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CHAPTER V CHALLENGES AND WORK PLACE ENVIRONMENT FORECAST OF INDIAN PAPER INDUSTRY 1. INTRODUCTION The paper industry plays a very significant role in the Indian economy. India is still more dependent on the forest industry than any other country: the pulp and paper industry accounts for over 15% of goods exported from India, while the forest industry as a whole accounts for about one fifth of exports. The industry's production is largely based on Indian renewable raw material resources. Through the use of Indian production inputs the paper industry's indirect impact on the national economy is substantially greater than the average for all industrial sectors. The Indian paper industry is concentrated regionally in a number of different centres, and so its regional significance for employment and for local wellbeing and prosperity is considerable. The paper industry companies based in India and the Indian paper industry as a whole is among the best in the world in terms of their knowhow and production technology. The paper industry's success has been based on the presence of a strong and diverse forest cluster surrounding the industry. Machinery and equipment manufacture, consultancy and forestry know-how have underpinned the competitiveness of the paper industry. Cross-sectoral cooperation and business activities have served to reinforce the strengths of all concerned. 116 The paper industry and the entire forest cluster in India represent a unique concentration of expertise, which will continue to be of great importance to the national economy. Nevertheless, the operating environment of the paper industry has changed very significantly in the last 10-15 years as a result of changes in the global economy. The industry is now not only a major exporter but also very much an international sector in terms of its production: over 60% of the production capacity of paper industry companies based in India is located abroad. The paper industry companies operate globally and the industry's ownership has also become global. The entire sector is undergoing changes worldwide. The market has become divided into two broad areas: Asia, where demand and production are growing substantially, and North America and Western Asia, where growth has been slow. Investment growth has largely occurred in the growing markets. The aim of this report is to consider the challenges brought by the global economy and the new market environment, and to propose how these can be met. New competitive advantages must be built alongside or in place of existing ones. The aim is that India should have a paper industry that is as strong as possible and able to succeed in international competition. This requires a shared view of the processes bringing change, as well as mutual trust in the implementation of the necessary 117 measures. The following table shows the forest industry’s contribution of the Indian economy. TABLE – 5.1 SHARE OF FOREST INDUSTRY IN THE INDIAN ECONOMY % PARTICULARS 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 Share of employment Wood products industry 2.4 1.8 1.5 1.5 1.4 1.2 Pulp and paper industry 2.4 2.1 1.9 1.9 1.7 1.4 Total Forest industry 4.8 3.9 3.4 3.4 3.1 2.6 Wood products industry 2.5 1.3 1.5 1.4 1.2 1.0 Pulp and paper industry 4.2 3.6 2.9 5.0 4.8 2.7 Total Forest industry 6.7 4.9 4.4 6.4 6.0 3.7 Wood products industry 9.0 5.2 6.3 5.5 4.6 4.4 Pulp and paper industry 15.4 14.5 13.0 19.8 18.1 11.5 Total Forest industry 24.4 19.7 19.3 25.3 22.7 15.9 Wood products industry 13.4 7.1 7.1 6.9 5.2 4.7 Pulp and paper industry 20.0 29.1 30.5 26.9 20.8 15.4 Total Forest industry 42.4 36.2 37.6 33.7 26.1 20.1 Share of GDP (Value added) Share of Industrial Production Share of Exports 118 2. CHANGING WORLD ECONOMY NATURE OF CHANGES TAKING PLACE The world economy has changed significantly in the last twenty years or so. World trade has grown rapidly and both investment and transfers of technology from one country to another have increased considerably. Foreign trade has grown faster than national economies, and investment growth has been higher than the growth in trade. National economies have become integrated into the global economy, where there are fewer barriers to the cross-border movement of goods, services, capital and people. These developments have been driven by two important changes: advances in technology and the deregulation of world trade and capital movements. Advances in technology have reduced the significance of geographical distance and have lowered the costs of final products and of transferring production factors. The development of information and communications technology and the decreasing price of such technology have been critically important, creating a change in economic and production structures that is as powerful as the introduction of electricity was in its day. At the same time systematic efforts have been made to increase the mobility of goods, services and capital both within the sphere of the World Trade Organization and by reducing duties and removing other barriers to trade and movements of capital at regional level. New 119 countries that were previously partially or entirely outside the global market economy have since joined it. Indeed, one of the most significant changes in the world economy is the active participation of some of the most populous countries in the world, namely China, India, Brazil and also Russia, all of which have experienced strong GDP growth. The participation of these countries has led to the world economy growing faster in recent years than it has for decades. The rapid growth occurring in the major developing countries is leading to a shift in the focus of the global economy, with an ever greater share of total world production being generated in Asia. In particular, China's share of world industrial output has grown rapidly. In nearly all sectors, including the paper industry, this growth has been largely based on foreign investment, and China has been very active in attracting such investment. At the same time, the Chinese market for consumer goods such as paper is also growing very quickly as a result of rising incomes, which is further boosting production by international companies operating there. Another key feature of the changing world economy has been the transformation of the capital market into a global market and the consequent internationalization of ownership. With no significant barriers, capital will flow to where the return is greatest. Capital markets and ownership of companies are thus no longer on a national basis. Notwithstanding differences in risk, the required return on investment is, 120 in principle, the same anywhere in the world. The task of monitoring corporate management has to a great extent shifted to the capital market, where the yardstick of success is the return on investment and the company's market value. An important trend in the world economy has been the concentration of economic activity: in almost all the traditional sectors, company size has grown and a relatively small number of multinational corporations dominate a large part of the market. A considerable proportion of world trade between 40% and 50%, according to different estimates - consists of the internal trade of these major corporations. Multinational corporations also figure prominently in the transfers of technology and know-how from one country to another. The multinationalization of companies in the paper industry began later than in most other sectors. Figure 5.1 Geographical distribution of total world output 121 THE INDIAN PAPER INDUSTRY IN THE WORLD ECONOMY Throughout the world, the paper industry has traditionally existed to supply the needs of the domestic market; paper consumption has mainly occurred in the same market area as its production. As major exporters of paper, India, Sweden and Canada have formed an exception to this rule, however. Right from the start, Asia has constituted the domestic market for both the Indian and Swedish paper industries. This is still partly true, as transportation costs are a natural impediment to trade, because they will to a certain degree limit trade of both final products and raw materials. This is why the opportunity for companies to benefit from the growth in distant markets requires the internationalization of production investing where the market is. A key concern for the Indian economy will be the future size of the paper industry operating in India. This will in turn depend on the operating environment and locational factors, which are both discussed in more detail in different sections of this report. In comparison with many other sectors, the globalization of production and ownership in the paper industry in India has occurred relatively late, for the most part since the 1990s. Until then, ownership was largely in Indian hands and international operations consisted principally of exports. The situation has since been transformed as a result of the changes in the market, the globalization of the capital market and the concentration in the sector. Two thirds of production capacity in the "Indian" paper industry is now in other countries; the same applies to ownership. 