Special Economy Zone in India – Lessons from China

In the late 1970s, the Indian and Chinese economies were comparable. The Chinese economy in the 1980s and 1990s cruised ahead of India, and today it finds itself at the top in all sectors against India except in software and knowledge-based products. Special Economy Zone is one of the backbones of the growth of the Chinese economy.

The journey of the Special Economy Zone in India started in year 2000 when M Maran, then Commerce Minister, made a tour to the southern provinces of China and realized the importance of SEZ. On returning from the visit, he incorporated the SEZ into the Exim Policy of India and after five year, Special Economic Zones Act 2005 was introduced and in 2006 SEZ Rules was formulated. The formation of the Special Economic Zones Act was not the first initiative of its kind by Indian government. India was one of the first in Asia to recognize the effectiveness of the Export Processing Zone model in promoting exports, with Asia’s first EPZ set up in Kandla in 1965. The experiment with the Export Processing Zone did not do wonder with the Indian economy.

The government, economists, and entrepreneurs jointly studied the Chinese SEZ model. After through analysis of the Chinese SEZ model, they decided to start the SEZs in strategic locations close to port cities and economic centers.

Lessons from China’s SEZs
In 1979, China started four SEZs and after ten long years the fifth one was set up in 1988. The Chinese government analyse the trends of the first four SEZs and based on that they started the fifth SEZ.

The SEZs in China are located on the coastline near Hong Kong and Taiwan which are major economic centers in the region. A large chunk of the FDI was contributed by the non-resident Chinese from Hong Kong and Taiwan, who invested in labor intensive industries. The size of the SEZs has been an important factor in the success of China’s reforms process. Government of China has gone a step forward and declared the entire region or province as a SEZ. In china, cities along the sea coast, including Shanghai, were opened up for foreign investments and given a status comparable to SEZs. Moreover, the hire and fire policy has attracted foreign investors to invest in China’s SEZs. The flexible labor policy of China was the biggest attraction for the foreign investors.

India Go Forward
In current market scenario when the global manufacturing bases are shifting from the developed countries to the developing countries. The countries like India and China hold good future, primarily due to cheap factor prices and proximity to new markets. In the emerged scenario, the Indian SEZ can easily attract FDI in manufacturing provided they offer hassle-free environment for the investors and all necessary fiscal incentives. Indian SEZ can do wonders the way china had done in past. The Indian SEZ have to remember that the Chinese SEZ were large in size, attracted FDI from the nonresident Chinese, government offered attractive incentives. The Chinese government promoted SEZ with flexible labor laws, liberal customs procedures and decentralization of power to the local authorities.

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