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Schemes without reach expose failure of policy implementation

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Schemes without reach expose failure of policy implementation

At the core of the issue lies a structural failure in coordinated governance.

Ease of Doing Business is not achieved through isolated departmental functioning but through an integrated administrative approach where policies are actively translated into tangible benefits.

This responsibility, in J&K, rests primarily with the Industries and Commerce Department.

However, instead of functioning as a facilitator and coordinator, the department’s role has largely remained confined to routine administrative processing.

At the national level, the Government of India has developed an extensive ecosystem of schemes and reforms aimed at strengthening Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSMEs), promoting exports, easing regulatory compliance, and enhancing competitiveness.

Multiple central ministries including the Ministry of MSME, Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change, Ministry of Finance, the Reserve Bank of India, and the Ministry of Food Processing Industries have introduced targeted interventions designed to reduce operational costs, improve access to finance, simplify procedures, and stimulate industrial growth.

These initiatives form the backbone of the Ease of Doing Business framework. However, their success is contingent upon proactive adoption and execution at the state or Union Territory level.

In J&K, this crucial link appears to be missing.

The Industries and Commerce Department is not merely expected to remain informed about these schemes, it is duty-bound to actively secure their benefits for local industry.

This includes identifying eligible sectors, facilitating applications, coordinating with central ministries, ensuring co-funding wherever required, and maintaining follow-up until measurable outcomes are achieved. Yet, there is little evidence to suggest that such a systematic approach has been undertaken.

A key example is the cluster development programme under the Ministry of MSME, which offers substantial financial assistance for creating common infrastructure and facilities.

Designed specifically for regions with dispersed industrial units like Jammu and Kashmir, such schemes could have significantly strengthened local industry. However, their large-scale adoption remains absent.

Equally critical is the department’s responsibility to ensure inter-departmental coordination within the local administrative framework.

It is expected to actively engage with other departments and push for the adoption of central reforms and guidelines relevant to industrial growth.

This convergence is not optional, it is fundamental to industrial facilitation.

For instance, reforms introduced by the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change, particularly those related to pollution control and regulation of wood-based industries, require active implementation at the local level.

In the absence of coordinated effort, such reforms remain confined to official notifications without translating into practical relief for businesses.

Similarly, financial sector reforms and credit facilitation measures introduced by the Ministry of Finance and the Reserve Bank of India are aimed at easing access to capital for MSMEs.

However, these require continuous engagement with banks and financial institutions at the regional level.

Without intervention from the sponsoring department, enterprises continue to face credit constraints, delays, and in some cases, coercive recovery actions, despite the presence of supportive national frameworks.

Beyond facilitation and coordination, awareness-building remains another critical gap.

A significant portion of MSMEs in Jammu and Kashmir remain unaware of schemes and incentives available to them. Dissemination of information, handholding of entrepreneurs, and creation of institutional support systems are essential functions of a department entrusted with industrial promotion.

However, this aspect remains weak, further widening the disconnect between policy and practice.

The cumulative impact of these shortcomings is substantial.

Local industries have been deprived of financial assistance, infrastructure development has lagged, regulatory bottlenecks persist, and access to markets and technology remains limited.

Businesses are effectively operating in an environment where support mechanisms exist on paper but are inaccessible in reality.

The contrast with other states is stark. Regions that have actively engaged with central ministries, aggressively pursued available schemes, and ensured administrative convergence have recorded tangible industrial growth.

Jammu and Kashmir, despite its unique challenges and special considerations, has failed to position itself within this framework, not due to lack of opportunity, but due to lack of initiative.

The responsibility for this systemic failure rests squarely with the Industries and Commerce Department.

As the designated sponsoring authority, it was expected to act as a facilitator, coordinator, and enabler.

Instead, its engagement has remained largely passive, lacking the strategic direction required to leverage national support systems effectively.

Experts underline that Ease of Doing Business cannot be built on policy announcements alone.

It requires institutions that actively pursue implementation, coordinate across departments, and ensure delivery at the ground level.

In the absence of these functions, the concept itself loses credibility.

In J&K, the widening gap between what is available and what is actually accessed continues to highlight the shortcomings of a system that was intended to bridge precisely this divide.

Greater Kashmir