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The politics of sezs in india: promise and pitfalls.

prepare a case study on various sezs of india

It has been two years since India’s Parliament passed legislation to allow the creation of Chinese-style Special Economic Zones (SEZs), enclaves whose tax breaks and relaxed regulatory requirements are intended to attract foreign investment, spur the creation of world-class infrastructure, and create jobs. Since February 2006, when the Special Economic Zone Act 2005 came into force, India’s usually slow-moving bureaucracy has acted with unprecedented vigor, clearing proposals for more than 400 SEZs. But what is motivating this move towards spatially defined reform? How has the SEZ policy fared so far? And why is the response it has generated significant? 

India’s adoption of the SEZ concept was, according to a former commerce minister, “inspired” by the success of China’s SEZs, which turned sleepy provincial backwaters like Shenzhen into global manufacturing hubs in less than two decades.

If so, it still remains a mystery why India’s SEZ policy is so strikingly different from the Chinese one. In China, the emphasis was on large sites – industrial cities, really – whereas Indian SEZs can be as small as 10 hectares (about 25 acres, or 1.07 million square feet). The theory behind SEZs favors larger sites. In the absence of scale, it is difficult to recoup the costs of building world-class infrastructure. Additionally, without a critical mass of firms in a given sector, the synergies arising from ‘clustering’ are lost. 

More significantly, China’s SEZs were established on land belonging to the state, and developed by Chinese government agencies in anticipation of leasing space and facilities to private firms; in India, the policy framework relies largely on private developers to own, develop, and operate the SEZs.  

Tailoring foreign ideas to fit domestic circumstances is not necessarily a bad impulse. But the design of India’s SEZ policy, and the manner in which it has been implemented, raises suspicion that the Chinese model was indigenized not so much to suit India’s national interest as to benefit elite interest groups . These include prominent industrial houses, real estate developers, and last, but by no means least, the politicians and bureaucrats who stand to gain (politically and personally) by acting as midwives at the birth of SEZs. By approving hundreds of small SEZs throughout India, the government has adapted the policy concept to India’s democratic context, where placating powerful interests across the country helps to cultivate broad-based support among the political elite. 

The entire SEZ phenomenon, in fact, provides a useful lens on the politics of economic reform in India. One way of looking at the process is to see it as the Indian state finally deciding to abandon its cautious approach to liberalization. The creation of SEZs is, indeed, an aggressive attempt to promote investment, trade, job-creation, and growth.

On the other hand, one could just as easily regard the decision to pursue SEZs as a capitulation to the realities of India’s democratic system. Reformers, who face formidable political obstacles to the next wave of liberalization (labor deregulation, tax policy changes, easing restrictions on foreign investment, privatization), can be seen as having scaled back their ambitions – not by reducing the scope of the reform agenda, mind you, but by shrinking massively the extent of the territory to which new reforms will apply.

In other words, if (politically speaking) India as a whole is not ready for radical change, then why not simply confine such reforms to those parts of the country that are prepared to embrace liberalization? Through the expedient of SEZs, the cutting edge of reform can be applied selectively, creating a patchwork of tiny hyper-liberalized jurisdictions dotting the country. Political resistance to reform would thereby be fragmented: opponents would be isolated from one another, dissipating their energies in highly localized protest movements, each with its own peculiar issues and personalities.

Unfortunately, confining the vanguard of the reform agenda to just a small fraction of India’s landmass has not quelled political resistance in quite the fashion that the SEZ policy’s architects in Delhi had hoped.

To implement the policy, the central government must rely on India’s state governments to assist SEZ developers to acquire land, to obtain the necessary clearances from state-level agencies, and to shepherd SEZ applications through the approval process in New Delhi. States are pleased with the investment-promotion opportunities the new policy makes possible, and have acted with remarkable alacrity to facilitate the process. State governments have thus demonstrated a high level of ‘buy in’ to the SEZ policy.  And because state governments are ruled by a wide array of political parties, many of whom sit in opposition in the national Parliament, their participation as enthusiastic implementers of the SEZ policy should, in theory, weaken the association of the policy with solely the parties that make up the United Progressive Alliance coalition government in Delhi. This should make the SEZ policy a much less partisan issue.

It has not quite worked out that way. This is because many state governments have failed to perform the other function their colleagues in Delhi were counting on them to: managing the political tensions that arise when large infrastructure projects are undertaken.  The compulsory acquisition of land from farmers and other property owners is always controversial; when done to benefit private real-estate developers, on the basis of a policy whose design has been widely criticized (not least because of the huge revenue implications of SEZ tax concessions), the mix is explosive.

