Institute for Competitiveness (India) the Indian knot in the global network of the Institute for Strategy and Competitiveness at Harvard Business School has initiated the India Council on Competitiveness. The Council, created in collaboration with the U.S. Council on Competitiveness; is based in Gurgaon, India and is an association of distinguished members from industry, academia, think tanks, media and researchers. The mission of the India Council is to set an action agenda to drive Indian competitiveness, productivity and leadership in world markets to raise the standard of living for all Indians
1. India Council on Competitiveness
MD’s, Presidents, CXO’s University
Chancellors, Vice Chancellors and Civil Society
leaders working to ensure Indian Prosperity
2. Formation: India Council on Competitiveness
• Institute for Competitiveness, India establishes the India Council on Competitiveness in
collaboration with the U.S. Council on Competitiveness
• Institute for Competitiveness, India is the Indian knot in the global network of the Institute for
Strategy and Competitiveness at Harvard Business School. Institute for Competitiveness, India is
an international initiative centered in India, dedicated to enlarging and purposeful
disseminating of the body of research and knowledge on competition and strategy, as
pioneered over the last 25 years by Professor Michael Porter of the Institute for Strategy and
Competitiveness at Harvard Business School. Institute for Competitiveness, India conducts and
supports indigenous research, offers academic and executive courses, and provides advisory
services to the Corporate and the Governments. The institute studies competition and its
implications for company strategy; the competitiveness of nations, regions & cities and thus
generate guidelines for businesses and those in governance; and suggests and provides
solutions for socio-economic problems
• The US Council on Competitiveness was founded in 1986 and is the only group of corporate
CEOs, university presidents and labor leaders committed to the future prosperity of all
Americans and enhanced U.S. competitiveness in the global economy through the creation of
high-value economic activity in the United States
3. Formation: India Council on Competitiveness
“I am so pleased to see India start up its own Competitiveness Council and bring together the ranks of its top
industry, university leaders and other top delegates with the goal of focusing on India’s productivity and
prosperity”
“Similar to the U.S. Council, the Indian body will be committed to addressing the issues pertaining to India’s
competitiveness in a multidisciplinary manner. It will surely build strategic partnerships with both the public and
private sectors; and it will ensure a stronger and more prosperous India in this ever- changing and competitive
global environment”
– Honorable Deborah L. Wince-Smith
“We are truly delighted to set up the Indian Council on Competitiveness in collaboration with the U.S. Council on
Competitiveness, the Council is being constituted in this country at a time when there is an imperative need for
an apex body to drive the competitiveness of the country in the right direction ”
– Dr. Amit Kapoor
“Launch of this Council really pleases me, its unique structure and will enable us to form a collective voice under
its banner, this also puts in motion a set of collective action with a pro business, pro sustainable growth and
prosperity intention with the mutual interest of organizations and leaders on both sides.”