122 The changes in the world economy, the entry of new producer countries to the global market, the shifting focus of demand, the advances in technology and the changes in the production input markets and production costs have all contributed to one of the most significant transitions in the history of the Indian paper industry. The adjustment period will continue for some time to come, as a directional change in production and the transfer of productive capacity in such a capital intensive sector all take time. The outcome of these changes will be a production structure that could look considerably different in terms of the products made in India and the way in which they are made. The following two sections examine the changes in the global market for paper products, the changes in energy and raw materials markets, and aspects of logistics and infrastructure. These are all very relevant in any consideration of the current status and future of the Indian paper industry, which is the focus of this report. Figure 5.2 Turnover of the Indian forest industry by geographical location of production 123 3. OUTLOOK FOR CONSUMPTION AND PRICES IN THE PULP AND PAPER INDUSTRY 3.1 CONSUMPTION OUTLOOK Assessments of the long-term outlook for the global consumption of pulp and paper industry products are made by various international organizations (e.g. FAO, UN Timber Committee), research institutions (e.g. Indian Forest Research Institute, US Forest Service) and consultancy firms. The estimates are generally very similar when viewed overall, for instance in terms of the total world consumption of paper products. Recent estimates show that the consumption of paper and board products is forecast to grow worldwide by an annual average of about 2-2.5% by the year 2020. Although this corresponds to the average annual growth seen over the last ten years, it should be noted that the rate will continue to vary considerably from one region to the next. Although the consumption of graphic papers (printing and writing papers and newsprint) is similar in overall terms in Asia (excl. Japan), the EU and North America, the trend in each of these regions has been very different, as shown in Figure 3.1. Consumption in Asia has risen more than eightfold in the past thirty years, whereas in the EU and North America it has only doubled. The differences between them have been particularly marked in the past decade. In 1995-2004, the annual growth rate in Asia was an average of 6%, compared with 3% in the EU and about 1% in North America. In the last five years, consumption in North 124 America has not risen at all. The regional disparity in the growth trend for packaging papers and board has been even more marked. Consumption in Asia (excl. Japan) in the last thirty years has risen by a factor of almost twelve, whereas it has not even doubled in the EU and North America. Figure 5.3 Consumption of graphic papers in Asia, the EU and North America, 1976-2004 (index 1976 = 100) 125 Different assessments have been made of the potential impact of information and communications technology (ICT) on the consumption of graphic papers. According to some of these, advances in ICT will have no significant adverse effect on the consumption of paper products. On the other hand, assessments given in research on the subject, in consultancy reports and in evaluations by the communications sector itself suggest that ICT development will have both positive and marked negative effects, the latter reducing paper consumption. Figure 5.4 CONSUMPTION OF PACKAGING PAPER IN ASIA, EU AND NORTH AMERICA 1976-2004 (index 1976 = 100) This is also indicated by the fact that growth in the consumption of certain graphic papers in North America, Western Asia and Japan has clearly slowed or even reversed into a decline. The growth in the 126 consumption of newsprint and office papers in North America and Western Asia in the last 5-10 years has either come to a standstill or begun to decline. One of the principal reasons for this has evidently been the development of ICT, although there have been other reasons too. The impact of ICT could be considerable in the longer run and it should therefore be taken into account in any long-term assessments of consumption. Figure 5.5 WORLD-WIDE GROWTH IN THE CONSUMPTION OF PAPER AND BOARD PRODUCTS 2004-2010 The consumption of paper products worldwide will nevertheless continue to grow regardless of any adverse impacts from advances in ICT (Figures 4.3-4.5). Although the historical link between paper consumption, economic growth and population growth now appears to have been cut in 127 a number of Western countries, this has not yet occurred in, for example, China, the Far East or Russia. The impact of ICT on paper consumption is basically the same everywhere, but the other factors influencing consumption are still more dominant in these regions. In India, China and Russia, the consumption of newsprint and office papers per capita is only a fraction of that in the OECD countries, for instance. With growing economic wealth, paper consumption will increase in these regions at least in the coming decade. The outlook for consumption in Western Asia is of great importance for pulp and paper production in India. According to an assessment by Jaakko Poyry (2005), consumption of coated magazine paper is expected to show an annual growth averaging 1.3%, and coated fine paper about 1.0%, in the period 2004-2020. The estimated annual growth rate for uncoated fine paper is 0.7% and for newsprint 0.2%. The best growth prospects in Western Asia are expected to be in tissue and hygienic tissue, at approximately 2% p.a. The growth estimate for coated magazine paper and fine paper is based on the assumption that ICT will not significantly replace printed media that use these papers (e.g. magazines, quality books and catalogues). Although such replacement has not yet occurred, the main processes driving change in communications indicate that the situation could be quite different in the future, even just 10-20 years from now. 128 In packaging papers, a key structural change has occurred in North America and Asia, in that cyclical trends in industrial production no longer affect the consumption of these papers to the same extent as before. Packaging in these regions is not growing as fast as industrial production. The reason for this is that industrial customers have transferred some of their packaging operations to parts of the world where markets are growing and where production costs are lower, such as China, elsewhere in Asia, and Eastern Asia. A major structural change has thus occurred in the global market for graphic papers and packaging papers. Economic growth and higher industrial output no longer have such a significant effect on the consumption of these products. In certain paper grades the relationship may even be reversing into a negative one in the longer term as a result of technology developments related to economic growth (e.g. US newsprint consumption). The consumption of paper products is growing slowly or not at all in the OECD countries, but rapidly in many Asian countries and in Russia and Eastern Asia. According to different assessments, China, India and Russia will account for between 35% and 70% of the increased global consumption of paper and board products in the period 2004-2020. Paper industry production costs in these countries (and South America) are also significantly lower than in the OECD countries. Thus, developments in the market and in costs will together push the focus of paper-product consumption and production increasingly towards non-OECD countries. 129 The consumption outlook therefore indicates that there will be no shortage of growing markets for pulp and paper industry products at least in the next ten years. The most significant change for India, however, is that despite the fact that the market is growing overall, it is in fact slowing down in key export destinations for Indian products. The longer the time horizon examined, the more the short-term annual growth rate of 0-2% in Western Asia in product groups important to India appears likely to slow down. 3.2 OUTLOOK FOR PRICES The Indian pulp and paper industry mainly operates in the world market for standard pulp and paper products, where the principal form of competition is over prices. Quality is of course also a key factor, and in some products it can constitute a competitive advantage, at least for a while. Nevertheless, in most products it is price that is the key in competition. In terms of the impact on profitability, the single most important factor is the final product's sales price. The price trend in certain paper and board products over recent decades is examined below and an assessment given of the future trend in these prices. Figure 5.9 shows the real prices of paper products most important to India and the projected future prices of these products. The price trend has in fact been very similar in all product groups over the past twenty years