As the buzz around the first major political visit from the UK to India builds up for the New Year, Invest India fleshes out the emerging contours of opportunity to bring the two vibrant ecosystems even closer together.
In its report entitled, ‘Advancing the UK-India Partnership: Business Perspectives’, it notes that the government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi has eased many foreign direct investment (FDI) regulations for key sectors to make India a favoured destination for investors and drive the country’s manufacturing capabilities. Both India and the UK are already among the largest investors in each other’s countries, contributing actively to the economy and providing jobs to thousands. However, with talk of UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson and Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab planning visits to India in the coming weeks and months, the momentum is certainly behind propelling the relationship to the next level.
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According to Invest India, the UK and India are working together on AI to deliver better healthcare, develop fintech to assist financial inclusion and payments solutions, and on cybersecurity to protect important personal and public assets from virtual threats.
“Both the UK and India realise the opportunity it offers and that continuing this revolution will underpin future growth and boost job creation in both economies,” it notes.
India aims to attain Universal Health Coverage (UHC) by 2030. Ayushman Bharat Mission with its two components – Pradhan Mantri Jan Arogya Yojana (PMJAY) and Health and Wellness Centres (HWCs) – aims to enable UHC.
“There are vast opportunities for British investors to explore in the sector and to benefit from the scope for growth,” the report notes.
Education technology or ed-tech has huge potential around the world to democratise access to education and both Indian and UK companies are well-placed to provide services in this segment. Ed-tech has grown exponentially in India over the last few months. It has become the second largest market for e-learning and has the second highest number of ed-tech companies in the world (327 companies). The UK ranks fourth globally and, with 245 companies operating in the ed-tech sector, is forecast to reach £3.4 billion by 2021.
According to the report’s findings, ed-tech companies in both the UK and India are in early-stage development and, therefore, tend to attract a wide range of investors.
There is also potential for growth and collaboration between the countries through the existing synergies like UK-India Education and Research Initiative (UKIERI), it points out.
The gaming industry has witnessed a paradigm shift with the evolution of television, digital and online gaming models. India is among the top five mobile gaming markets in the world; its number of online gamers are to reach 628 million by 2021.
According to the All India Gaming Federation, online gaming grew 12 per cent during the lockdown period, with a remarkable growth in online card games and digital sports. Due to Covid-19, firms are eyeing sponsorship deals in the gaming industry because of the absence of live sports.
The British video games industry is also important economically and culturally. The video games sector in the UK is the largest in Europe, employing over 15,000 full-time game developers, and indirectly supporting 26,241 jobs.
“A combination of online gaming and ed-tech also presents underexplored areas of development and can be an exciting space for entities from both countries to explore,” the report states.
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Under current conditions, India can benefit significantly from UK’s technological and administrative advancement in waste management, while the UK can benefit from the India’s research market. In 2016, the seeds of collaboration were sown when Dr Richard Allan, the head of the Centre of Expertise for Waters at the James Hutton Institute, identified potential opportunities for joint UK-India collaborative activities in handling wastewater management in Indian cities.
The Newton-Bhabha Fund, a partnership between the governments of India and the UK, bring together scientific research and innovation from the two countries to find joint solutions to global challenges.
As the Acting British High Commissioner to India summarises in her foreword to the report: “The UK-India partnership is and will remain, a force for good globally. We are stronger and more prosperous together.”
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