India special: The next knowledge superpower
19 February 2005 
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THE first sign that something was up came about eight
years back. Stories began to appear in the
international media suggesting that India was
"stealing" jobs from wealthy nations - not industrial
jobs, like those that had migrated to south-east Asia,
but the white-collar jobs of well-educated people.
Today we know that the trickle of jobs turned into a
flood. India is now the back office of many banks, a
magnet for labour-intensive, often tedious
programming, and the customer services voice of
everything from British Airways to Microsoft.

In reality, the changes in India have been more
profound than this suggests. Over the past five years
alone, more than 100 IT and science-based firms have
located R&D labs in India. These are not drudge jobs:
high-tech companies are coming to India to find
innovators whose ideas will take the world by storm.
Their recruits are young graduates, straight from
India's universities and elite technology institutes,
or expats who are streaming back because they see
India as the place to be - better than Europe and the
US. The knowledge revolution has begun.

The impact of the IT industry on the economy has been
enormous. In 1999 it contributed 1.3 per cent of
India's GDP. Last year that figure had grown to 3 per
cent. And what's good for one science-based industry
should be good for others. India has a thriving
pharmaceutical industry which is restructuring itself
to take on the world. And biotech is taking off. The
attitude is growing that science cannot be an
exclusively intellectual pursuit, but must be relevant
economically and socially. The hope among some senior
scientists and officials is that India can short-cut
the established path of industrial development and
move straight to a knowledge economy.

For the New Scientist reporters who have been in India
for this special report, many features of the country
stand out. First, its scale and diversity. With a
population of more than a billion, the country
presents some curious contrasts. It has the world's
11th largest economy, yet it is home to more than a
quarter of the world's poorest people. It is the sixth
largest emitter of carbon dioxide, yet hundreds of
millions of its people have no steady electricity
supply. It has more than 250 universities which
catered last year for more than 3.2 million science
students, yet 39 per cent of adult Indians cannot read
or write.

These contrasts take tangible form on the outskirts of
cities from Chennai to Delhi, Mumbai to Bangalore.
Here, often next to poor areas, great gleaming towers
of glass are growing in which knowledge workers do
their thinking. These images of modernity are a far
cry from stereotypical India - a place bedevilled
alternately by drought and flood, of poor farmers and
slum-dwellers. Yet both sets of images are real - and
many others besides.

High-tech is not the sole preserve of the rich.
Fishermen have begun using mobile phones to price
their catch before they make port, and autorickshaw
drivers carry a phone so that customers can call for a
ride. Technology companies are extending internet
connections to the remotest locations. Small,
renewable electricity generators are appearing in
villages, and the government is using home-grown space
technology to improve literacy skills and education in
far-flung areas.

These efforts are often piecemeal, and progress is
slow. "Illiteracy today is reducing only at the rate
of 1.3 per cent per annum," says R. A. Mashelkar,
director-general of the government's Council of
Scientific and Industrial Research. "At this rate,
India will need 20 years to attain a literacy rate of
95 per cent." He is hopeful that technology can speed
up this process.

Science too has its role to play. Critics of India's
investment priorities ask why the country spends large
sums on moon rockets and giant telescopes while it is
still struggling to find food and water for millions
of its citizens? The answer is that without science,
poverty will never be beaten. "You cannot be
industrially and economically advanced unless you are
technologically advanced, and you cannot be
technologically advanced unless you are scientifically
advanced," says C. N. R. Rao, the prime minister's
science adviser.

Rise of the middle class
The knowledge revolution is already swelling the ranks
of India's middle class - already estimated to number
somewhere between 130 million and 286 million. And the
gulf in spending power between the poor and the
comfortably off has never been more apparent. Take
cars. Sales are rising at more than 20 per cent a
year. Before India opened up its economy in the early
1990s, only a few models were available, almost all
home-built. Today, top-end imported cars have become
real status symbols. Another consequence of the
knowledge revolution is that the extreme wealth of a
new breed of young, high-tech yuppies is challenging
traditional gender roles and social values.

Whether the new-found prosperity and excitement of
present-day India can be sustained will depend
crucially on how the government guides the country
over the next few years. Cheap labour and the
widespread use of English do not guarantee success,
and there are major obstacles that the country will
need to tackle to ensure continued growth. Take
infrastructure. Where China has pumped billions into
water, road and rail projects, India has let them
drift. Likewise, companies complain that bureaucracy
and corruption make doing business far more difficult
than it ought to be.

One of the critical issues facing India is the gulf
between the academic world and industry. The notion
that scientific ideas lead to technology and from
there to wealth is not widespread. This stems in large
measure from the attitudes prevalent before 1991.
Before economic liberalisation, competition between
Indian companies was tame, so they were under no
pressure to come up with new ideas, nor did academics
promote their ideas to industry.

India's attitude to patents are a product of that
mindset. The country has no tradition of patenting,
and only recently have institutions and academics
started spinning off companies and filing for patents
in earnest. Most applications filed in India still
come from foreign companies. Until this year, the
country did not recognise international patent rules,
a failure that hampered interactions with foreign
companies.

The suspicion remains that Indian companies are out to
steal ideas, says Gita Sharma, chief scientific
officer of Magene Life Sciences, a start-up company in
Hyderabad. "We are not yet able to wipe away that
image." And while India has now adopted those
international rules on paper, there are still concerns
about how strictly they will be enforced. "It will
take a couple of years before the full implications
play out," says Sankar Krishnan, a biotechnology
analyst for McKinsey and Company in Mumbai.

Bringing research round to a more commercial way of
thinking is not the only issue that academia must face
up to. Another cultural problem, according to some
scientists, is that too often institutions have an
ethos of playing safe. Researchers who devise and test
daring theories are criticised if they fail,
discouraging the kind of ground-breaking research that
India needs.

There is a widespread view that the entire university
system needs an overhaul. India awards only 5000
science PhDs a year, says Mashelkar, yet it should be
producing 25,000. There are funding problems and
political interference in the running of some
universities, particularly those run by state
governments. In response, central government has
decided to select 30 universities, give them extra
money, and mentor and monitor them to create a series
of elite institutions.

But such changes will be for nothing if students
choose not to study science. In recent years,
increasing numbers have chosen to study IT and
management because that's where money is to be made.
"IT and outsourcing has improved the economy and
quality of life of people, but has had a negative
effect on science," Rao says. Mashelkar hopes that as
science-based companies grow, and demand for fresh
blood increases, salaries will rise and more students
will opt for science.

Chasing China
These problems must be solved if India is to
capitalise on its recent gains, and there are hopeful
signs that Indian science is improving in the global
scheme of things. Its share of the top, highly cited
publications has increased, but it is starting from a
very low base. The government spends only $6 billion a
year on research and it still has fewer scientists per
head of population than China or South Korea.

India's greatest rival has always been its giant
neighbour to the north. While IT and services are
helping India log 6 per cent year-on-year increases in
GDP, China's vast manufacturing base is raising its
GDP by around 9 per cent a year. Even in India's
strong suit of knowledge-based industries, China could
still steal the march on it, not least because its
Communist government can command change, while in
India the democratic government can only guide
national development.

Nevertheless, the rewards for India of a thriving
science-based economy could be huge. The investment
bank Goldman Sachs estimates that if India gets
everything right it will have the third largest
economy in the world by 2050, after China and the US.
India is not yet a knowledge superpower. But it stands
on the threshold.

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Printed on Mon Feb 21 08:16:37 GMT 2005


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