In some states protests against the creation of SEZs have turned violent. The most notable case is a chemical industry SEZ proposed at Nandigram, in communist-controlled West Bengal. A combination of local opponents, well-networked activist groups, and opposition politicians mounted a spirited (and successful) campaign to halt the project. But clashes with police and paramilitary forces led to violence in March of 2007, claiming the lives of 14 people. Conflict has flared up intermittently since then, most recently in November , when anti-SEZ protest was crushed by the state government, sparking outrage within and outside India.

West Bengal is not alone in having mishandled the politics of SEZs. Maharashtra and Goa (both in western India) and Orissa (in the east) have found themselves embroiled in controversy.  In most cases, the state has acted callously in dealing with property owners whose land was being acquired.

Corruption is part of the problem. But so is the Indian state’s dire track record at Resettlement and Rehabilitation . Even when India’s courts have mandated that government authorities take specific actions to compensate people affected by large projects – the Narmada Dam is a classic case – implementation has been appalling. Not surprisingly, people who have witnessed past failures are more likely to fight any attempt to acquire their land, which has huge symbolic as well as obvious economic value. Other ‘project affected people’ who do not own land, but depend for their livelihoods on their niches in existing local economies, are equally likely to resist change fiercely. 

What does all this mean?  First, the implementation of India’s SEZ policy demonstrates that, ironically, reform strategies designed to circumvent political obstacles can generate considerable discord when the political institutions that are supposed to manage tensions are ill-suited to the task. 

To play the political brokerage role envisaged for them, state governments will have to find ways of overcoming their much-deserved reputations for systemic venality and for reneging on their promises. In particular, they will have to devise context-sensitive approaches to compensating the ‘losers’ from reform. These will have to incorporate transparent and citizen-friendly accountability mechanisms if they are to be credible.

One reason why even seemingly attractive offers of compensation are refused by project-affected people is the lack of viable enforcement mechanisms, the courts in most areas often being dysfunctional at best. Unless India’s states can rise to the challenge of rebuilding their credibility – which implies the creation of institutions for enforcing compacts between citizens and governments – the political environment facing the continuation of economic reform will be inhospitable at best.  

The second point of relevance concerns the relation between India’s middle class and the country’s ongoing process of democratization. For many middle-class Indians, the prospect of living in an SEZ’s residential enclave is extremely attractive – not just because of the promise of upscale facilities, but (as importantly) because it offers a chance of escaping from the contentious and unpredictable politics that India is currently experiencing.

The gradual expansion of the political class to include more and more people from historically discriminated against groups is one of democratic India’s great achievements. But when combined with religious extremism, economic dislocation, and sclerotic political institutions, the result has been to politicize almost every aspect of public life. The desire to ‘secede’ from the normal India into a special zone may well divorce India’s middle class from the country’s bold attempt to re-imagine democracy – a rift that even a cursory reading of historical sociology would consider unwise at best.

It is an open question whether SEZs will evolve into islands of placid modernity amidst a sea of chaotic dysfunction, in which case they will symbolize the malaise that has beset India’s democratic experiment, or whether SEZs can generate new and responsive modes of governance that the rest of India will selectively emulate to make the quality of its democracy as impressive as its inclusiveness. So far the portents are not reassuring.

Rob Jenkins is Professor of Political Science at Birkbeck College, University of London. He is currently a Visiting Senior Fellow at the Ralph Bunche Institute for International Studies at The Graduate Center, City University of New York. He is also a Non-Resident Visiting Scholar at the Center for the Advanced Study of India, University of Pennsylvania.

India in Transition (IiT) is published by the Center for the Advanced Study of India (CASI) of the University of Pennsylvania. All viewpoints, positions, and conclusions expressed in IiT are solely those of the author(s) and not specifically those of CASI. © 2007 Center for the Advanced Study of India and the Trustees of the University of Pennsylvania. All rights reserved.

prepare a case study on various sezs of india

Special Economic Zones in India

Status, Issues and Potential

  • © 2016
  • Arpita Mukherjee 0 ,
  • Parthapratim Pal 1 ,
  • Saubhik Deb 2 ,
  • Subhobrota Ray 3 ,
  • Tanu M Goyal 4

(ICRIER), Indian Council for Research on International Economic Relations, New Delhi, India

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Indian Institute of Management, Kolkata, India

Economist and independent consultant, kolkata, india, economist and independent consultant, dlf welington estate, w2b 122 economist and independent consultant, gurugram, india, consultant, indian council for research on international economic relations, new delhi, india.

