Regulatory Barriers to Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises

23
REGULATORY BARRIERS TO MICRO, SMALL AND MEDIUM ENTERPRISES

Transcript of Regulatory Barriers to Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises

REGULATORY BARRIERS TO MICRO,

SMALL AND MEDIUM ENTERPRISES

ABOUT THE STUDY

Aims and Objectives

o Post- New Industrial Policy (1991) scenario: the

missing boom in the MSME sector- WHY?

o Comparative Evaluation: Business and Regulatory

Environment

Methodology

o Secondary Data Analysis

ABOUT THE STUDY

Research Question

o What have been the causes behind the inability

of MSMEs to realise their growth potential?

Hypothesis

o Given business environment; disparate growth…

Regulatory norms

serve as barriersBusiness environment:

non-conducive

LAYOUT OF THE PAPER/ PRESENTATION

o Introduction

o MSMEs v. Large Scale Industries

o Regulatory Norms

o International Comparison: EoDB Index

o Policy Recommendations

DEFINITION

• Basis: investment ceiling.

• Shift: SSIs MSMES: positive shift in policy

perspective and focus. Objective of the MSMED

Act, 2006?

Industry Enterprises engaged in the

manufacture of production

of goods: investment in

plant and machinery

Enterprises engaged in

providing or rendering of

services: investment in

equipment.

Micro Not exceeding Rs. 25 lakh. Not exceeding Rs.10 lakh

Small Between Rs. 25 Lakh and Rs.

5 crore

Between Rs.10 lakh and Rs.2

crore.

Medium Between Rs. 5 crore and Rs.

10 crore.

Between Rs. 2 crore and Rs. 5

crore.

CHALLENGES

Significance of study?

• Poor infrastructure

• Finance: lack of adequate and

timely access

• Marketing

• Regulatory norms: 142nd on the

EoDB

• Tax structure: number of

payments, procedure

• Lack of information flow

• Innovation/ R&D: missing

• Labour: Availability of skilled

and productive force

• Corruption

• Lumping MSMEs together:

POLICY PERSPECTIVE

CHALLENGE.

LARGE v. SMALL ENTERPRISES: POST 1991

What does liberalisation do?

o Access to capital/ technology + freedom to invest in

domestic industries = increased competition, creative

destruction/ innovation.

o Factors get reallocated as per productivity, with

inefficient firms driving out the inefficient ones- leads to

increased overall productivity and growth in the

economy.

LARGE v. SMALL ENTERPRISES: POST 1991

What did liberalisation do for MSMEs?

• Total working MSME units: 105.21 lakh (2001-02) v.

447.73 lakh (2011-12).

• Alteration in institutional arrangement: dereservation of

products for MSMEs; increased competition with the

large scale sector.

• Induction into a competitive environment proved too

sudden for MSMEs (given lack of capital, marketing

opportunities, innovation, skilled workforce); OUTCOME:

Sick units: 0.2 million (1990) v. 0.3 million (2000)/ Rate of

exports: 31% to 18%.

Comparative

Overview:

How the 1991

reforms treated and

impacted

SSIs/MSMEs vis-à-vis

Large Scale

Industries.

Years Factories (%

growth rate)

Employees

(% growth

rate)

Gross

Output (%

growth rate)

SSI Large SSI Large SSI Large

1980-81

to 1984-

85

-0.6 11.9 -2.1 2.1 0.6 8.7

1985-86

to 1990-

91

0.7 15.0 1.5 0.5 7.9 9.6

1980-81

to 1990-

91

0.2 13.7 0.1 1.1 5.0 9.3

DOCUMENTATION AND ANALYSIS OF

REGULATORY NORMS

Entry Continuance Exit

ENTRY

Registration

• PROCESS: S. 8(1), MSMED Act. Optional. Manufacturing: Memorandum of

Registration is mandatory.

• ADVANTAGE: Registration ensures the minimum financial interest of the seller

(the MSME owner)- that is, the price for his goods.

Licensing

• Licensing Exemption Notification (1991) under the IDR Act, 1951: no industrial

license required except in case of 6 product groups included in the compulsory

licensing group.

• Item groups reserved for exclusive manufacture by MSMEs.

PROCEDURAL NORMS (ENTRY)

• More significant than statutory stipulations in

terms of the hindrance they can potentially

pose: tedious and protracted nature.

• Starting a business: 11 associated procedures

(Delhi); 13 (Mumbai).

• Acquiring a construction permit: 27 steps/

procedures.

• Registering property (for the purpose of use as

a warehouse, for instance): 7 steps/ procedures.

ANALYSIS OF NORMS (ENTRY)

• Simplification of the registration process;

• Statutory protection to the financial interest of

the MSME owner;

• Minimal licensing obligations;

• Procedural barriers.

CONTINUANCE

Financing

• Outstanding credit gap (beginning of the 12th

plan period): 62% of the credit demand; total

credit demand for micro enterprises = INR 7.9

trillion (2012)!