– Wilfried Aulbur, Chairman, India Council on Competitiveness
4. India Council on Competitiveness
• The council is a non-profit undertaking and intends to remain a non-partisan, non-
governmental organization that aims to influence the change through debates, discussions and
interaction
• This Council is not intended to be a lobbying group
• The only group of corporate CXOs, University Chancellors and Vice Chancellors and Civil
Society leaders committed to the future prosperity of all Indians and enhanced Indian
competitiveness
• To drive Indian competitiveness, together we work to set an action agenda
• Council is a unique effort of bringing a cross section of private sector leaders aimed at
generating and suggesting innovative public policy solutions, corporate actions, setting research
agendas for a more prosperous India
• Council actively seeks to engage in partnerships with organizations as well as individuals both
in the private sector and the government to mutually benefit its agendas to strengthen the
position of all parties
5. Pillars of competitiveness
Competitiveness is determined by the level of productivity of our country. Pillars here are the
components through which we will measure and monitor the increase and decrease in
competitiveness
• Driving Innovative Entrepreneurship
• Development of Skills
• Upgrading India’s Infrastructural framework
• Fostering Sustainability
• India’s increased engagement within the Global Economy
• Managing Risk and attaining Balance
• Reducing income inequality and enhancing social inclusion and progress
6. Membership Benefits
• Council aims to remain committed to enhance India’s competitiveness via a pro-growth agenda to capitalize
on its unique strengths as well as address India’s challenges, members get to be a part of this leaders’ cohort
• Council’s eminent membership’s ability to forge strategic partnerships across the private and public sectors
• Members get an opportunity to add their voice to a movement seeking to shape our nation’s strategy on
issues as well as suggest possible solutions
• Amplification of the voice via Council’s platform
• Access to one-of-kind partnership and networking possibilities through invitation only dialogues process,
conferences and events both within India and abroad
• Insightful thought leadership from their peers, as well as staff
• All initiatives will comprise of debates, discussions, dialogues and conferences which lead to publications in
form of whitepaper, reports and clarion call
• Association of the member to a cause which aims to see prosperous India
• Representation within the council is spread across all the sectors of the economy, which allows for a wide
and a distinct benefit for all members
7. Requirements from the Members
• The Council’s activities are funded by contributions from its members, foundations and project
contributions
• Membership to the council is renewable every year and is charged an annual fee of $50,000
for founding members, $20,000 Multinational Corporations, Multi Location Firms,
Conglomerates, Diversified Enterprises, Trade bodies, $10,000 for Indian organizations,
Country Embassies, $5000 for Educational Institutes, Think Tanks, International Bodies and
$2500 for Thought Leaders, Thinkers and Distinguished Individuals
• Council membership is invitational, based on a criterion and is offered to leaders who have
shown stewardship in their business interests as well as the communities in which they
operate
• Insightful leadership and ability to impart wealth of knowledge to their peers and guide the
council raise issues, offer opinions, solutions as well as help the council action them
• Set forth a collective action to increase India’s competitiveness, productivity and prosperity
8. Role of the Executive Members
• The Council’s Executive members (14 Industrial Vice Chairs + 3 Civil Society + 3 University
Leaders) would be expected to drive the research agenda for the Council in their respective
industries
• Executive members would act as the bridge between the board members and the general
member and offer the assistance to the board with their agenda
• Executive members need to be proactive in their functioning and indulge themselves with
consensus building activities within their industry’s purview and other members
• Collectively Executive members would guide and assist the Council’s Board in its smooth
functioning
• Decide the research work, and subsequently decide what needs to be published, the number
of publications, the methods and ways in which dissemination of the publicized reports
9. Role of the Executive Members
• Collectively set the future agenda to decide and align the activities of the Council with the Key
Initiatives and propagate the implementation of competitiveness pillars to their respective
industries.
• Guide and direct the collective action for the corporates, university leaders and civil societies
to increase the competitiveness to drive a prosperous India
• They will also be expected to play a role in deciding the future membership within the Council
• Executive members on the Council will also be entrusted to elect the Board on the Council
• Board members will guide and offer direction to the research agenda for the council helping
the council enable the vision for a Pro Growth India
12. Structure of the council
• Membership will be tripartite focused majorly constituting CXOs, University Chancellors, Vice
Chancellors and Civil Society leaders
• The Council is headed by a Board of 6 members which will be closely supported by an Elected
membership of 14 Industry vice chairs + 3 University Chancellors, Vice Chancellors + 3 Civil
Society Leaders
• Board will comprise of a Chair, Industry Chair, University Chair, Civil Society Chair, President and
CEO; and Member
• General membership would be limited to only representatives of their respective organization,
with the focus to include the tripartite
• Council would also invite National Lab Associations for partnership as well as affiliations at
various level
13. Structure of the council
Representation for the executive membership for Industry would be classified as:
• Finance, Banking & Insurance
• Healthcare, Pharmaceutical & Social Assistance
• Information, Telecom & Data Processing
• Food & Beverage
• Education, Training & Educational Services
• Retail & Wholesale
• Utilities, Electricity, Gas, Water & Power
• Arts, Entertainment & Recreation
• Construction, Real Estate & Steel
• Petroleum, Chemicals & Plastics
• Transportation, Logistics & Aviation
• Textiles & Apparels
• Computers & Electrical Appliances
• Tourism & Hospitality
14. Areas of Focus - Initiatives
• Manufacturing
– Technological advancements in
Manufacturing
– Competing China?