  • Evaluates India’s Special Economic Zones (SEZs) policy in the context of trade and globalisation
  • Critically analyses the business environment in SEZs and offers policy recommendations on how to improve it
  • Examines India’s experiences with SEZs and provides inputs on how to make SEZs successful so that they can contribute to India’s growth and development
  • Includes supplementary material: sn.pub/extras

Part of the book series: India Studies in Business and Economics (ISBE)

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Table of contents (10 chapters)

Front matter, introduction.

  • Arpita Mukherjee, Parthapratim Pal, Saubhik Deb, Subhobrota Ray, Tanu M. Goyal

SEZs in Select Countries: A Comparison with India

Sezs in india: evolution, policy framework and current status, performance of sezs, quality of the business environment: sezs versus dta, special sezs for services: india’s experiences and the way forward, sezs and other industrial clusters: why incentives have not been successful in developing manufacturing in india, sezs in the multilateral trading system, special economic zones and regional trade agreements, challenges faced by sezs in india and the way forward, back matter, authors and affiliations.

Arpita Mukherjee

Parthapratim Pal

Saubhik Deb

Subhobrota Ray

Tanu M Goyal

About the authors

Bibliographic information.

Book Title : Special Economic Zones in India

Book Subtitle : Status, Issues and Potential

Authors : Arpita Mukherjee, Parthapratim Pal, Saubhik Deb, Subhobrota Ray, Tanu M Goyal

Series Title : India Studies in Business and Economics

DOI : https://doi.org/10.1007/978-81-322-2806-6

Publisher : Springer New Delhi

eBook Packages : Economics and Finance , Economics and Finance (R0)

Copyright Information : Indian Council for Research on International Economic Relations (ICRIER) 2016

Hardcover ISBN : 978-81-322-2804-2 Published: 27 July 2016

Softcover ISBN : 978-81-322-3843-0 Published: 30 May 2018

eBook ISBN : 978-81-322-2806-6 Published: 14 July 2016

Series ISSN : 2198-0012

Series E-ISSN : 2198-0020

Edition Number : 1

Number of Pages : XXIX, 254

Number of Illustrations : 1 b/w illustrations, 22 illustrations in colour

Topics : Economic Policy , Development Economics , Regional/Spatial Science , Emerging Markets/Globalization

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This repository provides metadata of IIMB Publications and aimed at creating and preserving an archive of Institution scholarship. IIMB Publications include Articles, Working Papers (FULL TEXT), Book Chapters published by Faculty, Doctoral Dissertations by FPM Scholars and Project reports of Students enrolled in various courses of IIMB.

Revisiting Special Economic Zones (SEZ): A Review and Evaluation of India’s SEZ Policy

Revisiting Special Economic Zones (SEZ): A Review and Evaluation of India’s SEZ Policy

This study evaluated the performance of SEZs in India, against the objectives laid down in the SEZ policy. It also examined the impact of India’s trade agreements on SEZs and how India can learn from global best practices in developing successful SEZs. The findings of this study have been used by the Department of Commerce to revise the SEZ policy after India lost the case against the US in the WTO in 2019.

Special Economic Zones in India Author(s): Dr. Arpita Mukherjee, Dr. Tanu Goyal, Parthapratim Pal, Saubhik Deb, Subhobrota Ray

Book Chapters:

“India’s Experience with the Special Economic Zones (SEZs): Status, Concerns and Way Forward” with Avantika Kapoor in ‘International Economic Law and the Challenges of the Free Zones: Global Regulatory Issues and Trends’ Edited by Julien Chaisse and Jiaxiang Hu, published by Kluwer Law International, Global Trade Law Series, Vol. 38, May 2019.

Journal Articles:

Special Economic Zones (SEZs) and WTO: The Case of India, with Angana Parashar Sarma in Transnational Dispute Management (TDM) a peer-review online journal, TDM, ISSN 1875-4120, June 2020.

Special Economic Zones Face the WTO Test, with Parthapratim Pal, in ‘Economic and Political Weekly Vol. LIII, Issue No. 33’, August 18, 2018, pgs 20-22.

