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Showing posts with label healthcare. Show all posts
Showing posts with label healthcare. Show all posts

Tuesday, 28 September 2010

Is Education India’s next gold rush?

uploaded by NPatrick6 on Wikipedia, cropped an...    Image via Wikipedia
About twelve years ago, I was sitting in a seminar listening to the Israeli management guru, Dr Eli Goldratt, expound forth on his seminal Theory of Constraints (TOC).  Dr Goldratt shared something very basic but something we often forget - that a chain is as strong as its weakest link.  This thought has stayed with me and it brings me to the theme of this week’s blog – higher education in India. While statistics in the Indian context are astounding, the one’s relating to education are mind-boggling.
  • 5: The multiplier by which the budget for education has increased in the 11th Five Year Plan (2007-12), compared to the 10th;
  • 14%: Current enrolment rate in higher education; targeted to increase to 30% by 2020;
  • 18,000+: Number of universities and colleges in India;
  • 600,000: Shortage of doctors;
  • 1,000,000: Shortage of nurses;
  • 15 million: Annual increase in labour pool by 2015;
  • 240-250 million: Estimated skilled workers required over the next 12 years to cater to the incremental skilled workforce demand in 20 high-growth sectors as well as the unorganised sector;  and
  • 600 million:  Indians under 25 years of age.

The strain of inadequate educational infrastructure is beginning to take its toll.  A few weeks ago, the World Economic Forum released its Business Competitiveness Report 2010-11.  India had dropped two places to rank 59.  Poorer rankings on education were identified as one of the major speed-breakers.  

Sensing the opportunity, a number of players – new and old - have jumped on to the bandwagon.  Exponential growth in stock prices of educational companies over the past decade bears testimony to the demand-supply dynamics.

Leading international universities have not been impervious to India’s hunger for quality education. Last week, Duke University announced its intent to set up a campus for its business school in India. Like Yale, Brown and Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), it is also in talks with India’s Ministry for Human Resource Development for partnering the upcoming 14 innovation universities. 

As institutions jostle for market share, the resulting frenzy has prompted the Advertising Standards Council of India (ASCI) to introduce a new set of guidelines prohibiting educational institutions and programmes from claiming recognition, authorisation, accreditation, or affiliations without proper evidence.   

To my mind, and borrowing from Dr Goldratt’s TOC, embedded in the education opportunity is one more nugget – that of standards and certification.  Indeed, attention to this could easily apply to India’s preparation for the Commonwealth Games.  After all, success in India is not only about what you do but how.

If you would like to increase the growth for your organisation by deepening its engagement with India, do write in at ratika.jain@whiteowladvisory.com .

Tuesday, 24 August 2010

10 reasons why India is heading for a second ICT revolution

One of my recent blogposts generated a significant number of comments on an EIU discussion forum.  A few of the commentators alluded to some of the speed breakers littering India’s highway to growth.   These included issues of governance, public debt, the need for ensuring trickle-down growth and development, agricultural reforms, efficient allocation of resources and greater financial inclusion.  While there is no one magic wand that can address these issues satisfactorily, certain notable developments in the information and communication technology (ICT) and ICT-enabled space, taken together, have the potential to come close.   

1.   Recent auctions of wireless broadband licenses and 3G spectrum. Acknowledged as among the biggest such auctions globally in recent years, revenue from the two auctions totalled `1.06 trillion (approximately US$ 23 billion), about three times the Indian Government’s initial estimates. As per recent reports, over 250,000 villages would be connected to wireless broadband and 3G mobile services by 2012 enabling them to access the slew of value-added services including e-commerce, tele-medicine and social networking.

The auction was also a welcome windfall for the deficit-strapped government, with some analysts saying the spectrum bonanza could cut the country's deficit to 4.5 percent of its gross domestic product (GDP) from a projected 5.5 percent for the 2010/2011 fiscal year.

2.   The Unique Identification (UID) project.  Launched in June 2009, the UID is an ambitious project designed to link a resident Indian’s multiple IDs (passport, driving license, PAN card, bank accounts, address, voter ID etc) to a common database. It is believed that unique national IDs will help address the rigging in state elections, widespread embezzlement that affects subsidies, poverty alleviation programmes, etc.  Addressing illegal immigration into India and terrorist threats is another goal of the programme.

3.   Mobile banking. According to a recent report by TowerGroup Research, mobile banking in India will grow from 10 million active users in 2009 to over 53 million active users by 2013.  Signalling the potential of this channel, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has relaxed mobile banking policies and increased the mobile payment limit to `50,000/- from `5,000/-.  At a recent conference on m-Governance organised by the Internet and Mobile Association of India (IAMAI), one of the speakers highlighted that, due to digital payments, cash circulation had gone up by 7%, against the usual 2%, quoting an RBI report.

4.   Agrarian transformation through models such as e-Choupal.  e-Choupal, an initiative of ITC Limited, involves the installation of computers with Internet access in rural areas of India to offer farmers up-to-date marketing and agricultural information for procurement of agricultural and aquaculture products. It was conceived to tackle the challenges posed by fragmented farms, weak infrastructure and the involvement of numerous intermediaries.

5.   The Spoken Web – Developed by IBM’s India Research Lab, this is a voice-enabled web-browser.  It is currently undergoing a second pilot in Gujarat, after one in Andhra Pradesh.  The opportunities for connecting the disenfranchised 35% of India’s population which is illiterate are mind-boggling.

6.   E-Governance. While deployment has been slow, some significant initiatives have been made, especially in states such as Andhra Pradesh. At national level, customs and excise and passport services have seen considerable use. For a status report, click here.

7.   E-learning. With more than 500 million people required to be educated/skilled over the next 12 years, the Government  of India is putting significant thrust to this mode of delivery.

8.   E-healthcare :  With a shortage of 600,000 doctors and 1,000,000 nurses, e-healthcare solutions are gradually being seen as significant drops in a very large ocean.
9.   Smart Grids – In May this year, India’s Ministry of Power launched the India Smart Grid Task Force and the India Smart Grid Forum with a view to turbo-charge the strategic deployment of smart grids in the country.
10. Adoption of smartphones.  According to Frost and Sullivan, smartphones will account for 54% of the Asia-Pacific mobile market in five years, up sharply from five percent in 2009.  In a market where the mobile handset is often considered a reflection of social standing, the smartphone is driving ARPU (average revenue per user) in India.  Introduction of low-cost, sub-US$110 smartphones is fuelling this growth.
The catapult that the mobile revolution created for the Indian economy in the late 1990s is well documented and widely acknowledged.  All of this makes me wonder whether ICT will now stand for India’s Cohesive Transformation?