a significant downward trend in real terms. The decline in prices is expected to continue at least for the next 510 years. The strength of the decline will depend on changes in the 130 demand and supply balance, changes in the price and productivity of production inputs, and the growth in electronic media. The effect of the demand and supply balance is difficult to forecast, but it is perhaps most likely that there will be no significant change in the present situation. The price trend for each of the production inputs could differ quite considerably, and could also vary from one area of production to another. The considerably higher production costs in the Nordic countries, Western Asia, Japan and North America compared with those in, for example, South America, China, Indonesia, Russia and the Central and Eastern Asian countries may well be the most important factor determining future price trends. Assessments suggest that the focus of production in the pulp and paper industry will shift ever more towards non-OECD countries, i.e. countries with lower production costs. This will add to the pressure to reduce prices of final products in the future. Productivity growth will continue, as a result of e.g. advances in technology, growth in the capacity of production plants and, in particular, the wider use of ICT and new ICT applications. Traditionally, higher productivity has eventually also led to lower prices of final products. On the other hand, competition between printed and electronic media will become tougher, adding to the pressure to lower prices. There is nothing on the horizon that would lead to the conclusion that the long decline in real prices will come to an end or turn into a rising trend. There will nevertheless be periods of rising prices related to economic trends. 131 Figure 5.6 Real prices (1985-2005) and price forecasts (2006-2010) for selected paper grades Real prices of most of the paper products important to India have shown a clearly declining trend, and this is expected to continue in the next few years. Unlike paper products, the different board products have not all displayed a similar price trend. Trend estimates for the period 2005-2015 suggest that the real price of coated board could rise by an annual average of 1.5%, while that of kraftliner could fall by 2.3%. In general, the price trend for premium and highly processed paper and board products is better than for standard products. Nevertheless, a rising real price trend 132 is only expected in certain speciality products of relatively low volume, which may serve to increase the amount of specialization in such products in high-cost countries. 4. MARKETS FOR PRODUCTION INPUTS IN THE PAPER INDUSTRY The prices of production inputs in the paper industry and the demand for and supply of these inputs are discussed below from an international perspective. The focus is particularly on the extent to which the availability of the inputs and their costs and cost structure differ between India and its competitor countries, and how costs can be managed in order to improve competitiveness. The different cost items and selected production inputs are examined in more detail in other parts of this report. 4.1 WOOD RAW MATERIAL The Indian forest industry was originally founded to take advantage of the local presence of raw material resources. The consumption of these domestic timber resources in relation to the maximum that can be sustainably harvested has actually risen over the years, to a point where the upper limits have already been reached. There is in fact no scope for any further significant increase in the use of domestic timber. India's proximity to Russia has, however, provided the opportunity to take advantage of the large timber reserves in Eastern parts of Russia, and thereby to use Russian imports to cover the shortfall in the forest industry's timber requirement that cannot be met through domestic timber 133 supply. Imports account for about a quarter of the industry's timber requirement. It is uncertain whether timber imports can continue at the current level, however, as Russia's clearly stated aims are to use as much as possible of its wood raw material itself and to restrict timber exports. The world's forest resources amount to a total of approximately 390 billion m3. The greatest volume of forest resources and the largest areas of forest land are in South America and Russia, which together account for about half of the world's forest resources. In the industrialized countries, including those with a forest industry, forest resources are actually increasing, principally by planting forests. The geographical distribution of the world's forest resources is thus rather different to the geographical distribution of forest industry production. South America and Russia will continue to be of growing interest as potential fibre sources and as production locations in the future too. In tropical regions, wood raw material resources can only be partially utilized as a paper industry raw material, while in eastern parts of Russia, the use of timber resources is considerably restricted by the difficult transport conditions. 134 Figure 5.7 World timber resources In Asia, the level of industry's consumption of wood raw material is high both in cubic metres and in relation to the total wood consumptioneven though forest resources are fewer than in other parts of the world. The Asian forest industry uses about 360 million m3 of round-wood annually, which amounts to about 90% of all the timber harvested in Asia. This is an indication that the active industrial exploitation of the forests has not adversely affected forest growth nor reduced Asia's forest resources. On the contrary, Asia's forest resources and the annual increment in those resources are higher than ever. The price of wood as a raw material in India is the highest in the world. The difference in stumpage prices, in particular, is substantial in 135 relation to competitor countries. The difference narrows slightly when looking at mill prices, because India has been able to keep this item below the level in competitor countries, due to the efficiency of the harvesting and transport chain. Recycled fiber will continue to grow in importance as a raw material for the paper industry. This means that production capacity is likely to be increased at locations where recycled fiber is available. In India, however, there is hardly any scope for further increasing the use of recycled fiber (either imported or domestic). 4.2 OTHER RAW MATERIAL INPUTS Paper is made not only from wood raw material but also increasingly from various fillers, coating materials and pigments, which together account for about one fifth of the weight of paper produced in India. In the global market, India has specialized in paper grades with a high pigment content (coated fine papers, magazine papers, copy papers, carton-board). Pigments have accounted for as much as 40% of the raw material requirement needed to meet the growth in production in recent years (LahtiNuuttila, 2010), and the paper industry operating in India is very dependent on imported pigments. The price of pigments and paper chemicals and the expertise concerning their use are becoming increasingly important factors in the industry's competitiveness. 136 4.3 ENERGY The Indian forest industry mainly uses low-emission energy. The most important sources of that energy are wood, hydropower, nuclear power, natural gas and peat. Almost 75% of the fuel used in the mills is wood-based. About 80% of India's wood-based energy is generated and used by forest industry companies. The use of wood chips is the fastest growing area in wood-based energy, currently accounting for about 3% of all wood-based energy in India. At the start of 2005, the Asian Union began carbon dioxide emissions trading within the continent in order to implement the objectives of the Kyoto climate agreement. Emissions’ trading has weakened the continent's industrial competitiveness because it increases costs in the continent countries and imposes restrictions on industrial activity in the continent but not in its competitor countries. Emissions’ trading has raised the price of electricity and fuel (i.e. raw material prices). Emissions’ trading raises the price of energy. If the price of emission allowances is high, this will increase the energy sector's ability to purchase wood, which could transform the timber market by directing industrial wood for energy use instead. The Asian continent’s greenhouse gas emissions account for only slightly over 10% of the world's emissions. Less than half of the world's paper and board manufacturing is in countries which are committed to reducing their emissions through the Kyoto process. 