ICRIER Working Paper:

Imposition of MAT on SEZs: Concerns and the Way Forward Author(s):  Arpita Mukherjee and Bhavook Bhardwaj

Diversifying India’s Services Exports through SEZs: Status, Issues and the Way Forward Author(s):  Dr. Arpita Mukherjee, Dr. Tanu Goyal, Mr. Saubhik Deb, Ms. Shreya Deora, Mr. Bhavook Bhardwaj

Government Reports:

SEZs in India: Perceptions versus Reality report of the study funded by Department of Commerce, Ministry of Commerce & Industry, Government of India, February 2015.

Research Team

prepare a case study on various sezs of india

@ 2024 ICRIER. All rights reserved.

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Social and Economic Impact of SEZs in India

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Social and Economic Impact of SEZs in India

1 Introduction

  • Published: February 2012
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A growing number of countries are focusing upon special economic zones (SEZs) as a strategic instrument for promoting additional investment in foreign direct investment (FDI), technology transfers, and employment generation. Nonetheless, developing countries have had varied results with this policy. The present study provides an indepth analysis of the socioeconomic impact of SEZs in the Indian context. The primary objective is to take the SEZ debate forward by presenting an alternative perspective on SEZs. It covers almost every aspect of the SEZ debate from their economic rationale to impacts on employment, trade, foreign exchange earnings, government revenue, technology transfers, and social issues such as land acquisition, human development, regional inequities, and environmental protection. The analysis heavily draws on historical and contemporary worldwide SEZ experiences, existing theoretical perspectives, extensive field visits, and in-depth interviews with various stakeholders.

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COMMENTS

  1. PDF The impact of Special Economic Zones in India: A case study of

    by states to 571 proposals out of which 348 SEZs have been notified. A total of 105 SEZs are already exporting. The 571 approved proposals are for SEZs sponsored by State governments and are in addition to seven Central Government SEZs and 12 State/private sector SEZs that were set up prior to the enactment of SEZ Act, 2005 (MOCI, 2010).1 These

  2. PDF Evaluating impact of SEZs in India through sectoral analysis and case

    performance of SEZs and identified 12 case study subjects. Further, the study team selected and studied some of the ... The number of operational SEZs in India stands at 262 with 5,537 units approved within these SEZs. From sectoral point of view, IT/ ITes sector is dominating with approximately 61 percent of total operational SEZs and hosting ...

  3. PDF Special Economic Zones (SEZs): A case study of Indian Economy

    The SEZ Rules provide for different minimum land requirement for different class of SEZs. Every SEZ is divided into a processing area where alone the SEZ units would come up and the non-processing area where the supporting infrastructure is to be created. II. The SEZ Rules provide for:

  4. Special Economic Zones (SEZs): A case study of Indian Economy

    In State/Pvt SEZs, investment increase from 1756.31 Cr. in 2006 to 11,478.00 Cr. in 2017. 3. Under SEZs Notified Under the act, investment hick from 4,035.51 Cr. in 2006 to 433,142.00 Cr. in 2017 ...

  5. (PDF) Economic Growth in India Through SEZ: A Case Study of Noida

    The study found that FDI and export had significant effect on growth of both the economies while increasing size of SEZ had veryminor effect on growth of economies. Rastogi et al. (2015) studied ...

  6. PDF Current State and Performance Review of SEZs in India

    House, 4/2 Siri Institutional Area, August Kranti Marg, New Delhi - 110 016 Email: [email protected], Ph: 011- 49545454 (Ext .156) ate and Performance Review of SEZs in India: A SurveyAbstractThe establishment of the India's first Special Economic Zones unit and the consequent announcement of a comprehensive SEZs Act in February 2006 ...

  7. PDF Special Economic Zones: Are They Good for the Country?

    A Special Economic Zone (SEZ) is defined as a deemed foreign territory within a country with special rules for facilitating FDI for export-oriented production, and for purposes of trade and customs duties. These Zones (SEZs) are geographical region that have economic laws different from a country's typical economic laws.

  8. PDF A HANDBOOK ON SPECIAL ECONOMIC ZONE

    The intention of the policy maker is to make SEZs an engine for economic growth. History of SEZs in India The seeds of the basic concept of Special Economic Zone (SEZ) were sown in the mid sixties. Further, the basic model of the present day Indian Special Economic Zone was structured with the establishment of the first Export

  9. The Politics of SEZs in India: Promise and Pitfalls

    India in Transition (IiT), allows scholars from all over the world, the opportunity to exchange various analyses and innovative ideas about India's current status and growth. IiT presents brief, analytical perspectives on the ongoing transformations in contemporary India based on cutting-edge research in the areas of economy, environment, foreign policy and security, human capital, science and ...

