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The key takeaways from the passage are that the Indian textile industry is a major employer and exporter but faces issues related to outdated technology, lack of standardization and coordination between training programs and industry needs.

Some of the main challenges faced by the textile industry in India include outdated machinery and technology, lack of awareness about global trends among designers, lack of specialized management training for roles like marketing, and lack of coordination between training programs and industry skill requirements.

Some of the government initiatives to support the textile industry mentioned are the Strategic Plan for Textiles and Clothing sector for 2011–16 which emphasizes research and development, the Integrated Skill Development Scheme to train workers, and encouraging public-private partnerships for training institutes.

- With the evolution of the lifestyle of Indias urban consumers, their clothing requirements

have broadened from being mere home wear, office wear to special occasion and functional wear. Households are now
also looking forward to decorating homes by giving them annual makeovers by changing the furnishings of curtains and
bed linen. Increase in disposable income has doubled the domestic household expenditure on clothing from INR1.08
lakh crores in 200405 to INR 2.06 lakh crores in 201011 (at current prices)
- Demand from foreign markets such as the US and EU are large and continue to
dominate the sector. Emerging markets with potential demand include Canada, Australia, Japan, South Africa and the
Middle East.
- The Ministry of Textiles, Government of India, has appointed eight textile research
institutes across various clusters. The government funds 75 percent of research projects in these institutions and the
rest should be raised by implementing agencies.

Increase in disposable income has doubled the The cost of production of yarn and fabric in India is
domestic household expenditure on clothing from lesser than other countries such as, the US, Italy and
INR1.08 lakh crores in 200405 to INR 2.06 lakh China
crores in 201011 (at current prices)
India has an advantage in raw material production
Foreign demand or exports from India has grown by costs, as it is between 5080 percent of the total
eight times in the last decade manufacturing cost for competitors such as China

The annual total investments in textiles and Textiles and clothing strategic plan 201116 to
clothing sector increased from INR 59500 crores in achieve manufacturing growth rate by 10 percent,
200102 to INR 2 lakh crores in 201112, growing exports by 15 percent in 2016
at an average rate of 12.8 percent per annum.
Integrated Skill Development Scheme to spend INR
There has been an increase in investments in 1900 crores to train 1.5 million workers in the textiles
apparels and garments sub-sector

India is the second-largest producer and exporter of textiles and clothing in the world. As of 2012, the textiles sub-sector
contributed to 4 percent of Indias GDP and 11 percent of the total Indian exports, primarily driven by the availability of raw
materials such as natural fibre mainly cotton, silk and jute.

The textile sub-sector in India is characterised by small-scale, non-integrated spinning, weaving, finishing, and apparel-
making enterprises. This structure arose due to policies on tax, labour and other regulations that favoured small-scale,
labour-intensive enterprises, while discriminating against large-scale, capital-intensive operations. Small-scale
unorganised players dominate the sector which lacks stringent regulations.

Sources: KPMG in India analysis


ii
15.23 million persons are 1981660
employed in the Textile and 2323820 85.28% 1689195
clothing sector, Of these, 2.3
million are employed in
factories
292465

342160 152665
Garments 8.04
183065
million (52.78%)

Home textiles and technical


textiles 3.1 million (20.35%)
Total factory Workers Direct Indirect Non Supervisory Others
employment workers workers workers &
Yarn and fabric 4.09 managerial
(26.78%)

Source: Annual Survey of Industries 2010-11, Ministry of Statistics and Planning, Government of India, as accessed on 6 February 2014

96246 19340 72909


83953
14178 55534

148214 107678
36573
125762 636842
926591

Direct Indirect Direct Indirect Direct Indirect


Supervisors Others Supervisors Others Supervisors Others

Source: Annual Survey of Industries 2010-11, Ministry of Statistics and Planning, Government of India, as accessed on 6 February 2014
Factory workers comprise people that are directly employed, indirectly employed (contract-based), or in supervisory or
managerial roles, among others.

Directly and indirectly employed workers are chiefly engaged in the roles of machinists, tailors, spinners, weavers,
dyers and others. Thirty-one percent of the total employees in textile factories of India are engaged in preparing fibres
and spinning yarn.

The other product category that has the highest number of workers includes wearing apparels and garments
(excluding articles of fur). About 10.05 percent of the workers are engaged in manufacturing knitted and crocheted
apparels, 11.28 percent in finishing textile products (bleaching, dyeing and printing) and about 9 percent in weaving
fabrics. Only about 6 percent of the workforce is engaged in producing other finished products such as home textiles
and technical textiles.
iii
Currently, 15.23 million people are employed in the textile sub-sector across yarn and fabric, home textiles, technical
textiles and readymade garments. Human resource requirement in the sector is expected to reach 21.54 million by 2022
translating into 6.31 million additional employment opportunities during the period 2013-22.
Automation of production of yarn and fabrics and new technologies such as digital printing, dobby and sateen are
expected to result in increased productivity levels translating into a moderate elasticity factor of 0.38 for the period 2013-
22.

Spinning Weaving and Finishing of Textiles 3.1 3.14 3.18

Manufacture of Other Textiles 8.04 10.64 13.78

Manufacture of Wearing Apparel 4.09 4.28 4.58

Entry-level operators have limited knowledge on machines handling and


troubleshooting aspects

Lack the ability to handle contingencies, manage people and allocate work
Lack of experience in handling machines

Lack the ability to undertake high-level due diligence required for quality checks

There is scarcity of experienced planners and they usually lack people management
skills
Lack of understanding of the process

Poor communication skills


Unable to manage contingencies and handle high-pressure situations at work

Lack of knowledge on customer standards and new global market trends


Experienced designers are scarce and switch jobs frequently
Most institutes offer training in apparels. There is dearth of sector-specific designers

Source: NSSO, KPMG in India analysis


iv
90.00 82.14
80.00
70.00
60.00
50.00
40.00 29.68
30.00 21.39
15.43 18.34 18.94
20.00
4.51 5.82 5.86 7.03 7.66 8.47
10.00 0.00 0.24 0.24 0.33 1.09 1.31 1.71 2.01 2.50 3.35 3.56 4.03
0.00
Dadra and

Orissa
Karnataka

Haryana

Kerala

Jharkhand
Gujarat

Andhra Pradesh

Madhya Pradesh

Punjab

Bihar
Delhi

Uttaranchal

Goa

Himachal Pradesh
Assam

Chattisgarh
West Bengal
Tamil Nadu

Rajasthan

Uttar Pradesh
Daman and Diu

Jammu & Kashmir


Maharashtra
The capacity of ITIs offering textile trade is inadequate to meet the skilling requirements of workers in most of the
state, including key textile clusters of Tamil Nadu, West Bengal, Karnataka, Gujarat, Rajasthan and Andhra Pradesh.
There are about 2,541 institutes with a total seating intake capacity of approximately 50,464 offering textile-related
trades.
Sixty-five percent of these skilling institutes are owned and managed by the government and constitute 63.09 percent
of the total seating capacity available for skill development in textile.
A majority of ITIs private and government offer courses on cutting and sewing (51 percent) followed by dress-
making (24 percent) and embroidery and needle work (13 percent).
Only government institutes offer courses on weaving, hand weaving of Niwar tape, durries and carpets and weaving of
silk and woolen fabrics, and bleaching, dyeing and calico printing.

16000 800
14000 700
12000 600
10000 500
8000 400
6000 300
4000 200
2000 100
0 0
Knitting with machine
Computer aided embroidery

Dress making

Fashion technology

Hand weaving of niwar tape,


Cutting and sewing

Pattern maker

Weaving of woolen fabrics


Embroidery and needle work
Bleaching, dyeing and calico

Weaving of silk fabrics


and needle worker

durries and carpets


printing

Number of Seats in Government Institutes Number of Seats in Private Institutes


Number of Government Industrial Training Institutes Number of Private Industrial Training Institutes

Source: ITIs Informational Service, Ministry of Labour & Employment, Government of India, accessed as on 16th November 2013
v
Provide incentives to Acknowledge and offer incentives to workers based on improvisation in skills a few large
factory workers in the firms offer this in the form of grades/promotions among each job role. For example, a home
form of skills premium textile stitching unit may have three grades of sewing machine operators and tailors. Grade
C may refer to tailors sewing simpler forms of products within a home textile segment (bath
linen) such as napkins. Grade B may refer to those responsible for making towels and Grade
A may refer to those in charge of producing bath robes. The salaries paid to workers would
increase with improved grades.
Competition among workers of a specific function (such as weaving machine operators)
should be conducted periodically to incentivise workers who deliver high productivity and
improved production quality.
Creating awareness The government must encourage textile engineering degrees as an option in popular
among the youth to institutes among other engineering options
attract them towards the Awareness needs to be created among school students at the middle school level (class V
sector VIII) through vocational education in textiles by courses on embroidery, needle work, fashion
design and textile chemistry. A few schools also include tailoring in home science courses
Specialized industrial ITIs and ITCs located in major textile hubs must be upgraded to latest technology and
training institutes in converted into centres of excellence offering courses in textile machine operations, which
textile machinery should focus on carding, blow room, different types of weaving looms and sewing
operations
Establishment of home Home textile design centres (HTDC) should be established on the lines of ATDC in hubs such
textile and technical as Karur, Maharashtra and Gujarat. These institutes could offer courses on home textile
textile design centers manufacturing, types of fabrics used, design and pattern-making and the use of CAD
Private sector The Ministry of Textiles is encouraging public-private partnerships within their integrated
participation for Skill Development Scheme, wherein funds are being provided to private players interested in
infrastructure establishing institutes. This could be extended further to another model wherein training
provisioning to ITIs institutes that cannot procure latest technology due to poor financial condition can
purchase/lease second-hand machines from private players
Revise design course Fashion and home textile design institutes should include courses on the preferences of
content in line with global consumers and upcoming trends in the textile sector. They should educate people on
global trends the design preferences of the US and Europe

Introduction of textile Textile management programs can be provided by textile research associations that offer a
management programs combination of textile courses along with marketing and sales
Sector skill council for A sector skill council for textiles focusing on apparels, spinning and weaving is being
the entire textiles and considered
clothing sector It must be ensured that the trades proposed in it account for the skill gaps across all textile
sub-sectors, including technical and home textiles

vi
S. No Section Page
1. Context and approach 4

2. Industry classification 6

3. Industry overview 13

3.1 Evolution of the industry 14

3.2 Industry Size, Growth trends 15

3.3 Textile and clothing output across states in India 18

3.4 Global competitiveness 19

3.5 Investment in the sector 21

3.6 Key trends 23

3.7 Policy initiatives 26

3.8 SWOT analysis of the sector 28

4. Sub-sectoral overview 29

5. Geographical clusters 36

6. Demographic characteristics of workforce 39

6.1 Key employment segments 40

6.2 Functional distribution of workforce 41

7. Incremental human resource requirement (2013-17, 2017-22) and skill gaps 42

7.1 Human resource growth projections 43

7.2 Key qualitative insights from industry interactions 44

7.3 Skill gaps in key job roles 49

8. Training infrastructure 56

9. Recommendations for stakeholders 61


Apparel Training Design Centres
National Institute of Fashion Technology
All India Council for Technical Education
Apparel Training Design Centres
National Institute of Fashion Technology
National Skill Development Council
Sector Skill Council
Technology Up gradation Fund Scheme
Scheme for Integrated Textile Park
Association of Southeast Asian Nations
Foreign Direct Investment
Center of Excellence
Readymade garments
Research and Development
Textile Research Associations
Human Resource Development
Resource Support Agencies
Labour Market Information System
Training of Trainers
Home Textile Design Centres
Indian Institute of Fashion Technology