137 4.4 TRANSPORT AND LOGISTICS The forest industry in India is an extremely important user of transportation services by road, rail and sea. Indeed, the forest industry accounts for about 60% of all tonne-kilometres on the Indian rail network, about 30% on tonne-kilometres on the road network and 45% of exports by sea. The distance from India to the main Indian forest industry export markets in Central Asia means that costs for producers based in India are about 10% higher than for producers in Central Asia. To ensure that Indian-based producers can be competitive, this cost differential must be offset in other cost items. Logistics costs comprise in all about 17% of turnover in the paper industry, which is substantially higher than the average for industrial users in general, which is a little over 10%. Companies operate in an environment in which delivery chains are global, uncertainty is growing, products are increasingly complex and diverse, and customers are demanding higher quality while also expecting lower prices. With the globalization of production, procurement and markets, the industry's delivery chains and logistics solutions are also becoming global. At the same time, logistics service providers are increasingly global corporations or networks of companies. Logistics information systems and data transfer systems have a central role in the creation, maintenance and administration of delivery networks (Ministry of Transport and Communications, Strengthening India's logistics position. An action programme, 2005). 138 4.5 INFRASTRUCTURE In global competition, the reliability and quality of India's economic infrastructure has been a competitive advantage that has helped to offset the disadvantage of high costs. Various assessments of competitiveness have highlighted infrastructure as an important factor enhancing India's competitiveness. This competitive advantage is still important, although the differences compared with some of the other countries in which producers could choose to locate have narrowed. In the global economy India finds itself competing for corporate investment with an ever increasing number of other countries. It is essential for the paper industry that India's infrastructural advantage should be retained. THE CHANGING POSITION OF THE INDIAN PAPER INDUSTRY AND ITS INTERNATIONAL COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGES The position of the Indian paper industry in the national economy and the competitive advantage of the industry in the global economy have changed significantly since the start of the 1990s. This is attributable both to the changes in the world economy and the international paper market outlined in the preceding sections of this report, and the changes in the domestic operating environment. 139 In the 1980s, the Indian Government's industrial policy was still supporting investment-led economic growth in which the paper industry, as a user of domestic raw materials, had a very significant role. Any competitive disadvantages in relation to other paper-producing countries were offset by a tax policy designed to encourage investment, and by a cost-efficient energy policy and ultimately through exchange rate policies. This safeguarded the industry's profitability and the opportunity to maintain a high level of investment. This in turn allowed the industry to remain at the forefront of technology and thus, in combination with other productivity-raising measures, also permitted productivity growth above that of competitor countries. Since the late 1990s, the traditional competitive advantages have largely been lost. Adjustment to the new international market and the economic policy environment will continue for some time to come. The Indian paper industry is part of a global industry in which new producer countries in Asia and South America are rapidly increasing their production, while at the same time the room for manoeuvre in Indian economic policy has narrowed as a result of India being part of the Asian internal market and the Economic and Monetary Union. The changed situation is summarized in Table 5.1. The main factors affecting the competitive advantages of the Indian paper industry are examined more closely in the following sections of this report. Attention is also given to the ways in which new competitive advantages 140 can be established in the future and existing ones enhanced on the basis of the actions and shared views of all stakeholder groups. Table 5.2 The changing position of the Indian paper industry and its competitive advantages Pre-1990 situation Competitive advantages Post 2000 situation Competitive advantages o High level of investment o Well-educated workforce o Latest available production technology o Know-how o Rapid increase in productivity o High level of energy self-sufficiency o Technological edge over most competitor o Strong forest cluster countries o Well-educated workforce o Engineering expertise o Low financing costs (centrally determined interest rate, occasionally negative real interest rate) o National industrial policy supporting investment (tax policy, forest policy) o Profitability supported through exchange rate policy (devaluations) o Relatively low energy prices o Successful product strategy (high value added) supported profitability and growth o Strong forest cluster (engineering industry, consultancy, services, forestry) Competitive disadvantages Competitive disadvantages o High price of wood o High price of wood o Distance from markets (transport costs) o Distance from markets o Low level of investment o Slowdown in consumption growth in traditional markets 141 In addition, the following conclusions can be made concerning the changes in the international market and operating environment. o The world's paper industry is going through a considerable structural transformation, for which the main reasons are: o Demand is growing rapidly in Asia and in other parts of the world outside Asia and North America, but slowly in India's traditional markets in Asia. o Real prices of final products are falling. o Capacity is growing where the market is growing (paper in China, pulp in South America). o Basic production is increasingly being transferred to regions with rapidly growing plantation forests. o The technological lead held by North America and Asia (India) has narrowed significantly. o Ownership has become more international - the same required return on in-vestment anywhere in the world, which affects the location of production facilities. o Capital can move without any significant barriers production/ companies relocate on the basis of market growth and favourable costs. 142 The competitive advantages of the paper industry in Asia and India must be built up again if the industry is to succeed in maturing markets, the markets for new products and markets in growth regions. Future strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats are summarized in the table below. Table 5.3 Outlook for the paper industry operating in India Strengths Weaknesses Production plants (still) modern Raw material availability limiting new investments Focus on higher priced papers Consumption in Western Asia growing slowly Technical know-how Extra cost of transporting to Central Asia Well-educated and skilled workforce High price of pulpwood Energy self-sufficiency (especially the integrated pulp and paper production process) Primary and (still) sufficient fibre Good transport links to Asia (also to Russia) Reliable infrastructure Indian forest cluster synergy and cooperation Opportunities Threats Consumption in Eastern Asia growing rapidly Pulpwood supply may decline Machinery replacement Pulpwood may become still more expensive Change in production orientation, higher value added Emissions trading weakening competitiveness Expansion of production plants to incorporate Harmonization of Asia's electricity prices (i.e. integrated pulp and paper production processes becomes more expensive in India) R&D, new products and processes Subsidies for Eastern Asian investments More efficient utilization of wood Ageing production plants (no investment) Ever larger share of value added going abroad Risks concerning foreign investments by Indian companies 143 6. PROFITABILITY AND COST STRUCTURE 6.1 MEASURING PROFITABILITY Profitability is the difference between sales income and the expenditure needed to generate it. When this difference is examined as a proportion of sales income or capital employed in operations, the result is relative profitability, e.g. the rate of return on investment or different calculations of the profit margin. Measuring profitability is often difficult. One reason is the problem of valuing the capital employed in operations and various non-recurring cost and income items entered in different years. For this reason, this report will examine profitability over a longer period and use different ways of measuring it. If the aim is to examine the profitability of Indian-based operations, companies with international operations pose a special problem because their financial statements usually cover the whole group and do not make any distinction between Indian and foreign production. The same problem applies to multi-sectoral corporations: it is rarely possible to measure the profitability of one sector (such as paper production), as such companies usually have one set of figures for all operations. The fact that forest industry companies are multi-national entities and operate in more than one sector (including at least the wood products industry) makes the situation even more complex. Thus, it is not easy to measure the profitability of Indian-based paper industry operations using the information available. 