• Availability of bank credit is low; credit to

MSMEs as a % of NBC: 14.6% (2000) to 8%

(2007).

• Master circular, RBI (2010): guidelines for

lending to MSMEs; targets?; specialised

branches.

CONTINUANCE

• High credit cost: reported to be an impediment

by 80% of MSME owners (ET).

• Credit Rating of MSMEs: significance? Role of

governmental policy: SMERA.

• FDI into an MSME: ceiling of 24% for equity

participation lifted with the MSMED Act: subject

only to sectoral caps and regulations now.

• Ease of getting credit in India: 36th position/ 189

countries on the EoDB.

CONTINUANCE

Labour

• Concurrent List subject- 44 central enactments:

industrial relations, industrial safety and health,

child and women labour, social security, labour

welfare, employment and training, wages,

others.: irrelevant to the MSME sector.

• Lack of skilled labour.

CONTINUANCE

Taxation

• Concerns: Number of payments, long

procedure, non-uniformity across states (World

Bank): 33 annual tax payments; 243 hours/ year

spent in filing; tax payment amounts to 61.7% of

profit. India = 156th of 189 countries.

Tax Benefits, Schemes and Incentives for the

MSME Sector

• Deduction in respect of profit and gains:

ambiguity as to definition of SSIs

• Excise exemption

• Presumptive taxation

ANALYSIS OF NORMS (CONTINUANCE)

• Increasing availability of credit: positive role of

the RBI

• Betterment in FDI policy towards MSMEs

• Balancing labour interests with regulatory

framework: avoiding ‘over-legislation’

• Redundancy/ Inapplicability of labour laws

• Protracted procedure for tax payments

• Ambiguity as to definition of SSIs for tax

purposes

EXIT

• Section 25, MSMED Act: required the central

government to prescribe a winding up scheme/

closing down procedure: no legal framework till

date: implication- wastage of human, capital

and physical resource.

• SICKNESS (associated with exit): “Erosion in the

net worth due to accumulated losses to the

extent of 50% of its net worth”.

• Causes of sickness: lack of demand; shortage of

working capital; non-availability of raw material;

power shortage; labour, marketing, equipment

and management problems.

EXIT

• Revival of sick units- not a priority for banks-

conflicting interests.

• Presidency Towns Insolvency Act (1909)/

Provisional Insolvency Act (1920): disregard the

concept of limited liability; focus of litigation:

reovering statutory dues; not revival of the

MSME unit. LLP Act, 2008.

ANALYSIS OF NORMS (EXIT)

• Rehabilitation and resolving insolvency

measures to be aimed at revival

• Legal framework for exit

INTERNATIONAL COMPARISON

How does the EoDB Index

work?

o A composite of 2 measures:

• DTF Score

• EoDB Ranking

Indicators

• Starting a Business

• Construction Permits

• Getting Electricity

• Registering Property

• Getting Credit

• Protecting Minority

Investors

• Paying Taxes

• Trading Across Borders

• Resolving Insolvency

EoDB: Business

Environment in

India

Comparison with

China, Russia,

Bangladesh

Relevance of the EoDB for MSMEs

A comprehensive measure of how easy/

difficult it is for a local entrepreneur to

open and run a small to medium-sized

enterprise when complying with relevant

regulations.

Where does India Stand?

5

5

2

3

1

1

5

2

4

3

DB TOPIC/

PARAMETER

DB RANK

2015/2014

ALONG THE

TOPIC

DISTANCE TO

FRONTIER

SCORES

2015/2014

Starting a Business 158/ 156 (-2) 68.4/ 65.54

(+2.88)

Dealing with

Construction

Permits

184/183 (-1) 30.89/ 29.70

(+1.19)

Getting Electricity 137/ 134 (-3) 63.06/ 62.55

(+0.51)

Registering

Property

121/115 (-6) 60.40/ 60.40 (-)

Getting Credit 36/ 30 (-6) 65.00/ 65.00 (-)

Protecting

Minority Investors

7/ 21 (+14) 72.50/ 65.83

(+6.67)

Paying Taxes 156/ 154 (-2) 55.53/ 55.64 (-

0.11)

Trading Across

Borders

126/ 122 (-4) 65.47/ 64.89

(+0.58)

Enforcing

Contracts

186/ 18 (-) 25.81/ 25.81 (-)

Resolving

Insolvency

137/ 135 (-2) 32.60/ 32.43

(+0.17)

POLICY RECOMMENDATIONS

Drawing up a distinction

between micro, small and

medium enterprises at a policy

level

Starting a business:

minimisation of procedural

compliances required

Better monitoring mechanism

with respect to finance for

MSMEs

Simplification of labour

regulatory framework

Inclusive method of

checking compliance

with regulatory norms

Taxation: Need for

simpler procedure and

non-ambiguity in laws

Addressing lack of

awareness

Legal framework for an

exit scheme