3
NSDC had conducted sector-wise skill gap studies for 19 high priority sectors in 200809 .
KPMG has been engaged as a consultant to help evaluate the skill gap across 25 sectors and
develop actionable recommendations for its stakeholders.
Mandate includes sector and sub-sector level analysis, demand-supply projection, estimation of
incremental man-power requirement between 2013-2017 and 2017-2022, identification of key-
employment clusters, and SWOT analysis of each sector
Study also aims to take qualitative insights from stakeholders on enablers and challenges for
each sector, way forward in terms of specific policy level actionable recommendations,

Study led by industry Sector Skill Councils and a panel of professionals from different sub-
sectors were consulted for their inputs on industry trends, key takeaways in terms of skill
requirement, qualitative insights to understand specific interventions required for each sector
and to validate the quantitative results and recommendations
6 sectors were added to the list of NSDC priority sectors for studying the skill gaps
Updated study also includes
Identification of top 20 job-roles in each sector, case studies around good training practices, sub-
sector level indicators and growth factors
Study also includes understanding of existing training infrastructure, work-force characteristics
and employment clusters,
Macro economic factors, central and state governments policies and their envisaged impact
Synchronisation of the sector wise demand from the district level skill gap studies
Recommendations for key stakeholders - Industry, NSDC, Training organizations and Government
Environment scans every year till 2015-16 including SWOT analysis for the sector

5
Cotton fiber including cotton blended*
Silk fiber including silk blended
1. Preparation and
spinning of textile Wool, other animal hair including wool, animal hair blended
fibres
Man-made fiber including blended* man-made fiber
Jute, mesta and other natural fiber including blended natural fiber
Weaving, manufacturing of cotton and cotton mixture fabrics

2. Weaving of Weaving, manufacturing of wool and wool mixture fabrics


textiles Weaving, manufacturing of man-made and man-made mixture fabrics
Weaving of jute, mesta and other natural fiber including blended natural fiber
Finishing of cotton and blended cotton textiles
Finishing of wool and blended wool textiles
3. Finishing of Finishing of man-made and blended man-made textiles
textiles
Finishing of jute, mesta and other vegetable textiles fabrics
Activity related to screen printing
Other activities relating to finishing of textile

Manufacturing of knitted and crocheted cotton fabrics


1. Manufacturing of Manufacturing of knitted and crocheted woollen fabrics
knitted and crocheted
fabrics Manufacturing of knitted and crocheted synthetic fabrics
Manufacturing of other knitted and crocheted fabrics
Manufacturing of curtains, bed covers and furnishings
2. Manufacturing of Manufacturing of crocheted made-up textile goods except apparel
made-up textile
articles, except Manufacturing of mosquito nets
apparel and textile Manufacturing of bedding, quilts pillows, sleeping bags etc.
articles for technical
use Manufacturing of tarpaulin
Manufacturing of blankets

Source: NIC classification, 2008


7
Manufacturing of carpets and other floor coverings made of cotton
Manufacturing of carpets and other floor coverings made of wool
3. Manufacturing
Manufacturing of carpets made of synthetic materials
of carpets and rugs
Manufacturing of carpets, and other floor coverings made of jute, mesta and coir
Manufacturing of other floor coverings
Manufacturing of thread, including thread ball making
Manufacturing of cordage or rope made of jute
Manufacturing of cordage or rope made of coir
4. Manufacturing
of cordage, rope, Manufacturing of rope and cordage made of synthetic material
twine and netting
Manufacturing of knotted netting of twine, cordage or rope (other than mosquito net)
Manufacturing of tapes, newar and wicks
Manufacturing of other cordage or rope
Embroidery work and making of laces and fringes
Zari work and other ornamental trimmings
Manufacturing of linoleum and similar product
Manufacturing of gas mantles
Manufacturing of made-up canvas goods such as tents and sails
5. Manufacturing
of other textiles Manufacturing of wadding of textile materials and articles of wadding such as sanitary
napkins and tampon
Manufacturing of metalised yarn or gimped yarn, rubber thread or cord covered with
textile material, textile yarn or strip impregnated, covered or sheathed with rubber or plastic
Manufacturing of waterproof textile excluding tarpaulin
Manufacturing of other textiles/textile products

Source: National Industrial Classification 2008, Government of India as accessed on 6 February 2014
Note: Textile products made of silk have been excluded from the study as they are largely handloom/ hand-made items
8
Manufacturing of all types of textile garments and clothing accessories
Manufacturing of rain coats of waterproof textile fabrics or plastic sheeting
1. Manufacturing
Manufacturing of hats, caps and other clothing accessories such as gloves, belts, ties,
of wearing apparel,
cravats and hairnets
except fur apparel
Manufacturing of wearing apparel made of leather and substitutes of leather
Manufacturing of wearing apparel
Manufacturing of wearing apparel and clothing accessories made of fur
2. Manufacturing
Manufacturing of fur and skin rugs and other similar articles
of articles of fur
Manufacturing of other fur products

3. Manufacturing Manufacturing of knitted or crocheted wearing apparel and other made-up articles
of knitted and directly into shape (pullovers, cardigans, jerseys, waistcoats and similar articles)
crocheted apparel Manufacturing of other knitted and crocheted apparel including hosiery

Source: National Industrial Classification 2008, Government of India as accessed on 6 February 2014
Note: Textile products made of silk have been excluded from the study as they are largely handloom/ hand-made items
9
Yarn, fabric and made-ups are
Mens wear, womens wear, kids
three products that are
wear
manufactured by the sector
includes all apparels and garments,
Ready-made formal and casual wear, that may be
Yarn and fabrics are intermediaries
garments made of different raw materials or
that are purchased by domestic
blends such as wool, cotton,
manufacturers of made-up
polyester or silk
products. These are also exported
to other countries and, hence, are
accounted as separate products
that also add value to the sector
Kitchen linen, bed linen, table/living
As per the final products, the three linen, bath linen
categories include garments, home Includes all home textile products for
textiles and technical textiles Home textiles residential and commercial (hotels,
restaurant usage) that may be made
The report analyses the sector of cotton, cotton blends, synthetics
prospects for both intermediate and terry fabrics. Excludes
products as well as final products handicrafts and handloom products

Agrotech, buildtech, clothtech,


Technical
geotech, hometech, meditech packtech,
textiles
sportech

Sources: National Industrial Classification 2008, Government of India, as accessed on 6 February 2014
Note: Textile products made of silk have been excluded from the study as they are largely handloom/ hand made items

10
Covers the process from cotton
processing (available for industrial use)
to spinning of yarn

Manufacturing of Includes the


jute and woollen manufacturing process
products from yarn to fabric
knitted /crocheted/
Spinning woven

Weaving /
Manufacturing Jute/woolen knitting Includes
of functional bleaching,
textiles using dyeing, printing
special fabrics of both
such as intermediate
meditech and final
(cotton gauze, Technical textiles Processing products
band-aid) or
automobile-
tech(seat
covers)
Home Textiles Garment mfg

Includes the use of fabric for


manufacturing garments with
Fabric is procured to manufacture final
application work such as embroidery
products such as bed linen and table linen
and design

Source: KPMG in India analysis

11
Ginning Opening Shedding Natural/chemic Cutting
(forming warps) al dyeing

Sheep rearing Blending Picking Direct/block/in Sewing


(inserting k-jet printing
wefts)

Raising Carding/ Compacting Embroidery Embroidery


cocoons combing and packing
cloth

Dyeing (not Heating/ Design and


always) steaming application

Softening/perfo
rating

Cotton Ring spun yarn Twill (e.g. Garments


denim)

Jute Motor spun Satin Home textiles


yarn

Flax (linen) Technical


textiles

Coir (coconut)

Hemp Dobby

Jacquard

Sheep wool Extra warps


and wefts
(double cloth)

Silk

Cashmere wool Jersey

Woollens
Source: KPMG in India analysis
12
18541900 The first cotton mill was established in Mumbai in 1818
The second mill was established by KGN Daber in 1854 and called Bombay Spinning
and Weaving Company
The establishment of the first cotton mill of Ahmedabad was initiated in 1861, which
eventually emerged as a rival spinning center to Mumbai
19011950 The number of mills increased from 178 in 1901 to 417 in 1945
The Cotton Association of India was established to regulate cotton trade and prices
Out of the 423 textile mills in the undivided India, India received 409 after the
partition and the remaining 14 went to Pakistan
However, 40 percent of the cotton-producing area became a part of Pakistan

19511990 Till 1985, the development of the textile sub-sector in India was guided by general
policies. However, in 1985, a separate policy for the sub-sector introduced, which
brought it to attention

19912000 In 1993, the Government of India made sector license free for this sector through the
Textile Development and Regulation Order
The Meera Seth Committee recommended the establishment of the National
Handloom Fund worth INR500 crores in 1997
The Ministry of Textiles introduced the Technology Upgradation Fund Scheme (TUFS)
in 1999, which has continued to run throughout the Tenth and the Eleventh Five-Year
Plans
20012010 The formulation of the Scheme for Integrated Textile Park (SITP) in July 2005, was to
provide superior infrastructure to meet export demand
India positioned as the second-largest manufacturer and exporter of cotton products
to some of the largest foreign markets, such as the US and EU
The Integrated Skill Development Scheme aims to skill 1.5 million persons for
textiles and clothing sector during the Twelfth Five-Year Plan
2011 onwards Technology mission on technical textiles to enhance technical textile production and
research and development through establishment of centres of excellences
Free-trade agreement with ASEAN nations, Japan and Korea for textiles and
clothing that offers duty free imports of Indian products
Strategic plan for textiles 201116 with specific focus on carpet exports, technical
textiles and skilling

Source: Textiles and Apparels Report , India Brand Equity Foundation (IBEF), August 2013 accessed on 6 February 2014
14
The Indian textile sub-sector has traditionally been contributing significantly to the economy and manpower as well as
to the structural changes in the manufacturing sector. As of 2012, the sector contributed 4 percent of the GDP, 32
percent of the manufacturing sector and 9 percent of total exports

