"The capital goods policy was cleared by Prime Minister Narendra Modi last week," Geete told PTI.
The policy envisages increasing exports to 40 per cent of production, from the current 27 per cent, while increasing the share of domestic production in India's demand to 80 per cent from 60 per cent, potentially making India a net exporter of capital goods.
"The capital goods sector is currently going through many challenges and issues and to address those challenges, the government has launched the comprehensive policy document, the National Capital Goods Policy, today," Geete said at a Make in India week seminar in Mumbai.
It also aims to facilitate improvement in technology depth across sub-sectors, increase skill availability, ensure mandatory standards and promote growth and capacity building of MSMEs.
Key policy recommendations include strengthening the existing scheme of the Department of Heavy Industry on enhancement of competitiveness of the capital goods sector by increasing budgetary allocation and increasing its scope to further boost global competitiveness.
The policy recommends integration of key capital goods sub-sectors as well.
For good measure, it advocates launching a Technology Development Fund under the PPP model to fund technology acquisition, transfer of technology, purchase of IPRs, designs and drawings as well as commercialisation of such technologies of capital goods.
The policy also suggests creation of a 'Start-up Center for Capital Goods Sector' to provide an array of technical, business and financial support resources and services to promising start-ups in manufacturing and services.
The policy also calls for mandatory standardisation, which includes defining minimum acceptable standards for the industry and adoption of International Organization for Standardization norms.
