Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

SWOT Analysis of Indian Industry

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "SWOT Analysis of Indian Industry"— Presentation transcript:

1 SWOT Analysis of Indian Industry
MEEB PRESENTATION On SWOT Analysis of Indian Industry Presented by Ankush kumar singh (10052)

2 The Indian pharmaceutical industry
INTRODUCTION : The Indian pharmaceutical industry ranks among the top five countries by volume (production) and accounts for about 10% of global production. The industry‟s turnover has grown from a mere US$ 0.3 bn in 1980 to about US$ bn in Low cost of skilled manpower and innovation are some of the main factors supporting this growth. According to the Department of Pharmaceuticals, the Indian pharmaceutical industry employs about 340,000 people and an estimated 400,000 doctors and 300,000 chemists. The Indian pharmaceutical industry is fragmented with more than 10,000 manufacturers in the organised and unorganised

3 SWOT Analysis of the Industry
STRENGTHS • Growing treatment naive patient population. • Low cost of innovation, manufacturing and operations. • Higher GDP growth leading to increased disposable income in the hands of general public and their positive attitude towards spending on healthcare. • Low-cost, highly skilled set of English speaking labour force and proven track record in design of high technology manufacturing devices. WEAKNESSES • Stringent pricing regulations affecting the profitability of pharma companies. • Poor all-round infrastructure is a major challenge. • Presence of more unorganised players versus the organised ones, resulting in an increasingly competitive environment, characterised by stiff price competition. • Poor health insuracnce coverage. OPPURTUNITIES • Global demand for generics rising. • Rapid OTC and generic market growth. • Increased penetration in the non - metro markets. • Large demand for quality diagnostic services. • Significant investment from MNCs. THREATS • Wage inflation. • Government expanding the umbrella of the Drugs Price Control Order (DPCO). • Other low-cost countries such as China and Israel affecting outsourcing demand for Indian pharmaceutical products • Entry of foreign players (well equipped technology-based products) into the Indian market.

4 Indian Automobile Industry
Introduction : The later globalization period enhanced the trade in all sectors which includes automobile and auto components in top trading commodities. The new auto policy helped to promote the auto sector worldwide. The cheap labour and resources in India has captivated the attention of developed countries from long years back. Only on the globalization the trade benefits came into clear picture and also India realized the potential of the world market. Despite of free trade agreement, the preferential and regional trade agreements brought the higher potential markets closer to India to develop the international trade and flourish the Indian presence

5 SWOT Analysis of Automobile Industry
STRENGTH 1. Cost competitiveness in terms of Labour and Raw material 2. Established manufacturing base 3. Qualified and skilled man power 4. Growing domestic automotive industry 5. Manufacturing capabilities with international quality standards 6. High operational efficiency WEAKNESSES 1. Low investment in Research and Development 2. Limited knowledge of product liability and offshore warranty handling 3. Limited domestic market for various components inhibiting capacity creations. 4. Comparatively poor infrastructure for supply chain and exports 5. Lack of experience in system integration OPPURTUNITIES 1. The growing need to outsource 2. Huge opportunity in the tier- 1 and tier 0.5 3. Continuous pressure on global OEMs and Tier 1s to reduce cost and source from low cost countries 4. Higher frequency of introducing of newer models by automakers 5. Global market opportunity itself is the ultimate opportunity provided by auto industry. 6. Acquisition in foreign markets. THREATS 1. Competition from other low cost countries like China, Taiwan, Thailand etc. 2. Free Trade Agreements / Preferential Trade Agreements 3. Expansion of the European Union-inclusion of Hungary, Czech Republic Poland etc which are major exporting countries to western Europe. 4. Appreciation of Rupee 5. Developments of new technologies like fuel cell, hydrogen powered vehicles, which may affect the auto component industry.

6 Indian Steel Industry INTRODUCTION :
Steel is crucial to the development of any modern economy and is considered to be the backbone of human civilization. The level of per capita consumption of steel is treated as an important index of the level of socioeconomic development and living standards of the people in any country. It is a product of a large and technologically complex industry having strong forward and backward linkages in terms of material flows and income generation. All major industrial economies are characterized by the existence of a strong steel industry and the growth of many of these economies has been largely shaped by the strength of their steel industries in their initial stages of development

7 SWOT Analysis of Indian Steel Industry
STRENGTH 1. Availability of iron ore and coal 2. low labour wage rates 3. Abundance of quality manpower 4. Mature production base WEAKNESSES 1. Unscientific mining 2. Low productivity 3. Coking coal import dependence 4. Low R&D investments OPPORTUNITIES 1. Unexplored rural market 2. Growing domestic demand 3. Exports 4. Consolidation THREATS 1. China becoming net exporter 2. Protectionism in the West 3. Dumping by competitors.

8 Thank You


Download ppt "SWOT Analysis of Indian Industry"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google