The sectors output is expected to grow at an annual average rate of 10 percent in the next 10 years, thereby increasing
its worth to INR 10.5 lakh crores in 2022. Several factors that would contribute to the growth would include:
Rising income levels are expected to increase the demand for home textiles and garments from domestic consumers
is expected to increase
Free trade agreements provide India a comparative advantage in the export segment as compared to its competitors
China, Bangladesh and Pakistan as they create opportunities for manufacturers to supply to potential markets in
East Asia
Low production cost continues to be an advantage for the sector and, consequently, demand from existing foreign
markets continues to increase
Structural changes in the sector, with a shift from vertically disintegrated to integrated large firms, with automated
machines for yarn and fabric production
Increased spending on research and development to enter the specialized fabrics and technical textiles sector
Favorable policy environment to support domestic and foreign investments and the implementation of schemes to
enhance the production capacity and improve technology

Increase in disposable income has doubled the The cost of production of yarn and fabric in India is
domestic household expenditure on clothing from lesser than other countries such as, the US, Italy and
INR1.08 lakh crores in 200405 to INR 2.06 lakh China
crores in 201011 (at current prices)
India has an advantage in raw material production
Foreign demand or exports from India has grown by costs, as it is between 5080 percent of the total
eight times in the last decade manufacturing cost for competitors such as China

The annual total investments in textiles and Textiles and clothing strategic plan 201116 to
clothing sector increased from INR 59500 crores in achieve manufacturing growth rate by 10 percent,
200102 to INR 2 lakh crores in 201112, growing exports by 15 percent in 2016
at an average rate of 12.8 percent per annum.
Integrated Skill Development Scheme to spend INR
There has been an increase in investments in 1900 crores to train 1.5 million workers in the textiles
apparels and garments sub-sector

Sources: National Accounts Statistics 2004-05 & 2010-11, Ministry of Statistics and Planning, Government of India accessed on 6 February 2014

15
India is the second-largest producer and exporter of textiles and clothing in the world. As of 2012, the textiles sub-sector
contributed to 4 percent of Indias GDP and 11 percent of the total Indian exports, primarily driven by the availability of raw
materials such as natural fibre mainly cotton, silk and jute.

The textile sub-sector in India is characterised by small-scale, non-integrated spinning, weaving, finishing, and apparel-
making enterprises. This structure arose due to policies on tax, labour and other regulations that favoured small-scale,
labour-intensive enterprises, while discriminating against large-scale, capital-intensive operations. Small-scale
unorganised players dominate the sector which lacks stringent regulations.

4.56 5% 4.46%

95.44 94.96% 95.54%

Textiles & Clothing Others Textiles & Clothing Others Textiles & Clothing Others

Source: GDP at Factor Cost 2001-02 to 2011-12 , Handbook of Indian Statistics, Reserve Bank of India as accessed on 6 February 2014

The size of the textiles and clothing sector in India in 200102 was INR96500 crores, which grew at an average annual rate
of 13.6 percent in the last decade, thereby increasing its worth to INR 372600 crores in 201112. The share of the sector to
the economys total output was the highest in 200607 at 5.04 percent and dropped during the global meltdown in 200910
to 3.69 percent.

The textiles and clothing sector has also contributed significantly to the manufacturing sector and export earnings of India.
The share of production from the textiles and clothing sector in the manufacturing sector has increased from 29.3 percent in
200405 to 32 percent in 201011.

The textiles and clothing sector plays a significant role in employment generation. The sector employs 15.23 million people,
of which 2.3 million are factory workers. Constant growth of the sector and its contribution to the economy implies that the
manpower has and would continue to play an important role in the sector. However, the changing structure of the sector
with a shift in production across the value chain (i.e. increased focus on yarn and fabric to final products such as garments,
home textiles and technical textiles), there would be a change in the skills and characteristics of potential candidates.

16
11.92% 9.10%
22.04%

77.96%
88.08% 90.90%

Textiles & Clothing Others Textiles & Clothing Others Textiles & Clothing Others

Source: Trade in Goods Statistics (HS), Trade and Investment Data, International Trade Centre accessed on 6 February 2014

Textile exports from India have increased by more than three times from INR 48700 crores in 2001 to INR 148800
crores in 2012.
Though growth in textiles and related products has been significant in the last 10 years, their contribution to the
total exports reduced from 24 percent in 2001 to 9.1 percent in 2012. However, the export segment continues to
drive the sector and, hence, employment in the textiles and clothing sector.

41530 1040 668 0.24 267.33 2219.54 3890 5.6 3.24

Source: International Textile Manufacturing Federation, Note: * as of 2009, ^ as of 2006, # as of 2008

India has 18.06 percent of the total installed capacity of cotton spindles in the world. The country also has the
largest number of handlooms (84 percent) in the world. However, the installed capacity of power loom remains
low.
Moreover, there has been an increased dependence on the imports of textile machinery, such as those used for
spinning, draw texturing, weaving and knitting. China is the world leader in installed capacity of spindles, rotors
and looms.

17
A few large spinning and weaving units are
Parts of Bihar and West Bengal
located here.
manufacture jute and silk made-ups.
The region is known for carpets and rugs
The woollen clothing sub-sector has
manufacturing along with woollen made-
some presence in Uttar Pradesh.
ups.
Key players include ITC Lifestyle.
Key players include Vardhaman, Oswal and
JCT Limited.

Most large companies across all


sectors of the value chain,
including spinning, weaving,
home textiles and garments, are
located here.
Key players include Aravind
Mills, Raymond, Welspun,
Bombay Dyeing, Alok, Century
Textiles. Major cities that serve as textile
hubs are Tirupur, Coimbatore,
Madurai and Karur; known for
apparels, spinning mills, silk and
Bangalore and Mysore have a few
home textile units, respectively.
garment firms.
Key players include Loyal Textiles,
Some major garment exporters include
KG Denim, Asian Fabric.
Gokaldas Exports and Shahi Exports.
Kerala is a hub for the jute sub-sector.

<10000 10000-200000 20000-30000 30000-40000 >40000


Tamil Nadu accounts for the largest textiles and clothing production of INR 761820 crores, which also employs the
largest number of workers (2.63 million) in textile factories. This state is followed by Gujarat, which has an annual
textile production valued at INR 49165 crores.
There are more than 70 textiles and clothing clusters in India accounting for about 80 percent of the total
production. There are 39 power loom clusters and 13 ready-made garment clusters in India.
Bhiwandi and Malegaon are the two largest power loom clusters. Major ready-made garments clusters are
located in Delhi, Mumbai, Gurgaon, Nagpur, Madurai and Salem, with annual turnover of more than INR 1000
crores since 2003. The state of Maharashtra has 10 textile clusters. Other major states in terms of the number of
clusters are Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Kerala and Uttar Pradesh (seven clusters each).

Source: Annual Survey of Industries 2010-11, Ministry of Statistics and Planning, Government of India as accessed on 6 February 2014
18
India is the second-largest producer of cotton in the world after China. However, two factors contribute to the low
availability of cotton for domestic textile manufacturers. First, India has one of the lowest cotton productivities of 639
kg/hectare, as compared to other major cotton-producing countries such as Pakistan, the US and China. Second, a
majority of the cotton produced by India is exported to other countries, including China. In 2008, 35 percent of the
cotton produced was exported; this is significantly less than the exports in the past years.

9000 8330
8000
7000
6000 5533
5000
3861
4000 3134
3000 2350 2263
1769 1799
2000 1186
942 865
1000 414 392 469 572443
0 50 14 158 90 56 160 62 60 2 1
0
Australia Brazil China Egypt India Pakistan Turkey USA Uzbekistan
Production Imports Exports

Source: Office of Textiles & Apparels (OTEXA), Department of Commerce, Government of USA as accessed on 6 February 2014

The cost of production of yarn and fabric in India is lower than in countries such as the US, Italy and China. The
cost of raw materials in China constitutes a major component of the total production cost of the yarn or fabric. It
ranges between 5080 percent of the total cost of production.

India enjoys advantages in labour cost and logistics as compared to China, but it is at a disadvantage when it
comes to power and building cost.

Labour cost 0.32 0.53 0.83 1.44


(USD/Hour)
Power cost 0.053 0.14 0.086 0.065
(USD/KWH)
Logistics 250 600 400 470
(USD/container)
Building Cost 120 130 140 97
(USD/sq.m)
Source: Strategic Plan of Textiles & Clothing 2011-16, Ministry of Textiles, Government of India as accessed on 6 February 2014
19
Home textiles 22%

Carpets 40.6%
Apparels 23.48% Cotton 42.16%
Home textiles 47.8% Laminated fabric Vegetable fibre 17.38%
12.23%
Specialised fabric 10.73%

India is also the second-largest exporter of textiles and clothing products in the world. Some of the major products exported
by India include cotton yarn and fabric, natural yarn such as silk and jute, carpets, home textiles and cotton blended
apparels. However, in the last five years, India has been facing competition from emerging markets such as Vietnam,
Taiwan and Turkey

Carpets 14549846 China 2403738 (16.52%) 1 1350669 (9.2%) 4 Turkey, Belgium

Specialised 12563462 China 4637697 (36.91%) 1 258253 (2.05%) 12 Taiwan, Germany,


Fabric Turkey, South Korea,
the US

Laminated 24335683 China 6848801 (28.14%) 1 181430 (0.07%) 24 Germany, the US,
fabric Taiwan, Korea

Knitted or 30182970 China 11219348(37.17%) 1 209374 (0.69%) 13 Korea, Taiwan, Turkey,


crocheted Italy,
fabric

Apparel 193400159 China 61224360 (31.65%) 1 7429975 (3.8%) 7 Italy, Bangladesh,


Germany, HK, Vietnam

Home 55921991 China 24015853 (42.94%) 1 3973042 (7.10%) 2


textiles

Source: Trade in Goods Statistics (HS Chapter 52 to 63), International Trade Centre as accessed on 6 February 2014
20
The annual total investments in the Textiles and clothing sector increased from INR59506 crores in 200102 to
INR205249 crores in 201112, growing at an average rate of 12.8 percent per annum. There has been an increase in
investments in apparels and garments, thereby implying the shift in the production across the value chain from
manufacturing just yarn and fabric to made-ups

2500

2000

1500

1000

500

0
2001-02 2002-03 2003-04 2004-05 2005-06 2006-07 2007-08 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12

Textiles & Other Products Apparels and Articles of Fur

Source: Historical Time Series of Annual Survey of Industries (200102 to 201011)

Grasim Industries Terrace Bay Pulp 2160

Madura Garments Pantaloon Retail 1999.8

BR Machine Tools Pvt. Ltd. Bombay Rayon Fashions Ltd. 4326.6

Group of Investors Provogue India Ltd. 3161.4

Source: Textiles and Apparels Report , India Brand Equity Foundation (IBEF), August 2013 accessed on 6 February 2014
21
Trident Ltd plans to invest INR1667 crores to install 176,000 spindles and 500 looms to manufacture about 40,000
TPA of additional cotton yarn of higher count.
Exhilway, a US-based private equity firm, will fund the Kolkata-headquartered garments retail start-up firm
Sconto Retail Pvt Ltd. The initial investment will only be in equity of about INR6 crores, with graded funding, both
in equity and debt, likely to increase to INR 24 crores by the first 18 months.
DyStar Group and Arvind Ltd have signed an agreement for joint development in the field of denim. Dedicated
teams from DyStar and Arvind's Denim Division will work closely to implement new technologies in indigo dyeing
and finishing as well as developing new products, processes and effects for denim fabrics and garments.
Gitanjali Group has entered the apparels sector as part of the extension of its popular brands and plans to
establish 300 selling points across the country in 2013.
Swedish retailer Rusta plans to import Indian textiles and handicraft worth INR200 crores annually over the next
3-4 years.