– Environmental Impact of India’s
manufacturing growth
• Energy
– Sustained Energy Security
• Education
– Need for a relook at our Education
system
• Innovation
– Develop and Protect Intellectual
Property
– Starting startups and fostering
entrepreneurship
– Waste Management
• Agriculture
– Maximizing productivity and optimizing
irrigation
– Enabling the use of technology
• Healthcare
– Rethinking Healthcare
• Global India
– Where India Stands
– A collaborative effort to improve India’s
position in the world
– Improving the state of doing business in
India
15. India’s National Competitiveness Forum 2017
India Council of Competitiveness organized its flagship event, India’s National Competitiveness Forum (NCF) on
May 25, 2017 at Taj Palace, SP Marg, New Delhi in collaboration with NITI Aayog.
The event comprised of intriguing keynotes and exciting panels that touched upon the ideas of state
competitiveness, ease of doing business, enhancing the quality of life of Indian citizens, competitive federalism,
smart cities et al. Professor. Porter shed light on the idea of competitiveness and how corporates play a part in
enhancing the prosperity of the nation.
16. National Competitiveness Forum 2017: A look
Keynote by Hon’ble Shri. Piyush Goyal
Minister of State with Independent
Charge for Power, Coal, New and
Renewable Energy and Mines, GOI
Keynote by Michael Porter, Professor, Harvard Business School
17. National Competitiveness Forum 2017: A look
Panel Discussion on: How India can enhance
its competitiveness
Keynote by Wilfried Aulbur, Managing
Partner, Roland Berger Pvt Ltd
Keynote by Santhosh Babu, MD, OD
Alternatives
18. National Competitiveness Forum 2017: A look
Keynote by Bibek Debroy, Member, NITI
Aayog
Michael Green, CEO, Social Progress
Imperative & Michael Porter, Professor,
Harvard Business School
Keynote by Amitabh Kant, CEO, NITI
Aayog
19. National Competitiveness Forum 2017: A look
Naveen Jindal, Chairman, JSPL In
Conversation with Michael Porter
Panel Discussion on Social Progress
Keynote by Supriya Shrinate Michael Green in Conversation with
Shri. Amitabh Kant
20. India’s National Competitiveness Forum 2016
India Council of Competitiveness organized its flagship event, India’s National Competitiveness Forum (NCF) on
September 30, 2016 at The Leela, Ambience Island, Gurgaon.
The theme for the forum was innovation and competitiveness. Today it is very important to understand the
fundamental drivers of the innovation in the Indian context specifically at the level of states. The forum was a
discussion platform to understand the underlying levers that can act to increase or impede the trajectory of India’s
growth and competitiveness.