  10. Special economic zones: critically study the special Economic Zones

    The report includes the life cycle of SEZ in India, physical structure and type and major events and enactment of laws since 2005. The study covers the FDI policy for SEZs, export promotion schemes, tax related issues and various controversial issues surrounding the SEZ story in India.

  11. PDF Mundra Special Economic Zone Case Study Socio

    The requirement for a SEZ per se to have an EIA was included in the September 2006 Notification, prior to that the EIA was done on the basis of industries contained therein. There is no requirement for a SEZ to have a public hearing as part of its EIA, which was omitted by the 1st August 2001 Notification. 3.

  12. PDF Place-based Development: Evidence from Special Economic Zones in India

    ional e ects of Special Economic Zones (SEZs) indeveloping countries. We investig. te the in uence of Indian S. Zs by exploiting spatial variations in thetiming of zonal operations. U. ing satellite and survey data, we establish that SEZs boos. ed economicactivity within areas several times.

  13. Challenges Faced by SEZs in India and the Way Forward

    Section 10.3 makes recommendations that address each of these challenges and proposes additional strategies that would turn SEZs into an engine of India's growth and development. The final section describes the kind of SEZs that are likely to succeed in India and the way forward to make SEZs a success story.

  14. A Study of Performance of Special Economic Zones (SEZs) in India

    This study results of state wise distribution of approved special economic zones indicated that the maximum number of are in the state of Telangana, followed by Karnataka and Maharashtra. In the ...

  15. PDF SEZs in India: Evolution, Policy Framework and Current Status

    n the investors, the SEZ Act was enacted by Parliament in. 005,10forfithe establishment, development and management of the SEZs. Under the provisions of t. EZ Act, the SEZ Rules11were formulated and noti ed in February 2006.fiThe current operational framework of SEZs in India is guided by. the SEZ Act 2005 and the SEZ Rules 2006 (as ame.

  16. PDF An Assessment of Potential Costs and Benefits of SEZs in India

    Export performance of EPZs/SEZs in India has shown steady improvement, including acceleration since the year 2000. From a mere 0.027 percent in 1966-70, the share of exports from SEZs in total exports has increased to 5.01 percent in 2005-06. Employment is increasing - more than double since 2000.

  17. Social and Economic Impact of SEZs in India

    Abstract. This book is a systematic analysis of the special economic zone (SEZ) programme in India. The book highlights the critical importance not just of investment in SEZs but also of investment in the wider domestic economy in which they operate. It is the result of detailed surveys of SEZs conducted at different points in time during 2004-9.

  18. PDF Land Utilisation in Special Economic Zones in India: A Macro and Micro

    ed during the same period.Time taken by notified SEZs to become operational.Dif. rences in the level of land utilization in a private and state government SEZ.The first three analyses are undertaken at macro level(a. l India level) and the last one at micro level (at the level of selected SEZs). Macro analysis is based on secondary data while ...

  19. Special Economic Zones in India: Status, Issues and Potential

    To facilitate private and foreign investment in SEZs, India introduced the SEZ policy in 2000, which was followed by the SEZ Act in 2005. After ten years under the Act, India now has one of the largest number of approved SEZs in the world and its SEZ policy remains heatedly debated, with a number of studies arguing both for and against it.

  20. SEZs in India: A critical study of the approval policies

    We have tried to understand the implementation issues by studying a few sample SEZs viz, Nokia in Chennai, Mundra in Gujarat which are included as short case studies in this document. In the second phase of the project, we have ventured to place the different Indian states on an index - based continuum.

  21. Revisiting Special Economic Zones (SEZ): A Review and Evaluation of

    It also examined the impact of India's trade agreements on SEZs and how India can learn from global best practices in developing successful SEZs. The findings of this study have been used by the Department of Commerce to revise the SEZ policy after India lost the case against the US in the WTO in 2019.

  22. Social and Economic Impact of SEZs in India

    The present study provides an indepth analysis of the socioeconomic impact of SEZs in the Indian context. The primary objective is to take the SEZ debate forward by presenting an alternative perspective on SEZs. It covers almost every aspect of the SEZ debate from their economic rationale to impacts on employment, trade, foreign exchange ...

  23. PDF Special Economic Zones

    SEZs in Uttar Pradesh. Details are mentio. Economic Zone (SEZ):8Noida Special Economic Zone (NSEZ), the only Central Government SEZ in northern India was set up in. 985 in Noida Phase-II. Prior to its being an SEZ in 2000, it was one of the seven Export Processing Zones of the country and was known as the Noida Export.