20 2.50%
18
16 2.00%
14
12 1.50%
10
8 1.00%
6
4 0.50%
2 1.04 1.85 1.29 1.01 1.47 2.46 5.64 9.86 14.28 12.31 8.85 17.39 12.24 7.50
0 0.00%

Total FDI Inflow (in all Sectors) Textiles & Clothing (as a % of total FDI Inflow)

Source: Inward FDI Statistics 2000-01 to 2013-14, Department of Industrial Policy and Promotion, as accessed on 6 February 2014,

Although the textiles and clothing sector is dominated by local private players, there has been a slight increase in
foreign investments.

The total FDI inflow in the textiles sector has grown from INR9 crores in 2000-01 to INR 740 crores in 201314 (as
of November 2013). However, its share in the total FDI inflow into the country has continued to remain less than 1
percent.

22
Indias textile sector is characterised by small-scale, non-integrated spinning, weaving, finishing and apparel-making
enterprises. This structure is a result of policies on tax, labour and other regulations that favoured small-scale, labour-
intensive enterprises, while discriminating against large-scale, capital-intensive operations. Small-scale unorganised
players dominate the sector which does not have many stringent regulations.
Use of automated machines With the evolution of the lifestyle of Indias urban
for spinning and weaving consumers, their clothing requirements have broadened from
Digital printing technology being mere home wear, office wear to special occasion and
Technology for woven fabrics functional wear. Households are now also looking forward to
such as jacquard looms, decorating homes by giving them annual makeovers by
other specialized fabrics changing the furnishings of curtains and bed linen.
A few large firms, which are With increased growth, use of technical textiles such as
capable of bearing huge automobile or train seat covers, packaging material and
investment risks, are meditech has increased.
considering technology for
complete finishing of product 1
including design and 5
embroidery
Working women in
India have
Since the sector is requirements for
characterized by many casuals as well as
small- and medium-scale formal wear.
firms,; it is vertically Demand from foreign
disintegrated. Most of markets such as the
the firms manufacture US and EU are large
either intermediary or 2 and continue to
final products. A few dominate the sector.
firms are concentrated 4 Emerging markets
only in the spinning and with potential demand
weaving sector. include Canada,
Most mid-sized firms Australia, Japan,
procure yarn and fabric South Africa and the
from others to Middle East.
manufacture made-ups.
There has been a shift in 3
large firms towards The Ministry of Textiles, Government of India, has appointed eight
integration where all textile research institutes across various clusters. The government
processes of the value funds 75 percent of research projects in these institutions and the
chain spinning, rest should be raised by implementing agencies.
weaving, processing and In 201112, INR 9 crores were allocated to research and
finishing made-ups development in the textiles and clothing sector. This, compared to
are undertaken in-house. other competitive countries such as South Korea and China, is low.
There is a need for the sector players and the government to invest
in manufacturing specialised and smart fabrics, functional made-up
articles that are energy efficient and eco-friendly. Source: KPMG in India Analysis
23
6
5
2.26
4
Millions

3 1.74
1.03
2 0.87
1.18 3.33
1 0.65 2.51 2.41
1.48
0.81 0.91
0
Rural Urban Rural Urban Rural Urban
Yarn and Fabric Home Textiles & Technical Textiles Ready Made Garments
Male Female

Source: Key Employment and Unemployment Indicators 2011-12 Government of India accessed on 6 February 2014`

Currently, 15.23 million people are employed in the textile sub-sector across yarn and fabric, home textiles,
technical textiles and ready-made garments.
Fifty-one percent of the total workforce is engaged in the manufacturing of ready-made garments, followed by
yarn and fabrics with 26 percent.
Sixty percent of the total workforce, about 9 million, are concentrated in urban areas with 49 percent engaged in
the manufacturing of readymade garments.
Women constitute 40.3 percent of the total workforce and 54 percent are concentrated in urban areas.
A significant proportion of women in the workforce (about 46 percent) are engaged in the manufacturing of home
and technical textiles.

638
Factories located in Tamil
700
Nadu are among the
600
largest employers in the
500
textiles and clothing
In 000

400
258 sector, (the state alone
300 229
191 159 178 employs 27 percent of the
200 96 117 115 119
42 13 35 36 43
total workforce of the
100 2 5 0 1 1 19 8 1 0 0 0 2 5 0 0 9 textile sub-sector of
0
Dadra and

India) followed by
Assam

Goa
Bihar

Meghalaya
Andhra Pradesh

Daman and Diu

Karnataka

Puducherry

Uttarakhand
Jammu & Kashmir

Madhya Pradesh

Tripura
Sikkim
Rajasthan
Chandigarh

Jharkhand

Kerala

Manipur

Tamil Nadu

Uttar Pradesh
Chattisgarh

Odisha

Punjab
Delhi

Gujarat
Haryana

Maharashtra

West Bengal
Himachal Pradesh

Nagaland

Gujarat, Karnataka,
Maharashtra, West
Bengal and Punjab.

Source: Annual Survey of Industries 2010-11, Ministry of Statistics and Planning, Government of India accessed on 6th February 2014
24
The Integrated Skill Development Scheme for the textiles and apparel sector, including jute and handicrafts, was
initiated by the Ministry of Textiles, Government of India, in July 2013 to impart skills to 1.5 million workers in the next
five years (2012-17). It focuses on developing a cohesive and integrated framework for training workers in all segments
of textiles, including handicrafts, handlooms, sericulture, jute and technical textiles, to enhance competitiveness of the
sector in the globalized economy.

With an aim to improve the state of infrastructure and the the global position of the Indian textile sector in the
manufacturing and export of divisions, including technical textiles, jute, silk and wool, the Textile Strategic Plan 2011-
16 was formulated. The strategic plan seeks to increase the growth rate of textile to 10 percent annually through
technological upgrade, modernization and improved productivity. The Strategic Plan also seeks to improve the
availability of skilled manpower for the entire value chain of the textile sector
Salient features of the Strategic Plan include:
Promotion of technological upgrade for all types of textiles, including technical textiles, jute and silk for
planned and harmonious growth of textiles by encouraging greater investment in the sector. The estimated
investment requirement in the textile sector is INR 1.99 lakh crores during 2011-17
Promotion of skills of all textile workers, handloom weavers and handcrafts artisans; creation of new
employment opportunities and development of new designs to make these sectors economically sustainable
Strengthening the institutional framework and enhancing plan outlays for effective implementation of various plan
schemes

To enhance global competitiveness and the skill base of the technical textile sector in India, a multi- pronged
interventional strategy the Technology Mission on Technical Textile was proposed by the central
government with an initial fund outlay of INR 200 crores. The key interventions proposed under the mission are:
Establishment of centres of excellence (CoEs) to provide infrastructural support for technical textiles
manufacturers. Facilities in the COEs will include
Common testing facilities for the testing and evaluation of products
Information resource centre
Incubators for the development of the prototype
Institutes for providing training of core personnel
Business start-ups for entrepreneurship development
Awareness on technology, international practices and market details
Research and development

It aims to create 35 million jobs and achieve exports worth


INR 18 lakh crores by 2024-25 with the help of investments.
Draft proposal for the same was submitted by expert panel
constituted by the government on 28th July, 2014.

Source: Integrated Skill Development Scheme, accessed as on 6th February 2014


Note: USD to INR conversion rate at 60
25
Maximum interest subsidy of 5 percent for
spinning and garment/made-ups units Credit-linked interest subsidy (at the rate of 6 percent p.a. in
Power tariff subsidy at the rate of INR1 per addition to other incentives provided by GoI) to promote technical
unit for a period of two years for textiles
new/expanded enterprises Technology upgrade and acquisition, including drawing and design
Assistance up to 20 percent (maximum INR technology development, by engaging R&D institutions
20 lakhs) for environmental compliance Upgrading facilities in ITI/ITCs offering special courses in textiles
Assistance up to 85 percent (maximum up and designs
to INR 3 crores) to apparel and design Focus on integrated value chain fibre-fabric-fashion-foreign
institutes Establishment of textile and apparel parks

Reduction of electricity duty by 50 percent Development of a textile cluster in Ludhiana via GoIs Industrial
for mega projects in the textile clusters of Infrastructure Upgradation Scheme
Patiala, Sangrur and Mansa to boost cotton Establishment of a Punjab Apparel Park by Punjab Small Industries
production and Export Corporation with the Association of Textile Industry
Allowance of private sector participation to establish training
institutes similar to NIIFT

Credit-linked capital subsidy ranging from


520 percent on the value of fixed assets Growth in integrated value chain from fiber to finished products
(maximum of INR 20 lakhs) Increase income levels of people in SMEs within the textile and
Full reimbursement in plant and machinery garment sector and create opportunities for 0.5 million people
and capital goods for captive power Strengthen the power loom sector and create processing capacities
generation, common effluent treatment and Make presence into technical textiles such as camouflaged clothing
waste disposal facilities Technology upgrade

Capital investment subsidy ranging from


1540 percent for micro firms and 1030 Establishment of the West Bengal State Spinning Mills Federation
percent for small enterprises for the procurement of yarn and the revival of existing units
Interest subsidy of 6 percent for five years Marketing of silk fabrics with a state brand name Reshamshree by
for small firms and 25 percent (ceiling of the West Bengal Silk Development Corporation Ltd
INR1.75 crores) for medium firms A public-private partnership initiative for establishing State Design
10 percent additional subsidy for Facilitation Centre for Handlooms
establishing technical textile units A mega power loom park with 200 high-tech units

Source: Gujarat Textile Policy 2012, Industries Commissionerate, Government of Gujarat


26
14000

12000

10000
4620
8000 3861
3227
2697 883
6000 2254 796
1884 717
1574 646
1316 525 583
4000 919 1099 473
385 427 6315
347 5218 5740
2000 3919 4312 4743
2944 3239 3563
2676
0
2012-13 2013-14 2014-15 2015-16 2016-17 2017-18 2018-19 2019-20 2020-21 2021-22

Yarn + Fabric + Made Ups (Finishing) Home Textiles + Technical Textiles Garments

Source: KPMG in India analysis

The Indian textiles and clothing sector is expected to grow at 10.01 percent in the next 10 years from the
current value of INR3.92 lakh crores in 201213 to INR10.54 lakh crores in 202122. Of these, the garments
sector is estimated to grow at an average rate of 15.44 percent over the years, thereby accounting for about 70
percent of the total production