21. National Competitiveness Forum 2016: A look
Keynote by Arvind Virmani, Former Chief
Economic Advisor, Govt of India
Keynote by Wilfried Aulbur, Managing
Partner, Roland Berger Pvt Ltd
Keynote by Ravi Venkatesan, Chairman,
Bank of Baroda
Keynote by Santhosh Babu, MD, OD
Alternatives
Keynote by Maarten
Koomans, CEO,
Reframing health
22. National Competitiveness Forum 2016: A look
Innovation, Intellectual Property and Value
Creation in association with IIM Indore
Role of Innovation in State Competitiveness, Competitive
Advantage of firms, and Rise of New Industries
Social Progress & Shared Value Strategy, Business Models, Trade-offs & Fit
23. Roundtable on Increasing Access to Healthcare in India
Held on September 1, 2016 at Maurya Shearton, New Delhi
24. Dialogue on Economics of Prosperity and Strategy in India
Held on July 19, 2016 at The Imperial, New Delhi
Keynote by Bibek Debroy, Member, Niti
Aayog
Keynote by Shankar Singham, Director of Economic Policy
and Prosperity Studies, Legatum Institute
Keynote by Srinivasa Rangan, Luksic Chair Professor of
Strategy and Global Studies, Babson College
Q&A with Bibek Debroy by
Anil Padmanabhan
25. Dialogue on Economics of Prosperity and Strategy in India
Panel Discussion – Role of Corporations in
Enhancing Prosperity
Panel Discussion – Competing in Imperfect
Markets: Lessons from India
Wilfried Aulbur, Managing Partner, Roland
Berger Strategy Consultants
26. The dialogue draws from conceptual antecedents from the work of the Institute on understanding state competitiveness
in India with particular emphasis on innovative capacity for Karnataka. The purpose is also to benchmark the
performance of Karnataka with other developing regions in India and help create a roadmap or give suggestions for
enabling Karnataka to be a state that foster innovative activity. These insights will help the policy makers to gain insights
from corporates that could enable growth within the state.
Dialogue on Karnataka’s Competitiveness: September 30, 2015
27. The event, a discussion platform, aimed to set the agenda for India’s growth and competitiveness by engaging top
leaders, renowned thinkers and selected government leaders. The leaders made deliberations on the state of India’s
competitiveness and other pressing issues. This year the conference focused on issues pertaining to Make In India,
Manufacturing Competitiveness, Doing Business in India, Best Locations for Make in India, Social Progress, Creating
Shared Value et al. The agenda was fairly robust agenda for interaction, sharing knowledge, and highlighting strategic
issues through the deliberations.
India’s National Competitiveness Forum 2015
28. National Competitiveness Forum 2015: A look
Held on September 25, 2015 at The Leela, Ambience Island, Gurgaon
Keynote by Wilfried Aulbur, MD, Roland
Berger Strategy Consultants
Keynote by Michael Enright, Director,
Enright Scott & Associates
Keynote by Rajiv Bajaj, Chairman,
Bajaj Auto
Keynote by Terence Tse
29. National Competitiveness Forum 2015: A look
Held on September 25, 2015 at The Leela, Ambience Island, Gurgaon
India’s present Manufacturing Capability,
Future Potential and the way forward
Succeeding in a tough environment &
the best locations for Make in India
Enhancing Manufacturing Capability in
the Defence Sector
Future of Manufacturing in Global
Economy
30. The event designed as a novel platform to deliberate on the CSR and Sustainability issues crucial to organizations
from the perspective of implementation challenges, solutions and opportunities. It envisages on building up a
case for innovative work on CSR & Sustainability by holding deliberations and discussions on success stories,
case studies of successful companies.
Keynote Speech by Ashok Kumar
Pavadia, Adviser & Additional
Secretary, Inter State Council
Secretariat, Ministry of Home Affairs
Special address by Dr.
Nipun Vinayak, Deputy
Secretary, Ministry of
Drinking Water &
Sanitation, GOI
Special address by Richie
Ahuja, Regional Director, EDF
The event was held on May 7, 2015 at The Leela, Ambience, Island, Gurgaon
Sustainability Summit: Creating Social Impact through Corporate Efforts
31. Panel Discussion on “Addressing
Environmental Issues through CSR Initiatives”
Panel Discussion on “Change in India Inc
Outlook towards CSR & Sustainability”
Panel Discussion on “CSR Implementation:
Partnerships key to successful CSR initiatives”
Sustainability Summit: Creating Social Impact through Corporate Efforts
32. National Competitiveness Forum 2014
• India’s National Competitiveness Forum, the flagship event of India
Council on Competitiveness held on September 26, 2014 at
Radisson Blu Plaza in New Delhi was a huge success. The day
started with an opening address and keynotes. Followed by
thought provoking panel discussions and other deliberations by
influential leaders.
