EXPORTS OF CHEMICALS DURING THE LAST THREE YEARS . 1996-97 1997-98 (US $ IN MILLIONS) ________________________________________________________ DYES AND DYE INTERMEDIATES 388.8 445.6 BASIC ORGANICS & INORGANICS 416.2 439.0 CHEMICALS INCLUDING AGROCHEMICALS

More Related