The demand for domestic consumption for home textiles and garments is expected to increase rapidly . In fact,
the garments sub-sector alone is estimated to increase by seven times from INR 51400 crores in 201213 to
INR3.70 lakh crores in 202122

7000
6000
5000
4000
3000
2000
1000
0
Yarn + Fabrics Home Textiles Ready Made Yarn + Fabrics Home Textiles Ready Made Yarn + Fabrics Home Textiles Ready Made
+ Technical Garments + Technical Garments + Technical Garments
Textiles Textiles Textiles
2013 2017 2021

Domestic Consumption Exports

Source: KPMG in India Analysis


27
The textiles and sector is the second-largest employer of labour in India. With increased
demand by domestic and foreign consumers, the sector is likely to generate high growth and,
hence, generate more employment
Enhanced government initiatives in research and development and improved technology
Favourable policy environment to strengthen infrastructure and labour skills
Presence of institutional support base to enhance the global competitiveness of the sector
through research and skill and infrastructural development

Disintegrated and small-scale sector that employs a large number of labourers in the textiles
and clothing sector are concentrated in the production of intermediate products rather than
final articles
Lack of innovative methods for improved design and the quality of products hinder domestic
production and leads to increased dependence on imports (especially in the case of technical
textiles)
Poor technological base in weaving and shuttle-less looms and technological backwardness
, especially in the weaving, processing and garmenting sectors
Substantial skill deficit in the workforce and diminishing labour advantage affects the global
competitiveness of the sector
Need for skilled labour for the production of made-up articles (functional clothing and
technical textiles) and finishing of textile products; due to the shift in the structure of the
sector from an unorganised disintegrated system to 'mill-based' manufacturing
Supportive policy regime, increasing plan expenditure and enhanced incentives for
investment and modernisation of the sector would prove to be beneficial
Rising demand from domestic markets due to high GDP growth and per capita income to
provide an impetus for the growth of the textile sector
Improved textile machinery may result in less demand for manpower
Government schemes and initiatives, that provide continuous incentives to small-scale
industries, may obstruct the growth of the sector and impact the international
competitiveness that it enjoys
Slow pace of infrastructure development and availability of power may affect the growth of
the sector
High cost of raw materials could affect the competitiveness of the sector

Source: KPMG in India analysis


28
Automation of production of yarn and fabrics
New technology digital printing, dobby and sateen
Technology for technical textiles
Requirement of machine operators with knowledge of new technologies for
weaving, blow room, carding, spinning and wet processing and for specialised
products. They need to be acquainted with new technology and should possess
skills for effective operations.
Mechanics, fitters and electricians must also be made familiar with automated
machines for effective repair and maintenance.
Moreover, textile technologists and engineers require knowledge on the availability
of such machines, its productivity, capacity and usage.

Functional fabrics across all three sub-sectors of made-ups are likely to be the
upcoming trend. Example, waterproof jackets, leather-made bed linen and seat
covers for automobiles.
Requirement for textile researchers and designers capable of understanding the
chemistry of textile products, its physical properties, functions and applicability.

Changing tastes and preferences of consumers in different markets


The US prefers solid colours and basic prints in home linen as compared to the EU
and eastern markets that require application.
Specialised designers catering to each sector of the textiles and clothing sector, and
not just garments, would be in demand.

Both domestic and export markets tend to have different retail segments which may
be organised or unorganised. Merchandisers must possess knowledge on the
different supply channels such that they improve their managerial skills of inventory
management, execution of orders and delivery.

Standards for quality and testing differ from country to country. Some countries such
as EU and Japan stress on quality of products. On the other hand, Indian quality
controllers and inspection agents are unaware of quality standards, which may lead
to the rejection of exports.
Therefore, with the entry of new foreign markets, understanding of testing
standards on various parameters of textiles such as durability, strength and
waterproofing quality, skilled manpower for inspection would be required at each
department/value chain of textile product.

Source: KPMG in India Analysis


30
Yarn has been one of the major products of the textiles sector in India. As of 201011, yarn constitutes 44 percent
of the total output of textiles and employs 31 percent of the total workforce employed in the sector. India is the
second-largest producer and exporter of cotton yarn in the world.

With increased capacity of spindles and rotors and vertically integrated firms, the production of cotton yarn is
increasing.

4000 0.2
3500
3000 0.15
2500
2000 0.1
1500
1000 0.05
500
0 0
2006-07 2007-08 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2006-07 2007-08 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11

Cotton Man made Wool Jute

Source: Production of Yarn, Ministry of Textiles , Government of India accessed on 6 February 2014

Though 100 percent cotton fabric continues to be the main variety of cloth manufactured, with increased
innovation in different types of yarn and processes of woven and knitted fabric, there appears to be a shift
towards blended products.

This shift is also characterised by changing demands of consumers, wherein there is a preference for polyester
and other man-made fibres in various products such as functional garments (e.g. jerseys and sweatshirt).

65000 812 798 848


724 768 768
55000
45000
35000
25000
15000
5000
-5000 2006-07 2007-08 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12
Cotton (Million Sq. Meter) Blended (Million Sq. Meter)
100% Non Cotton (Million Sq. Meter) Khadi, Wool & Silk (Million Sq. Meter)

Source: Production of Yarn, Ministry of Textiles , Government of India accessed on 6 February 2014
31
14.99% 17.72% 20.10%

85.01% 82.28% 79.90%

Ready Made Garments Others Ready Made Garments Others Ready Made Garments Others

Source: Historical Time Series of Annual Survey of Industries (200102 to 201011), ASI Provisional Data 201112, accessed on 6 February 2014

48.15%
49.22% 46.30%
51.85%
50.78% 53.70%

Readymade garments Others Readymade garments Others


Readymade garments Others

Source: Trade in Goods Statistics (HS), Trade and Investment Data, International Trade Centre accessed on 6 February 2014

The ready-made garments (RMG) sector comprises mens, womens and kids clothing, which may be used for either
private (home/office wear) or commercial (uniforms for school, waiters and flight crew) purposes.

Mens wear is the biggest segment in the RMG sector, comprising about 43 percent of its share in the total revenue
generated. This is followed by womens wear, with a share of 38 percent; 10 percent share of boys wear and 9 percent
for girls wear in the total revenue generated by the RMG sector.

Changing lifestyles and consumption patterns are expected to drive the sectors supply of causal wear with an 11
percent growth, which would drive demand for workforce with specialised skills in western formals design, blended
fabrics and increased application work on clothes.

32
4.32% 5.26% 7.31%

95.68% 94.74% 92.69%

Home Textiles Others Home Textiles Others Home Textiles Others


Source: Historical Time Series of Annual Survey of Industries (200102 to 201011), ASI Provisional Data 201112, accessed on 6 February 2014

15.86% 19.99% 19.02%

80.01% 80.98%
84.14%

Home Textiles Others Home Textiles Others Home Textiles Others

Source: Trade in Goods Statistics (HS), Trade and Investment Data, International Trade Centre accessed on 6 February 2014

The home textiles sub-sector comprises four major sub-


segments. These include bed linen (bed sheets, pillow covers
and duvets), table and living linen (table cloths, curtains,
cushion covers and carpets), kitchen linen (cafe curtains, gloves Bed linen 8965
and mittens and aprons) and bath linen (terry towels, bath Towels 3320
robes and rugs). The home textile sub-sector accounts for
INR18245 crores about 4.97 percent of the total textile Curtains 1850
production
Blankets 1465

There has been an increased demand from foreign consumers Upholstery 1190
for home textile products. Home textile exports have increased Kitchen linen 1110
from INR 9384 crores in 2001 to INR 263,34 crores in 2012
Rugs and carpets 500
Source: Textile & Apparel 2012 Compendium, Technopak
33
Bhadohi, Uttar Pradesh
Srinagar
This belt produces the maximum number of
Leh carpets in India. The carpets from this
region in various knots and counts are
famous for their varied range and designs.
Amritsar It specialises in woollen, tufted and
Bikaner
Tibetan carpets and durries.
Jaipur Agra Carpet-producing areas are spread over
Bhadohi
Gwalior 1000 sq km and comprise several villages
Mirzapur
and districts in Bhadohi .

Agra, Uttar Pradesh


It is one of the earliest carpet-producing
centres of India. The weavers produce
Persian, Turkman and Aubussan varieties.

Jaipur, Rajasthan

The citys carpet sub-sector is renowned


and offers softback and hardback carpets
and mats
It is also known for cotton and artificial
silk durries
Source: Carpet Belts, Carpet Export Promotion Council of India < http://www.indiancarpets.com/carpet-belts.html>, accessed on 6 February 2014

Major states contributing to carpets and rugs production and exports are located in the north. These include Uttar
Pradesh, Rajasthan, Jammu and Kashmir, Haryana, Punjab and Himachal Pradesh.
A few other locations in states such as Madhya Pradesh, Bihar and Andhra Pradesh include Gwalior, Obra,
Madhubani, Danapur, Elluru and Warangal.

The lack of reforms in the production system hamper productivity, organised production and supply of carpets. There
is also lack of modern facilities, particularly for dyeing, washing and processing carpets.
There is increased dependence on imports of large quantity of carpet grade wool.
Raw material prices of wool and woollen yarn have increased by 50 percent in the last few years.
There is dearth of skilled carpet weavers, as workers are not willing to learn new techniques and continue to
practise handloom production.
There is competition from major global players in the carpets and rugs sub-sectors, such as Pakistan, Turkey and Iran.
Lack of innovation, research and development and investments in new improved technology pose a big challenge.

34
India currently produces and consumes products under all the 12 categories, though all of them are not produced
domestically. The percentage of indigenous production varies drastically across various products. Unlike the
conventional textile sector in India, which is export-intensive, the technical textile sector is import-intensive.

Several products such as protective clothing, hoses and webbings for seat belts are imported significantly. Products
that have high production levels in India and are exported substantially are typically commodity products and do not
involve much R&D. These products include tarpaulins, jute carpet backing, hessian, fishnets, surgical dressings and
crop covers.

