A NITI Aayog report on Monday mentioned Turkiye as one of the nations from which India can adopt global best practices for addressing skill gaps in the country's medium enterprises.
The report titled 'Designing a Policy for Medium Enterprises' listed programmes of Turkiye in addition to Canada, Singapore and Australia for encouraging medium enterprises.
The report said Turkiye's "KOSGEB provides distance training on entrepreneurship; an effective, easy and flexible entrepreneurship training without time and space constraints by E- Akademi Programme Entrepreneurship Support Programme, with preferential treatment for women, youth and handicapped entrepreneurs." Also, observing that Turkey's e-Academy is an online training platform providing subsidised courses, enhancing accessibility for SMEs across regions, the report said, "online training programs can be offered at a subsidized rate, and free of cost for marginalized groups (as provided in Turkey's e-Academy)." Turkiye is facing backlash in India for its support to Pakistan during Operation Sindoor, which was launched by the country to destroy terror infrastructure following the Pahalgam terror attack, in which 26 people including tourists, were killed.
India's aviation security regulator BCAS earlier this month revoked the security clearance of Turkish firm Celebi Airport Services India on grounds related to national security with immediate effect.
The NITI report said for medium enterprises to succeed in a globalized market, there is a clear need for a tailored, data-driven approach to skill development that can align with industry needs and ensure a competitive, skilled workforce.
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To address challenges faced by medium enterprises, it recommended the introduction of a working capital financing scheme linked to enterprise turnover, a Rs 5 crore credit card facility at market rates and expedited fund disbursal mechanisms through retail banks, overseen by the Ministry of MSME.
The report also suggested the upgradation of existing technology centres into sector-specific and regionally customised India SME 4.0 Competence Centers to promote the adoption of Industry 4.0 solutions.
The Aayog also recommended the establishment of a dedicated R&D cell within the Ministry of MSME, leveraging the Self-Reliant India Fund for cluster-based projects of national significance.
The MSME sector contributes approximately 29 per cent to India's GDP, accounts for 40 per cent of exports, and employs over 60 per cent of the workforce.
Despite its critical role, the composition of the sector is disproportionately weighted -- 97 per cent of registered MSMEs are micro-enterprises, 2.7 per cent are small, and only 0.3 per cent are medium enterprises.
Medium enterprises, though only 0.3 per cent of MSMEs, contribute 40 per cent of MSME exports, showcasing immense untapped potential.
(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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The US, despite reporting a $ 44.4 billion trade deficit with India, runs a $ 35-40 billion overall surplus when revenues from education, digital services, financial activities, royalties, and arms trade are factored in, economic think tank GTRI said on Monday.
It said for India, this means it has every reason to walk into free trade agreement negotiations with confidence, pushing back hard against inflated deficit claims and demanding fair, balanced terms that reflect the full economic relationship, not just a narrow, cherry-picked slice of the ledger.
In 2024-24, the US has recorded a trade deficit of about $ 44.4 billion with India, which means Washington has imported far more goods and services from India than it exported.
US President Donald Trump has on multiple occasions highlighted this gap, accusing India of unfairly benefiting from trade.
Washington is also using the deficit figures to push India to unilaterally lower tariffs and open its market further, the Global Trade Research Initiative (GTRI) said.
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"But this trade deficit narrative is misleading and incomplete," GTRI Founder Ajay Srivastava said, adding that according to the think tank, the US quietly rakes in $ 80-85 billion every year from India through education, digital services, financial operations, intellectual property royalties, and arms sales.
"These massive earnings do not show up in the narrow goods trade statistics. When you factor them in, the US isn't running a deficit with India at all - it's sitting on a $ 35-40 billion surplus," he said.
He added that there's no reason for India to hand over sweeping concessions in sectors that have nothing to do with balancing trade, especially when these concessions would only further boost America's already dominant earnings from the Indian market.
In FY2025, trade between India and the US reached $ 186 billion as per the commerce ministry data. India exported $ 86.5 billion in goods while importing $ 45.3 billion, creating a goods trade surplus of $ 41 billion.
In services, India exported an estimated $ 28.7 billion and imported $ 25.5 billion, adding a $ 3.2 billion surplus. Altogether, India ran a total trade surplus of about $ 44.4 billion with the US.
Explaining further, Srivastava said that one of the biggest US money-makers from India is its higher education sector.
"Indian students studying in the US spend over $ 25 billion every year, about $ 15 billion on tuition and another $ 10 billion on living expenses," he said, adding that with the average Indian student spending between $ 87,000 and $ 142,000 per year, top universities like USC, NYU, Northeastern, and Purdue are major beneficiaries, making education one of America's biggest "exports" to India.
Also, the US tech giants like Google, Meta, Amazon, Apple, and Microsoft bring in another $ 15-20 billion a year in sales from India's booming digital market, the GTRI said.
These revenues come from digital advertisements, cloud services, app stores, software and device sales, and streaming subscriptions, most of which flow straight back to the US, thanks to limited local rules on data and taxation, it added.
American banks and consulting firms earn an estimated $ 10-15 billion in revenue annually from their work in India's financial sector, advising companies, managing corporate deals, and providing high-end services, it said.
Another major source of US income, it said, comes from Global Capability Centers (GCCs) in Indian tech hubs like Bengaluru and Hyderabad.
While most work is done in India, much of the real economic value is booked in the US as GCCs earn $ 15-20 billion revenue yearly through India operations, the Delhi-based think tank said.
"Further, the American pharma firms earn $ 1.5-2 billion annually through patents, drug licensing, and technology transfer. Auto companies and component suppliers earn $ 0.8-1.2 billion through licensing and technical services, it said, adding that Hollywood and US streaming platforms contribute another $ 1-1.5 billion through Indian box office sales, subscriptions, and content licensing.
Srivastava added that the US defence sales to India bring in billions more, although exact figures are often confidential.
"As the US pushes India to make one-sided trade concessions, New Delhi should stand firm. The facts are clear - India is not just a passive trade partner but a major contributor to American wealth across education, technology, finance, and defence," he said.
India can and should negotiate the free trade agreement from a position of strength, rejecting "hollow" deficit arguments and demanding fair, balanced, and reciprocal terms, he said.
(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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