Indian automobile industry can contribute over
12 per cent to the country’s GDP and generate around 6.5 crore additional jobs
over the next decade, a top Maruti Suzuki India official said on Wednesday.
“Our vision is that over the next decade, the
Indian automobile sector must contribute in excess of 12 per cent of the
country’s GDP. We (auto industry) want to create nearly 65 million additional
jobs by 2026,” Maruti Suzuki India Managing Director and CEO Kenichi Ayukawa on
Wednesday said at an event here.
Currently, the automobile industry is
contributing 7.1 per cent to the GDP of India and around 3.2 crore people are
employed directly and indirectly by the sector, he added.
Ayukawa said in the last ten years, the total
investment by the automobile industry in the country has been to the tune of 35
billion dollars.
“Our responsibility towards the communities
where we are operating also increases. It’s our duty to develop a sustainable,
mutually beneficial and inclusive socio-economic ecosystem,” he said.
He added that in order to grow the industry, we
will have to focus on areas like congestion, air pollution, global warming and
road accidents.
“Our aim is to be among the top three global
automobile markets. This will only happen if we create safe, efficient and
environment-friendly vehicles,” Ayukawa said.
Seeking more focus of the government on
licensing norms and enforcement of road safety rules in the country, he added
that such initiatives would help to achieve a more purposeful impact on the
society.
“Without robust licensing norms and
enforcement, efforts of the industry in driving training falls short,” Ayukawa
said.
He added that long before the new Companies Act
asked corporates to invest in CSR, many of its members had been already engaged
in various CSR initiatives.
“We have been specially focused in the fields
of village development, skill training, safeguarding the environment and road
safety. Now the time has come when we all get together as one entity to draft
and implement an ‘Industry Social Responsibility Plan’ so that we can have a
bigger positive impact,” he said.
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