1.56% 3.26% 3.90%

98.44% 96.74% 96.10%

Technical Textiles Others Technical Textiles Others Technical Textiles Others

Source: Historical Time Series of Annual Survey of Industries (200102 to 201011), ASI Provisional Data 201112, accessed on 6 February 2014

0.19%
0.16% 0.19%

99.81% 99.81%
99.84%

Technical Textiles Others Technical Textiles Others Technical Textiles Others

Source: Trade in Goods Statistics (HS), Trade and Investment Data, International Trade Centre as accessed on 6 February 2014

35
Loyal Textiles, Bannari Amman,
Nahar, Reliance

Mundra SEZ Textile &


Apparel Park Ltd., Kutch Kewalram, Vardhaman, Arvind,
Alok, Trident
Gujarat Eco
Textile Park Baramati Hi Tech Park Ltd
Ltd. & Surat
Super Yarn Raymond, Shahi Exports,
Ltd, Surat Gokaldas Exports, Creative
Metro Hi Tech Brandix India Apparel City Pvt. Ltd.,
Visakhapatnam
Portico
Cooperative Park
Hyderabad Hi Tech
Ltd & Pride India
Weaving Park
Cooperative Park,
Maharashtra Karur Integrated Textile
Alok, Bombay Dyeing, Indo Count,
Park
Welspun
Palladam Hi Tech
Weaving Park

SRF, Garware, Reliance, Alok


Integrated textile parks Key textile employment clusters

Zari work and other ornamental trimmings,


Kolkata 1,224,664 8%
manufacturing of wearing apparels
Coimbatore 638,977 4% Weaving, manufacturing of cotton and blended fabrics
Mumbai 684,077 5%
Surat 594,511 4% Spinning, weaving and finishing of textile fibers
Salem/Erode 551,952 4% Weaving, manufacturing of cotton and blended fabrics
South 24
461,295 3%
Parganas Home textiles and apparels

Ahmedabad 328,763 2%
Varanasi 314,385 2%

Ludhiana 293,803 2% Manufacturing of fur apparel and spinning of yarn

Source: NSSO Round 67 for employment clusters; ET Bureau Sept 25; KPMG in India analysis
37
Ludhiana Meerut
Gautam Buddha
Nagar

Surat
Ahmedabad

Bangalore
Tirupur
Thiruvalluvar
Erode
Coimbatore

Surat 188,807
Tirupur 132,000
Gautam Budha Nagar 100,392
Bangalore urban 75,102
Coimbatore 73,000
Thiruvallur 68,000
Ludhiana 58,388
Meerut 54,182
Ahmedabad 53,483
Erode 85,000
Source: NSDC Incremental Skill Gap Studies
38
The size of the units manufacturing products also varies to a large extent. There are several small-scale units
manufacturing technical textile products and this segment is highly unorganised.

Though several major players are present, the production of certain goods is still concentrated in small-
scale segments, such as canvas tarpaulin, carpet backing, woven sacks, shoe laces, soft luggage, zip
fasteners, stuffed toys, fabrication of awnings and canopies and blinds.

There are a few multinational companies such as Johnson & Johnson, Du Pont, Procter & Gamble and Kimberly
Clark, which are major players in technical textiles and have established their units in India.

Technical textiles are products that are not meant for aesthetic purposes but for functional use such as
producing mosquito nets, cricket gloves and umbrellas.

The various sub-segments of technical textile and their respective sub-components have been provided below:

Agrotech Shade nets, crop covers, fishing nets 487


Meditech Diapers, sanitary napkins 1514
Mobiltech Aircraft upholstery, automobile and railway train seat covers 3161
Packtech Sacks, tea bags 14067
Sporttech Parachute fabric, sleeping bags, tents 2632
Buildtech Architectural membranes, scaffolding nets, cotton canvas 1726
tarpaulins

Clothtech Shoe laces, velcro, umbrella cloth, elastic tapes 6570


Hometech Mosquito nets, mattress fillings, blinds, carpet back cloth 3191
Protech Bulletproof jackets, chemical protection clothing 1259
Geotech Used for landfill, rail track bed covering such as geo grids and geo 185
nets

Oekotech Eco tech 68


Indutech Conveyer belts, ropes 2326

Source: Domestic Technical Textiles Industry, Ministry of Textiles , Government of India as accessed on 6 February 2014
40
15.23 million persons are 1981660
employed in the Textile and 2323820 85.28% 1689195
clothing sector, Of these, 2.3
million are employed in
factories
292465

342160 152665
Garments 8.04
183065
million (52.78%)

Home textiles and technical


textiles 3.1 million (20.35%)
Total factory Workers Direct Indirect Non Supervisory Others
employment workers workers workers &
Yarn and fabric 4.09 managerial
(26.78%)

Source: Annual Survey of Industries 2010-11, Ministry of Statistics and Planning, Government of India, as accessed on 6 February 2014

96246 19340 72909


83953
14178 55534

148214 107678
36573
125762 636842
926591

Direct Indirect Direct Indirect Direct Indirect


Supervisors Others Supervisors Others Supervisors Others

Source: Annual Survey of Industries 2010-11, Ministry of Statistics and Planning, Government of India, as accessed on 6 February 2014
Factory workers comprise people that are directly employed, indirectly employed (contract-based), or in supervisory or
managerial roles, among others.

Directly and indirectly employed workers are chiefly engaged in the roles of machinists, tailors, spinners, weavers,
dyers and others. Thirty-one percent of the total employees in textile factories of India are engaged in preparing fibres
and spinning yarn.

The other product category that has the highest number of workers includes wearing apparels and garments
(excluding articles of fur). About 10.05 percent of the workers are engaged in manufacturing knitted and crocheted
apparels, 11.28 percent in finishing textile products (bleaching, dyeing and printing) and about 9 percent in weaving
fabrics. Only about 6 percent of the workforce is engaged in producing other finished products such as home textiles
and technical textiles.
41
Currently, 15.23 million people are employed in the textile sub-sector across yarn and fabric, home textiles, technical
textiles and readymade garments. Fifty-one percent of the total workforce is engaged in the manufacturing of readymade
garments, followed by yarn and fabrics with 26 percent. Human resource requirement in the sector is expected to reach
21.54 million by 2022 translating into 6.31 million additional employment opportunities during the period 2013-22.

Automation of production of yarn and fabrics and new technologies such as digital printing, dobby and sateen are
expected to result in increased productivity levels translating into a moderate elasticity factor of 0.38 for the period 2013-
22.

Spinning Weaving and Finishing of Textiles 3.1 3.14 3.18

Manufacture of Other Textiles 8.04 10.64 13.78

Manufacture of Wearing Apparel 4.09 4.28 4.58

(In millions) (In millions) (In millions)

Spinning Weaving and Finishing of Textiles 0.04 0.04 0.08

Manufacture of Other Textiles 2.6 3.14 5.74

Manufacture of Wearing Apparel 0.19 0.3 0.49

Source: NSSO, KPMG in India analysis


43
Key problem faced by the Productivity across the value chain has been a concern. Though increased
textiles and clothing sector automation has been observed in the sector, it is not in value-added segments
in India Fragmented production across the value chain and the presence of several
disintegrated firms have impacted the quality of production
Access to working capital by micro/small units leads to a lack of upgraded
infrastructure
Inability of the sector to attract manpower due to non-competitiveness in
salary/wage levels as compared to other service sectors
Key factors that would Significant domestic and export demand are driving substantial requirement of
affect demand for labour in manpower in the sector.
the textiles and clothing Pricing are quality of products lend India a competitive edge and this is likely to
sector attract new customers/brands.
Adapting new products, imparting lessons on product development and delivering
complicated designs would create demand for textile technologists, designers and
quality controllers.
Upcoming trends in the use of various types of new fabrics and technologies is
expected to increase the requirement of skilled workforce. This includes
temperature control fabrics and iced fabric, which are in vogue.
Increasing demand and significant productivity requirements are likely to drive
innovation in technology and automation across the value chain.
The requirement of product managers is expected to continue to rise due to the
introduction of new fabrics and innovative products such as various types of product
categories in technical textiles.

Sub-sector/segment Demand for operational-level workforce or machinists is increasing across the


where growth and skill are sector.
not in line For workers other than operators, firms identify talent and encourage them to grow
internally by grooming them for higher positions within the firm.
New entrants do not seem to find the sector lucrative. Locations of textile mills in
small cities have not been able to attract the youth.

Poor correlation between Skills premium with respect to increasing wages exists only at higher levels of the
skills premium and wages value chain, among designers, merchandisers and managers.
High attrition of employees leads to increased training cost.
Instead, firms are willing to bridge the skill gaps by providing internal training after
recruitment rather than collaborating with external trainers.

Source: KPMG Primary Interactions as on 10 March 2014


44
Level in the organisation operators, machine maintenance workers
where skill deficit is acute and weavers
confection operators, marketing staffs, specialised
stitching operators, machine maintenance people, merchandisers, product developers,
compliance and quality control officers
tailors, cutting machine operators, textile technologists
Skill gaps are prominent at the entry level operators, designers, merchandisers
The current training curriculum for the entry-level roles is more theoretical and
doesnt address practical issues sufficiently

Critical job roles with operators and supervisors


greater impact on output/ stitchers, designers and merchandisers
productivity tailors, pattern makers, designers and merchandisers
Training centres lack adequate infrastructure (latest textile technology) ,
certification/accreditation to train employees

Formal channels of Some formal channels are:


recruitment/ staffing Campaigns in villages
ITI
Referrals
Agents
NIFT designers
Colleges merchandisers
The existing recruitment channels are often unable to provide the required number
or quality of manpower
There are several textile engineering-related courses/certification available
Critical factors affecting Attitude of workers to continue with the job
manpower supply Movement of workers from brown-collar/blue-collar jobs to white-collar jobs or to
other industries in the same cluster (mostly when they are unskilled/ semi-skilled)
Some governmental policies push workers to quit their jobs such as NREGA

Source: KPMG Primary Interactions as on 10th March 2014


45
Post Graduate and
Above
Graduate 4%
6%
Vocational/Diploma
6% Upto Secondary
75%
Higher Secondary
Upto Secondary
9%
Higher Secondary
Vocational/Diploma
Graduate
Post Graduate and Above

Within the spinning weaving and finishing of textiles sub-sector, nearly three fourths of the workforce requirement is
expected to happen in up to secondary category.
Source: Primary Interactions, KPMG analysis

3.18

3.14
3.13
3.12
3.11
3.1

2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2022

The spinning weaving and finishing of textiles sub-sector currently employs ~3.1 million employees and the employment
base is expected to reach to 3.2 million by 2022.

