Dirty laundry: Welspun
tangle highlights India's quality challenge
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[August 26, 2016]
By Promit Mukherjee
MUMBAI (Reuters) - Questions over the exact
provenance of bedsheets sold by Welspun India to America's middle
classes have not only wiped $740 million off the firm's market value,
but also revived one of Indian manufacturing's enduring headaches:
quality.
India's government, desperate to accelerate growth and create more jobs,
has backed a "Make in India" manufacturing push. India already makes
everything from car parts to t-shirts, but is trying to move up the
chain to make higher-end products, like Apple's iPhone.
One major hurdle, however, has been product quality, often blighted by
low salaries, poor training and sketchy suppliers. As India manufactures
more, cheap is not always cheerful.
So far, in Welspun's case, U.S. retailer Target Corp has severed ties,
accusing it of passing off cheaper sheets as premium Egyptian cotton for
two years. Other Welspun clients are probing the company's products.
It's not clear what led to the problem. Welspun, whose share price
nearly halved this week, has said it would do an external audit of its
supply chain.
Other Indian manufacturers distanced themselves from Welspun, but many
fretted over the broader impact as the country tries to bet on quality,
not just cheap workers, where it faces constant competition from
regional rivals.
"It's high time exporters improve the quality of their products," said
S.C. Ralhan, president of the Federation of Indian Export Organisations,
set up by the government and industry to promote exports. He said the
group would take up the issue of quality with its members.
Arvind Sinha, national president of the Textile Association of India,
said India's image as a manufacturing destination for textiles could be
tarnished.
"This is another blot on the Indian exports resume," said an analyst at
a local brokerage, who asked not to be named as it would violate his
firm's policies. "The Welspun fiasco could have ripple effects and force
companies to scout for options in other regions in Asia that have
unscathed records."
Government officials say the Welspun case is an exception, and don't
expect much damage to India's reputation as a manufacturing hub.
"We hope it will be one of the stray incidents that will not have much
impact on our near $42 billion textile exports," said a senior textile
ministry official, who declined to be named.
A senior official at the Ministry of Commerce and Industry said more
such incidents could dent efforts to promote India as a manufacturing
export hub.
"If Indian industry is to survive and thrive, it has to adopt global
standards," he said, adding the ministry has raised the issue of
standards with exporters through export promotion councils, and has
stressed third-party auditing and self-regulation.
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Employees work at a Target store at St. Albert, Alberta, January 15,
2015. REUTERS/Dan Riedlhuber/Files
DRUGS AND NOODLES
India has been here before.
Its $15 billion pharmaceutical industry, a global supplier of cheaper
generic medicines, has been dogged by quality concerns, with health
regulators in the United States, Britain and Europe barring some plants
from producing drugs for their markets because of inadequate standards.
Highlighting weak official checks and under-resourced testing facilities, Nestle
India had to pull its popular Maggi instant noodles off the shelves last year
after local regulators found some samples contained unsafe levels of lead.
Subsequent tests at government-accredited laboratories showed the noodles were
safe for consumption.
Quality assurance experts in India and beyond, however, said damage from the
Welspun case could be contained - if the authorities and businesses move quickly
to put in place stringent quality assurance standards.
"The government and the companies should themselves put in place better quality
control standards to ensure India's image is protected," said a certifier at the
Indian arm of a Europe-based textile certification company.
The $108 billion textile industry accounts for a tenth of India's manufacturing
production, 5 percent of GDP and 13 percent of export earnings, according to
government data. It is the country's second-largest employer after agriculture.
The government has announced several schemes in the past two years to encourage
better use of technology and infrastructure in the textiles sector, and to
foster innovation.
But the Welspun case suggests more needs to be done.
"Sourcing strategy is really driven by who can deliver the lowest cost at an
acceptable quality, and India is still a place that delivers on that promise,"
said Neil Stern, senior partner at retail consultancy McMillan Doolittle in
Chicago.
"This certainly brings negative publicity, but companies will stack it up as one
bad apple and not view it as a systemic problem."
($1 = 67.0175 Indian rupees)
(Reporting by Promit Mukherjee, with additional reporting by Manoj Kumar in
DELHI and Nandita Bose in CHICAGO; Editing by Euan Rocha and Ian Geoghegan)
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