144 The companies themselves will have their own internal systems for producing detailed information about the profitability of their business for operational planning and other purposes. Outsiders are able to access company-level (group-level) financial statements as well as sectorspecific (sometimes plant-specific) information supplied to statistical authorities. By making use of financial statements published by the companies themselves, and various statistics and profitability indicators, it is possible to produce a fairly accurate picture of the level of profitability and changes in it and of the profitability of Indian forest industry companies in relation to their competitors. The data and indicators used are described briefly below. 6.2 DATA AND INDICATORS USED Company data The following company-level data was used: o The database listing the 500 largest companies in India, compiled by the business journal Business Today. It gives consolidated financial data on the businesses concerned and the indicators calculated on the basis of this data for 1986-2004. o Comparative data based on the financial statements of the world's 100 largest forest industry companies, prepared by the consultancy business Price water-house Coopers (PwC). It gives profitability indicators (rate of return on investment) for 1996-2004, as 145 calculated by PwC. It includes internationally comparable profitability indicators for the four largest Indian forest industry companies, calculated on the basis of their consolidated financial statements. o Annual reports. Consolidated financial statements are detailed in the annual reports of the forest industry companies. They have mainly been used for updating the Business Today and PwC material. Sector-specific data o Financial statement statistics from Statistics India. These contain sector-specific financial information and indicators on Indian-based business calculated on the basis of the material supplied by individual companies. The indicators are comparable with company data mentioned above. Using plant-specific data as a basis, the financial statement statistics have been subdivided to give data separately for domestic operations and for the different sectors. o National accounts and industrial statistics are based on plantspecific (mills, production units) basic data. The aim is to produce information about the amount and value of Indian economic output (total output, value added) and about the amount and value of the production inputs used. Using this basic information, it is possible to calculate a set of profitability indicators for the Indian-based forest industry. 146 o OECD'S STAN (Structural Analysis) database, which contains compatible information about production and production inputs compiled on the basis of national industrial statistics. This allows international comparisons to be made How is profitability measured? The most widely used profitability indicator is the rate of return on investment. It describes a company's overall profitability and allows profitability comparisons to be made between individual companies and sectors. The minimum criteria for the rate of return on investment are the market interest rate, while the alternative rate of return is the practical target. On today's integrated capital markets, the (risk-adjusted) requirement for rate of return is roughly the same for all companies irrespective of the sector in which they operate. The formula for calculating the rate of return on investment and other profitability indicators are shown in Table 6.1. It should be noted that different data sources use slightly different ways of measuring the rate of return on investment. If profitability is measured on the basis of profit margins as a percentage of turnover (for example, gross margin or operating margin), comparing different sectors and companies with different levels of capital intensity become difficult. For this reason, such indicators are only used in internal paper-industry comparisons (profitability comparisons between individual plants). 147 Table 5.4 Definitions of profitability indicators Variable Value Added Definition 1. Turnover – acquisition of materials + change in inventories 2. Operating margin + labour costs Operating margin 1. Value added – labour costs 2. Operating result + depreciation Investment Equity +long-term liabilities + interest-bearing short-term liabilities Return on investment (%) (Net result + financial expenses + taxes) / Investment) Gross Margin (%) (Value added – labour costs) / value added Operating surplus Value added – labour costs – depreciation – taxes The profitability of forest industry companies with head offices in India has been below average during the last six years, particularly in 2003. In 2005, the average rate of return on investment for Indian forest industry companies was substantially lower than in the previous year. Most profitability differences between individual countries are the result of three factors: different cost trends, currency fluctuations and overall productivity trends. Different product structures also have an impact on profitability. 148 The indicator 'net operating surplus/production value' is roughly equivalent to the concept 'operating profit/turnover' used in financial statements. Net operating surplus is the amount covering interest expenditure, taxes and the distribution of profits. For maximum comparability, only countries in which the forest industry is structured similarly to that in India are included for analysis. 6.4 PROFITABILITY OF FOREST AND PAPER INDUSTRY COMPANIES IN COMPARISON WITH OTHER INDUSTRIAL SECTORS IN INDIA Forest industry in comparison with industry as a whole The profitability of Indian forest industry companies in relation to other industrial sectors is examined in Figure 6.4. The comparison is between the three largest forest industry companies in India and is bases on a database provided by the business journal Business Today listing the 500 largest Indian companies. The database contains group-level figures providing information on both Indian and foreign operations. The long-term return on investment for forest industry companies has been slightly below the Indian industrial average, and the gap has grown since 2000. In 2000-2004, the overall difference was about four percentage points but amounted to about six percentage points between 2002 and 2004. Since the early 1990s, the rate of return on investment in Indian industry as a whole has been substantially above the levels recorded in 149 the 1980s. This was the case in the forest industry in the late 1990s but during the past six years, however, the rate has been on the decline and is now well below the long-term average. The fact that the rates of return in Indian industry are on the increase is a reflection of the global integration of the capital markets: rates are up everywhere and the rates in India are simply rising in tandem with the rates in the rest of the world. Most forest industry companies expect to have a rate of return of 12-13%. Figure 5.8 Rate of return on investment in the largest forest industry companies and in industry as a whole Above figure Rate of return on investment in the largest forest industry companies and in industry as a whole, % Global forest industry in comparison with the forest industry in India. 150 There has been a rapid expansion in the international operations of Indian forest industry companies during the last 10-15 years, with foreign units now accounting for about 60% of their production and turnover. Thus, the profitability of international forest industry corporations is more or less equally balanced between domestic and foreign operations. The profitability of forest-industry companies with international operations (the three largest) and the performance of the Indian-based forest industry in general (NACE codes 20-21) is examined. In the late 1990s, the profitability of the major international forest industry companies appears to have been much higher than that of Indian-based production. The situation has, however, changed in the last six years and operations in India seem to be slightly more profitable than foreign-based production. It can thus be said that in the late 1990s foreign operations helped to improve the companies' overall profitability, while in 2002-2003 they caused it to drop. There are naturally uncertainties in such estimates because during the period reviewed, major structural changes were taking place in both individual companies (mergers and acquisitions) and the sector in general. 