Source: NSSO, KPMG in India analysis


46
Post Graduate and
Above
Graduate 5%
6%
Upto Secondary
57%

Upto Secondary
Vocational/Diploma
25% Higher Secondary
Vocational/Diploma
Graduate
Post Graduate and Above
Higher Secondary
7%

Within the manufacture of other textiles sub-sector, nearly half of the workforce requirement is expected to happen in
the up to secondary category.
Source: Primary Interactions, KPMG analysis

13.78

10.64
9.51
8.99
8.5
8.04

2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2022

The Manufacture of other textiles sub-sector currently employs ~8 million employees and the employment base is
expected to reach to 13.8 million by 2022

Source: NSSO, KPMG in India analysis


47
Post Graduate and
Above
3%
Graduate
17% Upto Secondary
55%

Upto Secondary
Vocational/Diploma
7% Higher Secondary

Vocational/Diploma

Graduate
Higher Secondary
Post Graduate and Above
18%

Within the manufacture of wearing apparel sub-sector, nearly half of the workforce requirement is expected to happen
in the up to secondary category.
Source: Primary Interactions, KPMG analysis

4.58

4.28
4.21
4.17
4.13
4.09

2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2022

Manufacture of wearing apparel sub-sector currently employs ~4.1 million employees and the employment base is
expected to reach to 4.58 million by 2022

Source: NSSO, KPMG in India analysis


48
Ability to understand variations and take corrective
actions
An extensive understanding and knowledge on how to
handle machines and troubleshoot
Ability to understand and adapt to new productions
processes and technologies

Features and operations of automatic looms (shuttle and


shuttle-less) for each type of fabric
Processes of weaving and knitting warps/wefts, dyed
and grey fabrics
Different types of woven and knitted fabrics
Knowledge of various movements of looms such as
primary, secondary and auxiliary Entry-level operators
Fabric defects reasons and remedies have limited knowledge
on machines handling
Woven/knitted fabric measurement and calculations and troubleshooting
aspects
Chemical and physical properties of textile
intermediaries, both yarn and fabric
Wet processing procedures for different types of fabrics
cotton, viscose nylon and polyester
Dyeing and printing technology before and after
intermediary product utilisation

Terminology of sewing and tailoring fabric laying,


cutting, alteration, hemming and piping
Tools used for sewing and machine parts
Operations of sewing for various products and its
components such as types of collars, sleeves, pockets,
cuffs and application work (zip, buttons and patches)

Source: KPMG in India Analysis


49
Knowledge of the production process of textile product in
their respective department (yarn, knitted/crocheted/woven
fabric, garments and home textiles)
Awareness on the textile technology being used, its
capacity and productivity
Ability to understand and adapt new production processes Lack the ability to
and technologies handle contingencies,
manage people and
Experience in identifying defects in products and rectifying allocate work
them
Lack of experience in
handling machines
Ability to plan work, manage people and handle
contingencies
Ability to understand variations and take corrective actions
Ability to meet production requirements as per orders
Coordinate with workers and production managers

Understanding quality assurance processes and the ability


to follow the inspection manual
Ability to identify deviations from the company-prescribed
quality levels and report to quality inspector
Ability to conduct quality audits at various levels of the
production process and test products on various
specifications
Lack the ability to
undertake high-level
Knowledge of quality control processes, inspection systems,
due diligence required
defects and remedies in products
for quality checks
Managerial capabilities to maintain work ethics and social
compliance

In-depth information on the physical and chemical


properties of fabrics and final made-ups
Testing of durability, heat resistance and washing
techniques to meet clients requirements
Source: KPMG in India Analysis
50
Ability to plan work and manage people
A strong knowledge of the organisations production
process
Ability to handle and manage contingencies
Knowledge and experience requirements: There is scarcity of
Raw material management purchase, utilisation and experienced planners and
inventory to ensure availability they usually lack people
management skills
Financial management
Lack of understanding of
Cost control the process
Production and productivity
Quality control
Energy management
Personnel management
Strong verbal communication skills
Ability to handle customers and appropriately answer
their queries
Deep understanding of the organisations production
process and the ability to control its execution
Poor communication skills
Thorough knowledge on market trends and new
technologies in the sector There is dearth of
experienced merchandisers
Knowledge of quality standards, pricing, distribution and the existing ones
channels and trade models switch jobs frequently
Knowledge about the product on specifications, Unable to manage
properties of fabric, labeling and packaging contingencies and handle
Ability to handle logistics, export marketing, retail high-pressure situations at
management, supply chain systems and inventories work

Ability to plan and execute orders as per clients


requirements
Negotiation skills
Management of database of buyers and clients

Source: KPMG in India Analysis


51
Thorough understanding of the organisations production
processes
Strong knowledge of market trends and new
technologies in the sector
Ability to design products based on customers core and Lack of knowledge on
secondary requirements customer standards and
Strong knowledge and understanding of various national new global market trends
and international standards Experienced designers are
Fashion designers must possess knowledge of fashion scarce and switch jobs
illustration, styling, global design trends (as per seasons) frequently
and consumer types, garment construction, application Most institutes offer
of computer-aided designs in patterns and different training in apparels. There is
types of fabrics and their usage dearth of sector-specific
Pattern makers/computer-aided designers require skills designers
in preparing advanced industrial flat patterns and cutting
techniques
Efficient in using computer-aided design software

A deep understanding of the organisations production


processes
Thorough knowledge of market trends and new
technologies in the sector for spinning, different types of Lack of sector-specific
woven fabrics such as jacquard and dobby, machinery knowledge
for specialised products such as carpets and rugs, Lack of knowledge on new
curtains as well as technology for printing, dyeing and technologies and their
processing application
Strong knowledge and understanding of various national
and international standards related to the process and
its time

Source: KPMG in India Analysis


52
Factory workers Non-factory workers

Machine operators: Textile technologist


beamer/blender/carder/spinner Marketing manager
Spinning technician Chief innovation officer (for
Spinning (Yarn) Fitter specialised yarn)
Electrician Production engineer
Quality control inspector Production manager (quantity)
Supervisor
Production manager

Machine operators: knitter/ weaver Knitwear designer


Weaving technician Fabric designer (woven)
Knitting technician Textile technologist
Weaving and knitting Fitter Marketing Manager
Electrician Chief innovation officer (for
Quality control inspector specialised yarn)
Supervisor Production engineer
Production manager Production manager (quantity)

Textile wet processing technician Digital print specialist


Block printing specialist Textile colour technologist
Tie and dye specialist Production engineer
Dyeing Quality control inspector Production manager (quantity)
Supervisor
Production manager

Cloth presser Textile colour technologist


Dry cleaners Textile specialist (physical and
Clothing alteration chemical properties)
Finishing Cutting room manager Production engineer
laboratory technician Production manager (quantity)
Quality control inspector
Supervisor

Sewing machine operators Fashion designer (for each sub-


Pattern cutter sector of apparels)
Product Design Pattern grader Home textiles/carpet designer
Embroidery specialist Marketing manager (for each
Dress maker product)
Quality control inspector Production manager
Supervisor
Production manager

Trimmer/ checker Brand manager


Clothing packer/folder Export manager (region and product-
Labelling Label applier wise)
Inventory watch keeper Sales and distribution Manager
Sample displayer
Source: KPMG in India Analysis
53
Ability to distinguish between different textile fibers and textile
products on the basis of their properties and intended purposes
Operate and monitor plant and machinery for spinning
preparation using various methods for preparing material for the
spinning frame
(machine operators) Maintain automated and computer-controlled spinning
machines and installations and conduct associated tasks
involved in yarn production
Operators must have about six months of training in latest
technologies for spinning yarn along with knowledge of the
types of yarn and their properties

Operate and monitor knitting machines (computer-aided) and


(machine operator) use different methods to manufacture knitted goods
Check knitted/crocheted and woven fabrics for faults and rectify
them
Plot designs, draw and use design specifications to manufacture
desired fabrics
(supervisors/ inspectors/
They play an important role as they are in charge of managing
quality controllers)
quality requirements by different customers and must possess
strong knowledge of yarn and fabric properties
Must have 610 years of experience as a machine operator and
must be able to manage a team of fiveeight operators

Able to use textile finishing processes and consider physical


and chemical influences
(textile product finisher) Select testing procedures and devices and conduct quality tests
Modify product properties by controlling and regulating
machines and systems
Must hold a diploma in textile chemistry/textile manufacturing

Source: KPMG in India analysis


54
Must have skills in different types of stitching, use of needles
and work on various types of fabrics
Ability to alter garments, stitch applications as per the patterns
marked on cloths
Must progress over time with respect to the difficulty level of
products being stitched

The role of supervisors is crucial since they handle several field


personnel
Candidates must have passed higher secondary or completed
graduation for this role and possess good communication and
(sewing machine operators, team management skills
tailors, patter makers)

Skills to plan and produce visual drawings using 3D/CAD


(supervisors/ quality
software
controllers)
Ability to differentiate between raw materials and types of yarn
and fabrics used for varied products
(designers/ merchandisers) Assist in informing, advising and supporting customers
Work in teams and appropriately guide production managers to
produce required products as per specifications
Must have a degree in design (product-specific. such as in
formal apparels, traditional garments, carpets and interior designing)

:
Strong communication skills and the ability to negotiate with
clients
Achieve sales target periodically and possess knowledge of
new and existing markets (retail and distribution channels)
Basic knowledge of textile products along with a management
degree

Perform research to find new ways of using yarns;


develop chemicals that may be added to fabrics to make them
(textile technologist/ more waterproof, flame-resistant or shrink-resistant;
innovation officer) experiment with textiles to improve their look, feel, texture and
durability
Highly qualified with an engineering degree in textiles
Source: KPMG in India analysis
55
Industrial training institute 1654 31840 Short courses/trades offered bleaching,
dyeing, computer-aided embroidery, dress
Industrial training centres 887 18624 making, cutting and sewing, embroidery and
needle work, knitting with machines,
weaving of silk and woollen fabrics
Apparel training design centres 14 Short courses on basic and advanced
(SMART, apparel vocational operation of textile machinery, finishers and
institutes) packers, quality checkers and machine
technician
AICTE-approved textile
Degree programs in textile engineering,
engineering colleges
39 1816 fashion technology, textile chemistry,
carpet/jute/silk technology

NIFT 15 Undergraduate degree programs in fashion


design, accessory design, textile, knitwear
design and fashion communication
Ahmadabad Textile Industries 8 There are eight textile research associations
Research Association in India located in Mumbai, Surat,
Northern India Textile Research Ahmedabad, Coimbatore, Ghaziabad and
Association Kolkata. Though engaged in R&D, testing
Southern India Textile Research and consultancy, each of them provide
Association training programs to the industrial
Bombay Textile Research workforce depending on the requirement
Association of the sector
Jute TRA
Wool Industries TRA
Powerloom service centres 44 Regular training courses on pre-weaving and
weaving technology, fabric design, machine
maintenance and other local requirements to
Weavers services centres 24
weavers and loom owners to acquire, improve
and update their HRD skills in line with the
latest and appropriate technology in the
sector

Source: National Institute of Fashion technology (NIFT) Campuses , NIFT < http://www.nift.ac.in/contactus.html> accessed on 10 March 2014
57
90.00 82.14
80.00
70.00
60.00
50.00
40.00 29.68
30.00 21.39
15.43 18.34 18.94
20.00
4.51 5.82 5.86 7.03 7.66 8.47
10.00 0.00 0.24 0.24 0.33 1.09 1.31 1.71 2.01 2.50 3.35 3.56 4.03
0.00
Dadra and

Orissa
Karnataka

Haryana

Kerala

Jharkhand
Gujarat

Andhra Pradesh

Madhya Pradesh

Punjab

Bihar
Delhi

Uttaranchal

Goa

Himachal Pradesh
Assam
West Bengal

Chattisgarh
Tamil Nadu

Rajasthan

Uttar Pradesh
Daman and Diu

Jammu & Kashmir


Maharashtra
The capacity of ITIs offering textile trade is inadequate to meet the skilling requirements of workers in most of the
state, including key textile clusters of Tamil Nadu, West Bengal, Karnataka, Gujarat, Rajasthan and Andhra Pradesh.
There are about 2,541 institutes with a total seating intake capacity of approximately 50,464 offering textile-related
trades.
Sixty-five percent of these skilling institutes are owned and managed by the government and constitute 63.09 percent
of the total seating capacity available for skill development in textile.
A majority of ITIs private and government offer courses on cutting and sewing (51 percent) followed by dress-
making (24 percent) and embroidery and needle work (13 percent).
Only government institutes offer courses on weaving, hand weaving of Niwar tape, durries and carpets and weaving of
silk and woolen fabrics, and bleaching, dyeing and calico printing.

