Manufacturing Industries — India
"India wants to be a $5 trillion economy. That won't happen without manufacturing."
1. Chapter Overview
Manufacturing contributes ~17% of India's GDP — below the 25% target. India aspires to be the 'next China' in global manufacturing. This chapter covers: India's major industries (textiles, sugar, iron and steel, automobiles, IT), their LOCATION FACTORS, and the government's 'MAKE IN INDIA' initiative.
2. Major Industries — Location and Issues
Cotton Textiles
- LARGEST industry in India (employment). OLDEST modern industry.
- Location: Maharashtra (Mumbai — 'Cottonopolis'), Gujarat (Ahmedabad), Tamil Nadu (Coimbatore)
- WHY here? Raw cotton nearby. Humid coastal climate (thread doesn't break). Port for export. Cheap labour.
- Challenge: fragmented (many small powerloom units). Outdated machinery in government mills.
Sugar
- India: #2 producer (after Brazil)
- UP (#1), Maharashtra, Karnataka
- Challenge: sugar is WEIGHT-LOSING (5-7 tonnes of cane → 1 tonne sugar). Mills must be NEAR FARMS. SEASONAL — crushing season 4-7 months → mills idle rest of year.
Iron and Steel
- Backbone of industry. India: 2nd largest steel producer globally after China (~125 million tonnes, 2023).
- Integrated plants: Bhilai (Russian collaboration), Rourkela (German), Durgapur (British), Bokaro (Russian). Tata Steel (Jamshedpur) — oldest PRIVATE plant.
- Chhotanagpur Plateau = 'Ruhr of India': iron ore + coal + manganese + limestone + power (Damodar) + labour.
- Challenge: imported coking coal needed. Some plants operating below capacity.
IT and Electronics
- Bengaluru — 'Silicon Valley of India'. Hyderabad — 'Cyberabad.' Pune, Chennai, Noida.
- Why India? English-speaking skilled workforce. Lower cost. Time-zone advantage (24/7 service). Government support (Software Technology Parks).
Automobiles
- Delhi-Gurgaon, Mumbai-Pune, Chennai-Bengaluru
- Maruti Suzuki (Gurgaon), Hyundai (Chennai), Tata Motors (Jamshedpur/Pune)
3. Industrial Policy — 'Make in India' (2014)
- Goal: increase manufacturing to 25% of GDP. Create 100 million jobs.
- Focus sectors: automobiles, textiles, electronics, defence, pharmaceuticals, renewable energy
- FDI liberalisation in most sectors
- 'Production Linked Incentive (PLI) scheme' — government pays incentives linked to production
4. Exam Focus
- Cotton textiles — location factors (raw cotton, humid climate, port, labour). Mumbai, Ahmedabad.
- Sugar — UP vs. Maharashtra/South. North→South shift.
- Iron and steel — integrated plants. Chhotanagpur advantages.
- IT industry — Bengaluru. Why India? English, skilled, cost, time zone.
- 'Make in India' — objectives.
5. Conclusion
India's manufacturing story is HALF-WRITTEN:
- TEXTILES: The old workhorse — still the biggest employer.
- STEEL: The foundation. Chhotanagpur. SAIL + Tata.
- IT: The 21st-century success story. Bengaluru, Hyderabad.
- THE GAP: Between what India PRODUCES and what it CONSUMES — bridged by Chinese imports. 'Make in India' is the answer. Implementation is the question.
'The factory is not just a building. It is a pathway from farm to middle class. India needs more factories.'