6.5 PROFITABILITY OF THE INDIAN-BASED PAPER INDUSTRY, BY PRODUCTION UNIT The measurement of the profitability of the paper industry by production unit (mills) in 1998 and 2004, is on the basis of gross margin percentage in which labour costs are deducted from value added (= 151 operating margin + labour costs and rents) and then expressed in relation to value added. Value added comprises the compensation paid for work input and capital (including depreciation). This means that when the indicator goes below zero, operating profit no longer covers labour costs, and value added becomes negative. The aim of analysis is to give an estimate of how much of the capacity (measured by the number of persons employed is below the profitability limit) and to examine structural changes in profitability. The zero limit of this profitability measure is in a way an absolute lower limit for profitability, below which operations cannot be run successfully even in the short term. Sometimes losses can of course be considered as an 'investment' if continuing with loss-making units is essential for the company as a whole. Even if real prices are declining, a company can still keep its profitability at satisfactory levels if it can compensate for the drop in prices with higher productivity. The increases in paper-industry productivity have, however, not been enough to compensate for the impact of lower prices. In sectors that manufacture standard products in a very competitive international environment, prices are determined on the markets and they are, in practice, the same for everyone. Increases in production in countries that have substantially lower production costs than India and other industrialized countries will probably continue to push product prices downwards. 152 Improvements in profitability should be sought in areas in which companies can implement changes, i.e. in productivity and the most important cost items. The sector's profitability depends on the prices of products and production inputs and on how efficiently these are applied (amounts used in the production process), i.e. on the productivity of each input factor. In the 1980s, the Indian paper industry was still investing heavily and its capacity was on the increase. As a result, production grew substantially, overall productivity increased rapidly and unit labour costs dropped. Twenty years later, the situation is the opposite: growth in productivity and production has slowed and profitability is on the decline. These developments are examined thoroughly, which give the changes in profitability, productivity and production prices during the last two decades. There is a clear (statistically significant) link between the three. If prices are solely determined by the markets, the best way to improve profitability is to increase overall productivity or to try to influence the most important cost items. The impact of changes in productivity on profitability can be illustrated as follows: a one per cent annual increase in overall productivity would enable the Indian paper industry to produce the same amount of goods at one per cent lower cost. In a sector with production costs of about US$ 13 billion, this would mean an annual cost reduction of US$ 130 million and thus an improvement in profitability. 153 6.7 COST STRUCTURE The paper industry's cost structure is examined here on the basis of calculations made by the Indian Forest Research Institute. Sources and calculation methods are comparable with each other. The Figure shown below describes the cost structure of the Indian pulp and paper industry, as presented in Indian industrial statistics. Following Table gives the production costs (unit costs) for each tonne of pulp and paper produced and the changes in these costs between 1990 and 2003, by cost category. Figure 5.9 Costs in the pulp and paper industry 154 Table 5.5 Production Costs in the pulp and paper industry per tonne of final products, 1990 and 2003 (US$/tonne, 2003 prices) Expenses 1990 2003 Change % Wood Raw Material 85 65 –24 Stumpage costs 44 21 –52 Harvesting 6 5 –17 Transport of domestic and imported wood in India 11 7 –36 Imported wood at the border 10 14 40 Domestic and Imported chips and sawdust 14 19 36 Other raw materials and supplies 230 165 –28 Minerals and chemicals 44 54 22 Other than minerals and chemicals (pulp, etc) 186 111 –40 Labour 83 74 –11 Salaries 21 18 –14 Wages 45 39 –13 Social Security costs 18 17 –6 Social Security costs for salaries 6 5 –17 Social Security costs for wages 12 11 –8 Energy 43 41 –5 Fuel 3 8 167 Electricity 24 23 –4 Heating 16 9 –44 Other costs 47 145 209 Purchased services (transport & marketing) 21 98 367 Purchased industrial services (repairs/installation works) 14 22 57 Merchandise 4 20 400 Rents 9 4 –56 TOTAL COSTS 489 490 0 Cost of production (export unit value – unit costs of production) 133 196 +47 Production (1000 tonnes) 17852 25006 40 Exports (1000 tonnes) 9485 14381 52 Value of Exports (US$ million) 5900 9866 67 Export unit value (US$/tonne) 622 686 10 Source: Indian Forest Research Institute, New Delhi Statistical yearbook of forestry. 155 As seen in the Table, real unit production costs have remained unchanged during the period in question (about US$ 490/tonne). Despite this, there might have been an improvement in cost efficiency. Figure 5.10 Changes in Forest Industry Cost Structure There has been a continuous changeover to products with a higher value added, for which prices and production costs are higher than for standard products. Thus, in 2003, each tonne of pulp and paper industry products contained a significantly higher proportion of coated printing and writing papers and a lower proportion of grades such as newsprint and other uncoated papers than in the 1990s. These changes are also reflected in the value of exports. During the period in question, the value of paper industry exports grew by 67% in real terms even though production only increased by 40% and prices of final products was declining. 156 There were major changes in the structure of cost items between 1990 and 2003. The most important were the increase in the proportion of 'minerals and chemicals' and the rise in the proportion of services supplied by external providers. The increase in these cost items is illustrated in the above table. These changes are mainly shown in Figure 6.10, which places minerals and chemicals under other raw materials and external services under other costs. The fastest growing external services are information and communications costs, marketing costs and transport costs. Despite a rise in real pay, labour costs as a proportion of total costs decreased by 11% during the period covered. This was because of a drop of almost 20% in the number of employees between the early 1990s and 2003, when the sector employed a total of 36,000 people. Labour costs accounted for 15% of unit costs in 2003. 6.8 CONCLUSIONS There has been a substantial weakening in the profitability of Indian forest industry companies in the last six years. This is mainly because of price trends and currency fluctuations. A combination of declining real product prices and rising costs has pushed profitability downwards. Higher productivity has not been able to compensate for lower prices. The long-term profitability of the Indian paper industry and the forest industry in general (rate of return on investment) has been weaker than in industry as a whole. The gap has been particularly wide since the 157 end of the 1990s. The targeted profitability level (annual rate of return of 12-13%) has only been reached two or three times. The profitability of Indian-based forest industry companies has been weaker than that of foreign businesses even though profitability has been on the decline in all the traditionally strong forest industry countries. Comparison between Indian-based paper production and the most important competitors’ countries leads to similar conclusions. Short-term and medium-term profitability can be improved by raising productivity and by tackling production costs (i.e. by lowering unit costs). It is possible to increase overall productivity by making more effective use of inputs, organizing work and production more effectively and by adopting new working procedures. Changes in the production and product structures will naturally also have an impact on long-term productivity. The most important cost items in the paper industry are raw materials (e.g. wood raw material), labour, energy and external services (such as transport, information technology and communications services). Since the early 1990s, the fastest-growing cost items have been transport and the purchase of external services in connection with information and communications technology. This reflects the growing importance of information technology in general and the globalization of the companies' operations. 