16000 800
14000 700
12000 600
10000 500
8000 400
6000 300
4000 200
2000 100
0 0
Knitting with machine
Computer aided embroidery

Dress making

Fashion technology

Hand weaving of niwar tape,


Cutting and sewing

Pattern maker

Weaving of woolen fabrics


Embroidery and needle work
Bleaching, dyeing and calico

Weaving of silk fabrics


and needle worker

durries and carpets


printing

Number of Seats in Government Institutes Number of Seats in Private Institutes


Number of Government Industrial Training Institutes Number of Private Industrial Training Institutes

Source: ITIs Informational Service, Ministry of Labour & Employment, Government of India, accessed as on 16th November 2013
58
Address trained manpower requirement of textiles and related sectors, including handicrafts, handlooms,
sericulture, jute and technical textiles by developing an integrated framework of training based on sector
needs
Focus on enhancing the capacity of the existing institutes providing skill development and training in the
textile sector

The proposed twelfth FYP outlay of INR1900 crores with a physical target of 1.5 million people during
201217
Establishment of Sector Skill Councils (SSC) for apparels, textiles (including handlooms) and handicrafts
(including carpets) under the aegis of NSDC
Leverage on the capacity and strengths of the existing training institutes under the aegis of the ministry
Encourage private sector participation on a PPP model
Focus on the three components to build the required supply infrastructure:
Institutions/textile research associations under the Ministry of Textiles
Private institutes (by leveraging PPPs)
State government textile agencies
Proposes the establishment of Resource Support Agencies (RSA) for effective implementation of ISDS
through:
Identification of skill requirements and creation of skill inventory database
Standardisation of course content and content development
Standardisation of admission, assessment and certification procedures
Quality control
Increased transparency through the creation of a project management unit, under the ministry, which would
be responsible for
Monitoring of ISDS
Managing the skills and labour market information system (LMIS)
Mandatory placement and tracking to assess the impact of training imparted

Recognises trainers capacity and training the trainers (TOT) as key priority for skill development
Provide advanced training programmes at the cluster level to improve the availability of trainers
Propose a comprehensive training of the trainers (TOT) program to strengthen trainers capacity

Source: Integrated Skill Development Scheme, Ministry of Textiles, Government of India, accessed as on 10th March 2014
59
Textile Technology
Tailor
Sales and Marketing
Quality Control
Production Management
Pattern Maker
Mechanic
Machine Operator - Weaving
Machine Operator - Textiles
Machine Operator - Spinning
Machine Operator - Sewing
Machine Operator - Dyeing, Printing and Processing
Laboratory Technician
Fitter
Finisher and Packer
Embroidery
Electrician
Design
Computer Aided Design

0 10000 20000 30000 40000 50000 60000 70000 80000


Received/Receiving Training Dropped Out Placed

Since the inception of the programme, 0.2 million people have enrolled in various institutes to receive training for
over 20 specialised courses in the textile sector
Machine operator (sewing) witnessed the maximum enrolment of 75,319 people and constituted 37 percent of the
total trainees while the least number of students (98) were enrolled in the electrician course
The overall dropout rate is 1.52 percent with courses on quality control and computer-aided design recording the
maximum dropout (3.98 percent and 3.82 percent, respectively)
The overall placement ratio is only 15.2 percent, indicating poor sector linkages of institutes
Machine operators (spinning) witnessed wider range of placement opportunities with over 42 percent of the total
trainees getting placed
Eight out of the 20 specialised courses electricians, embroidery, finishers and packers, fitters, machine operator
(textiles), pattern-maker, tailor and textile technology lacked placement opportunities for trainees

Source: Trainee Status Till Date, Integrated Skill Development Scheme, < http://www.isds-mot.com/node/192>, accessed as on 10th March 2014
60
High attrition levels across the sector, especially for
entry-level workers. Attrition among small and middle-
level workers is more than 75 percent annually, which
implies that more or less all the workers in the textile
units would change every year. Acknowledge and offer incentives to workers based on
improvisation in skills a few large firms offer this in
Schemes such as MNREGA encourage high levels of the form of grades/promotions among each job role.
absenteeism within textile factories. For example, a home textile stitching unit may have
three grades of sewing machine operators and tailors.
Unwillingness of workers to be recruited as contractual Grade C may refer to tailors sewing simpler forms of
labours contributes to significant informal employment products within a home textile segment (bath linen)
in the sector and, therefore, encourages frequent job such as napkins. Grade B may refer to those
switch. responsible for making towels and Grade A may refer
to those in charge of producing bath robes. The
Unwillingness of operators/entry-level workers to salaries paid to workers would increase with improved
upgrade their skills as wages are low compared to grades.
other service sectors is also prominent.
Competition among workers of a specific function
There are several small and medium-sized units where (such as weaving machine operators) should be
lack of innovation and changes in technology deter conducted periodically to incentivise workers who
workers from continuing with the same job role. deliver high productivity and improved production
quality. Awards and recognitions should be offered to
support such incentives. This may also be linked to
quarterly performance of workers.

There should be development of credibility and


enhancing perception of the utility of training through
the implementation of innovative training practices
such as apprenticeship.

Introduction of monetary and progression incentives for


trained vis--vis untrained personnel by companies.

Increased number of jobs and preferences among


entry-level workers in the service sector such as retail,
banking and IT

Level III (L3) workers with high education requirements The government must encourage textile engineering
express growing interest in MBA and other engineering degrees as an option in popular institutes among other
degree courses engineering options

62
Textile hubs in small towns have firms that recruit Awareness needs to be created among school students
women who are studying in class X and XII. They at the middle school level (class VVIII) through
pursue textile jobs such as stitching and trimming on a vocational education in textiles by courses on
part-time basis to fund their education. embroidery, needle work, fashion design and textile
chemistry. A few schools also include tailoring in home
The sector does not attract the youth to pursue careers science courses.
at the shop-floor level. Moreover, if the units are in
small cities/regions, relocating becomes an issue since Many parts of northern India have been observed by
the salaries are believed to be low. trainers and firms to be a source of manpower, which
could be trained and skilled. SSC, as part of its labour
market information system, could identify typical
demographic profile of people who are likely to enter
the sector and support development training
programmes suited to these profiles.

Training for machine operators in textile mills is


restricted predominantly to industrial training
institutes. These institutes have limited classes for
spinning and weaving operations and offer more
programmes for cutting and sewing. ITIs and ITCs located in major textile hubs must be
upgraded to latest technology and converted into
Lack of design institutes for each sector of the textile centres of excellence offering courses in textile
sector, such as home textiles and technical textiles. At machine operations, which should focus on carding,
present, there are Apparel Training Design Centres, blow room, different types of weaving looms and
NIFTs and IIFTs that offer programmes in apparel sewing machine.
design. Therefore, many fashion or garment designers
interested in home textiles require on-the-job training
to understand design trends, patterns and colours for
such products.

Textile research associations, which offer courses on Home textile design centres (HTDC) should be
the manufacturing of technical textiles, do not offer established on the lines of ATDC in hubs such as Karur,
programs on the designing of products. These courses Maharashtra and Gujarat. These institutes could offer
are restricted to the manufacturing process, technology courses on home textile manufacturing, types of fabrics
and use of specialised fabrics. The design aspect used, design and pattern-making and the use of CAD.
would be required for certain products such as sports
technology and allergy-free bedding. Each textile research association considered as a
centre of excellence for a technical textile sub-sector
must also introduce design technology courses.

63
Infrastructure and textile machinery in ITIs and ITCs
offering courses on spinning, weaving, dyeing, printing
and processing operations do not use latest
technology. With increased automation and changing
technology, there is a need to regularly upgrade skills The Ministry of Textiles is encouraging public-private
of operators, fitters, electricians and textile partnerships within their integrated Skill Development
technologists. Scheme, wherein funds are being provided to private
players interested in establishing institutes. This could
Latest technology and textile machinery, as per sector be extended further to another model wherein training
requirements, are being used only by a few textile institutes that cannot procure latest technology due to
research associations such as NITRA and SASMIRA poor financial condition can purchase/lease second-
however, there are less seats for textile technology. hand machines from private players.

The Strategic Plan for Textiles and Clothing sector for


201116, as laid out by the Ministry of Textiles,
emphasises on research and development in each
textile sub-sector, including technical textiles, jute and SGS is a global firm in-charge of quality testing and
woollen industries. It has proposed collaborative certifying products. It conducts workshops in India for
research with global R&D textile institutes. This could inspectors, supervisors and quality control managers
be further extended to programs in advanced textile in various consumer goods so that Indias
technology and quality control. manufacturing quality is in line with international
standards. This can be extended to the textiles and
Designers trained in NIFTs, IIFTs and other major clothing sector wherein the firm operates as an
fashion design institutes lack awareness on global inspection agent for various foreign import agents.
trends. Every country has different preferences for
garments and home textiles. Indian designers are
usually unable to predict future seasonal trends, lack
awareness on global designs and require constant
guidance through trend workshops.
Fashion and home textile design institutes should
Management (MBA) graduates from reputed business include courses on the preferences of global
schools who join textile firms as marketing executive consumers and upcoming trends in the textile sector.
or merchandiser lack knowledge of textiles, such as They should educate people on the design preferences
the type of fabric, physical and chemical properties of of the US and Europe.
the textile products and varieties of weaving
techniques.

Textile management programs can be provided by


textile research associations that offer a combination
of textile courses along with marketing and sales.

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The trades offered by textile training institutes are not
standardised. Moreover, they are restricted to old
technology operations and/or sewing and cutting.
There is a need to expand the existing list of trades
offered by industrial training institutes in line with the A sector skill council for textiles focusing on apparels,
textile sectors skill demand. spinning and weaving is being considered.
Standardisation of trades and occupation standards in It must be ensured that the trades proposed in it
skills should be complemented with a nodal body in account for the skill gaps across all textile sub-sectors,
charge for certification. including technical and home textiles.
SSC can leverage support from textile research
association and export promotion councils to design
occupation standards.

A majority of recruitment by textile firms within their


mills and units is undertaken through job fairs in textile
clusters or through references from existing
employees.
An IT application for updates on vacancies in textile
At times, there is increased supply of women workers firms in each textile cluster would assist workers in
interested in stitching and tailoring roles however, they searching jobs. Enrolment of job seekers as well as
are unaware of the firms located in textile hubs. employers can be managed by those industrial
institutes that serve as centres of excellence for the
textiles sector.

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