Leather – Same Starting Line, Different Destinations

In 1978, China and India stood at nearly similar positions in leather and footwear. Both had large populations, abundant raw materials, traditional craftsmanship and near-zero global presence.

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CHINA’S STATE-OWNED enterprises produced basic shoes under planned economy quotas. India’s colonial-era tanneries and entrepreneurial clusters in Madras and Kanpur operated as fragmented and domestically focused enterprises. Both started from the same line. One engineered above USD 50 billion export industry. The other is still assembling the blueprint.

CHINA’S TRANSFORMATION
Deng Xiaoping’s (former Chairman of the Central Mili­tary Commission of the People’s Republic of China) reforms engineered a manufacturing revolution. Spe­cial Economic Zones in Shenzhen, Zhuhai, Shantou and Xiamen offered foreign investors an irresistible package: tax holidays, duty-free imports, simplified regulations and plug & play infrastructure. Footwear was among the earliest beneficiaries. Taiwanese and Hong-Kong entrepreneurs moved quickly, bringing capital, technology and importantly, global brand rela­tionships. Nike began Chinese manufacturing in 1981. Adidas and Reebok followed. Abundant, disciplined and low-cost labour from massive rural-to-urban mi­gration fueled manufacturing boom.

Beijing’s masterstroke was infrastructure as deliber­ate industrial policy. It developed world-class ports, factory-to-shipping roads and reliable power. Complete supply chain ecosystems emerged: tanneries in Hebei and Zhejiang, component suppliers, machinery produc­ers and chemical companies clustering around footwear hubs, driving down costs and lead times simultane­ously. Critically, policy ensured investors’ confidence to commit long-term. The outcome was 13 billion pairs annual production (55 per cent of global production) with to­tal turnover exceeding USD 80 billion. China’s footwear in­dustry manufactured a new society. The industry lifted over 20 million people out of rural poverty, providing the wages that funded educa­tion and healthcare for an entire generation.

INDIA’S MISSED MOMENT
India produces 3 billion pairs annually, primarily for domestic consumption with exports around USD 5 billion, one-tenth of China’s peak. Yet, India possesses what China never had: democratic governance, Eng­lish-speaking talent, design capabilities, institutions like CLRI and a massive domestic market. Still, these strengths remain underleveraged.

The Indian government is now moving towards a more aggressive, export-oriented strategy. Central and state policies are beginning to align, focusing on long-term incentives and Free Trade Agreements (FTAs). Fresh investments bring technology, buyer relationships and management expertise along with supply chain. Clus­ter upgradation—CETPs, testing laboratories, power reliability, logistics connectivity are underway where speed-to-market is the priority. Still, worker housing, healthcare facilities and skilling require equal atten­tion. The future growth will be driven by non-leather segments – sports shoes, athleisure, synthetics. That is scale-driven, process-led and competitive only when supported by standardised supply chains, automation and logistics infrastructure.

India’s Vision 2030 also targets USD 50 billion turnover, USD 14 billion in exports, and 2.2 million additional jobs. India today possesses the capability and infrastruc­ture than China did in 1978. India becoming a global leader is not a distant dream. The world is ready to walk in Indian shoes; it’s time for us to provide them.

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