The report analyses that up to 40% of India's US$10 trillion economy of 2034 could be derived from new solutions. The study stresses that 'The Winning Leap' should not be limited to a new approach or solution but rather needs to be seen as a 'play-to-win' mind set shift for industry leaders and the country overall.
A young demographics, paired with a burgeoning middle-class that is digitally enabled; is a once in a lifetime opportunity for India to develop economically and socially, said Mr. Dennis Nally, Chairman, PricewaterhouseCoopers International Ltd. India can only build shared prosperity for its 1.25 billion people by transforming the way the economy creates value. For India, to create 10-12 million jobs every year in the coming decades, corporations and entrepreneurs must work together to help deliver new solutions and build capabilities for growth.
The research suggests that Winning Leap solutions from private sector fall within three broad categories:
1. Fierce Catch-Up - This entails following traditional approaches or technologies to surmount challenges, but at an accelerated pace. For example: Improving energy transmission and distribution efficiency
2. Significant Leap - This involves adopting new or different approaches or technologies, which may have been developed elsewhere but would also work in India. For example: Shifting from coal-based power generation to nuclear or solar energy
3. Leapfrog - This represents a radically different approach - a paradigm shift - that entails applying a new and potentially disruptive business model. For example: Moving from central to distributed power generation
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According to the report, if each sector of the Indian economy executes solutions drawn from all three categories, it will expand fivefold and can achieve 9-10% sustained economic growth over the next 20 years in a resource efficient manner.
Corporations alone can't fuel growth and innovation needed to power India's Winning Leap, and hence the entrepreneurial sector must also play a major role as they possess qualities critical for developing innovative solutions, the willingness to take risks, an aptitude for fast decision-making, and bold leadership, said Deepak Kapoor, Chairman, PwC India. The government also needs to extend support by creating national platforms that enable this growth and improving the ease of doing business index. For instance, immediate changes that could be harvested could be in areas like ease in starting a company and in paying taxes.
The report investigates 10 sectors; viz. education, healthcare, agriculture, retail, power, manufacturing, financial services, urbanisation and enabling sectors such as India's digital and physical connectivity. Together, these sectors constitute over 70% of India's GDP. For each sector examined, a key metric with which to assess growth performance was defined - a vector of growth. The report states that each of the sectors face challenges whose resolution will require new and scalable solutions that are resource efficient and environmentally sustainable. Moreover, all of these sectors are interconnected and hence a setback in one spawns setbacks in others and vice-versa.
Shashank Tripathi, Partner and Strategy Leader at PwC India said, The report stresses that linear growth in each sector would not be enough to meet the growth ambition envisioned for India. Given the complexity and scale of the challenges facing India, the resources required, and the urgency of demands for change coming from Indian citizens, sector players must deploy solutions that deliver non-linear growth. For instance, a Winning Leap approach that increases 'Average years of schooling' from 7 to 10 by 2034 could save the education sector US$ 170 billion in cumulative investments. This can only happen when innovative solutions such as mEducation, amongst others, receive wide scale adoption, investment and execution.
To enable such non-linear growth and to have a 'play to win' approach in this new economy of tomorrow, organisations must focus on five key themes which should form the basis of their capability building measures and investments:
Serving informed and empowered customers
Creating flexible and adaptive operating models
Drawing on non-traditional resources and partnerships
Adapting a growth and innovation mindset
Focusing on accountability, integrity and sustainability
Three Economic growth scenarios
With data and modelling from Oxford Economics, the report defines three possible economic growth scenarios for India, each hinging on different strategies and achievements that could come from corporations, entrepreneurs, and Government, and each reflecting a different focus for investment:
Scenario 1: Pushing old ways faster outlines a focus on investment in education, health, and other dimensions related to human capital. The analysis suggests that in this scenario, India's GDP could see a 6.6% compound annual growth rate (CAGR) between now and 2034.
Scenario 2: Turbocharging investment outlines the impact of rapid and significant investment in physical infrastructure and envisions a 7.0% CAGR for GDP leading up to 2034. Scenario 3: The Winning Leap includes investment in both human and physical capital as per the previous two scenarios but also focuses on investment in R&D and innovation and envisions a 9.0% CAGR for GDP by 2034. This scenario forecasts the most aggressive growth and is the only scenario which will generate the 240 million new jobs India's growing demography needs. This is supported by a massive transformation in the investment outlook and productivity metrics in India, supported through significant investments (domestic and foreign) and research and development.
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