158 7. EMPLOYMENT AND PRODUCTIVITY 7.1 EMPLOYMENT The number of people employed by the paper industry in India has been steadily declining for decades. Since the mid-1970s, the total has dropped from about 60,000 to approximately 35,000. The trend has been similar in all major Asian paper-producing countries (such as India and China) and in the United States, and it is likely to continue in the coming years. The long term trend shows that employment in the paper industry in India has been declining more rapidly than employment in industry or the corporate sector as a whole. Annual variations in paper industry employment have not, however, been as substantial as in industry in general, which is, for example, evident from figures for the recession years of the early 1990s. The rate of growth in India-based paper production has slowed down since the late 1990s, which is also reflected in the employment figures. As companies have expanded their international operations, most of the growth in production and employment has taken place in foreign units. Investing abroad is continuing, which means that this will also be the trend in the coming years. A reduction in labour input, the move towards more capital-intensive production and technological changes (overall productivity) have all helped the sector to increase its labour productivity more rapidly than other industries. 159 There are substantial regional differences in the importance of paper production and the forest industry in India in terms of its contribution to employment and to prosperity and wellbeing. In South India, the sector is much more important as a whole. 7.2 PRODUCTIVITY INTERNATIONAL COMPARISONS Sustainable long-term growth in production can only be achieved on the basis of rising productivity. Higher productivity is a major source of growth in real pay and prosperity at sectoral level and in the economy as a whole. In an open world economy, productivity and efficiency are the two most important factors in competitiveness, which means that both employees and employers should work hand in hand to achieve higher productivity. Productivity simply means the ratio of output and production input. Output/ input. Labour productivity is the ratio of output and labour input (hours worked). It is important to note that all production factors, including capital, new technologies, energy, and the raw materials and semi-finished products used have an impact on labour productivity. This means that as production has become more capital-intensive, labour productivity has usually increased in both the paper industry and in other sectors. Overall productivity is the ratio of output and all inputs required to generate it. Overall productivity is an indication of the overall operating efficiency and thus a better way of describing the competitiveness of the sector than the 160 more limited productivity measures. A rapid rise in production and productivity usually go hand in hand and this has also been the case in the Indian paper industry. Expansion of capacity in the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s was accompanied by rapid technological progress and a rise in productivity. The rise in productivity has also had a major impact on profitability. A rapid rise in productivity and the fact that the Indian paper industry has managed to remain at the cutting edge of technological developments have helped to compensate for the competitive disadvantages resulting from a distant location, high transport costs and high raw-material prices. For many years, productivity in India rose more rapidly than in its most important competitor countries. The situation has changed since the late 1990s, however. Investment levels are now about half the average of the preceding two decades. There has been little expansion in production capacity, and no growth in capital stock has meant less technological progress. Productivity is rising more slowly than before and the Indian paper industry is no longer outperforming its competitors in this respect. The rise in labour productivity and overall productivity has slowed down slightly since the late 1990s. During the past six years, higher capital inputs (more capital-intensive production) have no longer helped to increase labour productivity. Until now India has been able to retain its competitive edge through faster productivity growth than its competitors, but the gap is narrowing. 161 7.3 LABOUR PRODUCTIVITY CHANGES IN THE PRODUCTIVITY STRUCTURE OF THE INDIAN PAPER INDUSTRY In the above sections, the focus has been on average paperindustry productivity. There are, however, substantial differences in the level of productivity and in changes in productivity from one production unit (mill) to the next. Productivity at individual units naturally also depends on the production technology and machinery used and on the products manufactured. Following Figures 7.11 and 7.12 examine the value of production per employee at individual production units in 2000 and 2004. They also give unit-specific labour costs, average labour costs for the sector and (average) wear and tear of capital assets (depreciation). The aim is to examine the pressure for structural change. Each production unit should have an output per employee that, in the short term, covers labour costs and, in the long term, the wear and tear of capital assets and other production factors. 162 Figure 5.11 Value of production per employee at individual production units in 2000 Figure 5.12 Value of production per employee at individual production units in 2004 163 Even though the calculations are only approximate and contain a number of uncertainties, the comparison over time gives some idea of the changes in the pattern of productivity. It seems that the proportion of lowproductivity units has increased and that a larger proportion of the capacity is characterized by weak productivity. The figures suggest that there are structural problems in the sector. 7.4 CONCLUSIONS The long-term rise in both labour productivity and overall productivity has been more rapid in the Indian paper industry than in its competitor countries. This has largely been the result of high investment levels and the application of the latest technology. As investment levels have dropped since the late 1990s, productivity growth has also slowed down somewhat. For many years, the Indian paper industry was able to reap competitive advantages from higher productivity growth on the basis of technological superiority. Productivity remains high but the gap between India and its competitors is no longer widening. Competitive advantages and competitiveness must be sought from other sources. In principle, competitiveness depends on prices of inputs and efficiency. Efficiency determines how the available production factors are utilized for achieving a certain level of production. Thus, efficiency is largely dependent on the capacity utilization rate, organization of work, operational flexibility, the use of raw materials and semi-finished products, and logistics. These can all be altered in the short term. In the long term, 164 what is needed are new products, innovation and fundamental changes in production technologies. There can be substantial variation in production efficiency and labour productivity from one production unit to the next and even within companies. There are also differences in employee absences, which has an impact on productivity. Productivity differences between production units will also depend to a certain extent on how up-to-date the production machinery is. Surveys carried out at workplaces indicate that teamwork, better work arrangements and improved management practices can help to improve productivity. 8. WORKING HOURS, LABOUR COSTS, PAY LEVELS AND PAY TRENDS 8.1 SIGNIFICANCE OF LABOUR INPUT AND LABOUR COSTS Over the past 30 years, labour costs have accounted for an average of about 15% of the value of production and slightly more than one half of the value added in the Indian paper industry, as against 14% and 46% in 2004. These percentages vary significantly within the different sectors of the paper industry. In the main sectors of the industry, the average proportion of production value accounted for by labour costs (turnover) is as follows: o Pulp industry: 8% o Paper and board manufacture: 15% o Paper converting: 30%. 165 Despite the significant growth in production, the number of employees directly employed by the paper industry has declined fairly steadily in recent decades. In 1975, the industry employed about 60,000 people, while in 2004 the number was only 35,500. The decline derives from the fact that labour productivity in the industry has grown faster than production. As the paper industry operates in only a limited number of locations in India, the local significance in terms of employment and pay is great, as is the indirect impact on employment. The percentage of waged employees in the paper industry has been declining for some time; today, they account for about 70% of all personnel and about 70% of the total payroll. Social security contributions paid by the employer are about one fifth of all labour costs. Intermediate product inputs purchased by the paper industry also include pay and other labour costs. In the entire processing chain whether for the whole industry or for a single paper mill - pay therefore accounts for a considerably higher percentage than the 15% referred to above. In terms of the national economy as a whole, pay and employers' social security contributions are about 60% of the net national income and capital expenditure is about 40%. There is very little that a single industry can do to influence these figures. However, the skills and expertise of paper industry employees can affect the prices of these inputs and the structure and efficiency of the way they are used. 166 The favourable trend in labour productivity in the paper industry has contributed to higher real earnings and shorter actual working hours without increasing the proportion of total production value accounted by labour costs. Based on national accounts, the estimated average annual working hours have dropped by about 150 hours (around 10%) in the past 30 years, while real annual earnings in the industry have doubled over the same period. Because India is a technological leader in the paper industry, productivity has risen sharply and the terms of employment have improved against international benchmarks. An essential part of this trend has been the improvement in skills and expertise of employees in the industry. In an international context, the pay level in the Indian paper industry is among the highest in the sector and the annual working hours are among the shortest in any of the other industrialized countries. In relation to other industrial sectors in India, the terms of employment in the paper industry have improved in recent decades. 