• Sessions were held around the theme of Economic geography and
Competitiveness, Technology and Competitiveness, Enabling
Industrial Development, Realigning Institutions and
Competitiveness Decoder
• Influential leaders such as Pirojshaw Sarkari (CEO, Mahindra
Logistics), Kevin Stolarick (Director, India Institute for
Competitiveness, Toronto), Girish Nayak (CTO, ICICI Lombard),
Gerd Hoefner (MD, Siemens), Nagendra Palle (CEO, Mahindra First
Choice Wheels), Angara Venkara Girjia Kumar (CEO, National
Insurance Company Limited) and Anita Arjundas (CEO, Real Estate
Sector and Managing Director, Mahindra Lifespace Developers) et
al were some of the other panelists.
33. CTO Interaction 2014
• CTO Interaction is a meeting of eminent CTO’s gathering
under the Council’s banner to discuss upon the state of
India’s Innovation and technology. It was held on August
26, 2014 in Bengaluru.
• CTO Interaction is an initiative by the council to provide
leading technology, innovation enthusiasts to opine on key
important issues, challenges and opportunity that lies
ahead for India.
• CTO’s ranging from established multinational to upcoming
cutting edge organizations and technology brokers within
the country attended the event.
• The aim was to bring forward views and opinions of the
experts in the field, who have, with their experiences,
managed to understand and play a part in taking charge of
country’s innovation.
34. Interaction with Navi Radjou
• Learning sessions are being conducted in association
with ‘Thinkers’. The first among the series was held on
December 8, 2014 with Navi Radjou.
• Navi Radjou is an independent thought leader and
strategy consultant based in Silicon Valley. He is an
internationally recognized voice of business innovation
and leadership.
• He delivered a talk on “How to profit from the global
ingenuity economy?.” He discussed how new
technologies (mobility, social media, Internet of Things,
3D printing) and groundswell socio-economic
movements (e.g., sharing and circular economy, maker
movement) are dramatically lowering the cost of
innovation worldwide. Using real-life case studies, he
showed how companies could reinvent their strategy,
culture, and leadership to succeed in the emerging
global ingenuity economy.
35. Interaction with Stuart L. Hart
• A breakfast session and a workshop was conducted in
association with ‘Thinkers’ on December 8, 2014 with
Stuart L. Hart
• Stuart L. Hart is the Steven Grossman Endowed Chair in
Sustainable Business at the University of Vermont
Business School and the Samuel C. Johnson Chair
Emeritus in Sustainable Global Enterprise and Professor
Emeritus of Management at Cornell University’s
Johnson School of Management. He is also President of
Enterprise for a Sustainable World, Founder of the Base
of the Pyramid Global Network and Co-Founder of the
Emergent Institute in Bangalore, India.
• In his workshop for executive teams, he helped them to
develop a framework that enables a constructive
discussion about how best to incorporate the emerging
challenges associated with sustainability into core
business strategy
36. Supported Initiatives
• Social Progress India: The project aims to provide help for the basic and aspirational needs
of their citizens. The Council would thus be actively looking to rapidly expand this
conversation to reach a critical mass of interested and qualified communities looking to
bring the same rigor to social and environmental progress as to economic growth and
business competitiveness.
• Shared Value: The initiative would help to drive the adoption, implementation and practice
of shared value strategies amongst leading companies, civil society and government
organizations. This helps them not only earn profits but also solve critical problems facing
communities.
• MobiPrize India: It will offer a global platform for the new ideas / innovations / projects
and ventures that are creating positive change in the mobility space. Launched jointly by
SMART and the Institute for Competitiveness in association with the council, it would
celebrate and reward the ventures and ideas that are changing or strengthening the
transportation systems in the Indian context.