167 Figure 5.13 Capacity utilization rates on labour productivity Development in the paper industry is typically affected by significant cyclical fluctuations, which affect plant capacity utilization rates, productivity and price trends. Above figure illustrates the clear impact of capacity utilization rates on labour productivity. The slight drop in labour productivity at the beginning of this millenium was largely due to lower capacity utilization rates. In 2004, productivity rose above the projected trend, despite the fact that capacity utilization rates remained lower than at the end of the 1990s. 168 The rise in nominal labour costs per employee corresponds with the productivity trend but has proved steadier. The rise in real labour costs has been slower than the rise in productivity per employee. While the increase in real earnings has been slow compared with the increase in productivity, the figure for labour costs as a proportion of production value has not fallen because average real prices for paper products have declined. In the case of conventional paper products, the decline in prices is partly based on the overall trend and partly on the cyclical oversupply in the Asian market. The falling prices have reduced profitability of the industry in the last few years. Companies and employees both view pay and pay levels differently: for companies, these are part of production costs; for employees, pay is their income for work performed. Pay can also be examined in terms of total labour costs (pay and indirect labour costs) and purchasing power. From a company's point of view, what matters most is the unit labour cost, i.e. the ratio of all labour costs to production volume. This includes both the amount and price of the labour input and the output obtained, i.e. productivity. From the employees' point of view, the most important thing is the purchasing power they obtain through their earnings. Both views recognize the importance of high, rapidly growing productivity. Achieving high productivity in relation to competitors allows a good level of profitability and thus has implications for pay. Profitability depends on other factors as well, however. 169 In an open world economy, long-term profitability for companies, countries and regions alike should not be allowed to fluctuate too widely. Profitability is defined as the difference between sales income and the costs necessary for generating that income. One such cost factor is labour costs, the significance of which varies from one sector of the paper industry to another. Personnel are one of the most important factors in the competitiveness of a company or industrial sector. Their skills, training and motivation have a considerable impact on the productive and efficient use of the other factors of production technology, machinery, raw materials. This is illustrated by the fact that the amount of the labour input or labour costs for each tonne produced vary a great deal between production units, however similar, regardless of whether these companies operate in India or globally. The production processes in the paper industry are very similar in all major paper producing countries, since the machinery and technology are the same and require much the same skills from the employees. In fact, the differences found in the use of labour inputs or unit labour costs relate to the lengths and arrangements of working hours. Because paper machines have to run without interruption, these arrangements are fairly important in the paper industry. The continuous shift system has been adopted at all plants but is applied in different forms; because working hours vary, the number of shifts varies from four to six (survey by MT-Palvelut Oy). 170 Absence rates, too, affect the number of actual working hours as there are considerable differences between production units, between occupational groups and between countries. Labour costs are also affected by the price of the labour input (hours worked), which consists of pay and indirect labour costs. The latter are divided into statutory costs, costs based on collective agreements, and voluntary costs, which all vary greatly from one country to another. All the above issues related to working hours, labour costs, earnings and pay formation are discussed in more detail in the following section, which presents international comparisons, comparisons between the paper industry and other industries in India, and overviews of trends in the Indian paper industry over the past few decades. 8.2 WORKING HOURS The comparisons of working hours presented here are based on a survey conducted by Indian Forestry Department, which is an updated, more complete version of two earlier surveys. With regard to India, the survey is based on a time use survey carried out in 2004 by the Confederation of Indian Industries; for other countries, the information was gathered through a separate survey from units of Indian forest industry companies in India and other Asian countries. The concept of working hours is quite a problematic one since different countries have different practices related to e.g. annual holidays, public holidays or overtime. The starting point used for these comparisons 171 was the theoretical annual working hours, where the employees' only absences are their annual holidays and holidays provided by collective agreements - in other words, the number of hours worked by a full-time employee who has earned the full amount of annual holiday and other holidays and who has not done any overtime or been absent from work. Adding overtime to the number of theoretical working hours and deducting absences due to sickness or accidents gives us the number of actual working hours. The comparisons must of course be treated with caution, as the control groups, for instance, are relatively small and the concepts used may not be entirely consistent, despite the efforts to make them so. In India, the annual working hours figure was 1,732 hours in 2004, which takes account of the 56 hours of public holidays during that year. The Indian figure does not reflect the possible shortening of the hours whenever shifts or hours are changed; this would only show in the actual number of working hours. Under a continuous three-shift system, the differences between the countries compared are greater than in daytime work. The shortest hours are, again, in India. Furthermore, the amount of overtime is lowest and the amount of absences due to sickness or accidents highest in India, which emphasizes the extent of difference between theoretical and actual working hours in India in comparison with the difference in other countries. The number of working hours under a continuous shift system may be the 172 same as in daytime work. In many other countries or production units, however, employers and employees have agreed on working hours that are shorter than those in daytime work. The concept of overtime is interpreted differently in different countries. This survey merely focuses on how much is done in addition to the theoretical working hours, not whether the employees are paid extra for this. The principles of gathering data on absences due to sickness or accidents also vary from one country to another, which makes comparisons difficult. Sometimes these differences are based on whether compensation for the period of absence is paid by the company, through the company's own insurance scheme or through a national scheme. Another problem is long absences, which may have a significant impact in smaller production units. With regard to India, the time use survey by the Confederation of Indian Industries only provides data on all employees as a whole and not according to different working hour’s arrangements. With these reservations taken into account, we may conclude that rates of absence due to sickness or accidents in India are significantly higher than in the other comparison groups. 173