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Inceptum '23
The solution can be divided into two parts: diplomacy and deals with the USA and Russia, and addressing war inflation
while promoting entrepreneurship and stable employment.
Solution •
•
Expansion of loan support to SMEs
Greater involvement in R&D
• GTM/Explansion strategies of Indian startups.
• Analysing other countries war inflation folicies.
• Expanding Manufacturing Facility
• Offset banking system
• Increasing domestic procurement capacity • Formulated policies to stop check the • Provides for a systematic approach
Impact by 70% by the year 2050 inflationary pressures matrix via which Indian startups to
compete with China
• Controlling critical dependencies by utilizing • Checked in overreaching fiscal deficits
a combination of hard and soft power by a combination of quantitative • Expanding our manufacturing base
instruments by providing “Plug & Play” services
OVERVIEW ANALYSIS SOLUTION CONCLUSION
PROBLEM ANALYSIS
Uneployment Rate %
Defense 12
• Lack of Defence Manufacturing base in India
10
• Primarily driven by Government ordnance factories
and poor private participation 8
Inflation 0
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
36
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
20
ec
ec
ec
ec
ec
ec
ec
n
t
Oc
spending during the war
Ja
D
th
rd
st
st
st
st
st
st
st
20
31
31
31
31
31
31
31
03
• Inflationary pressures exacerbated by the ongoing Fleet Strength of Navy Fighter Aircraft
conflict with Pakistan
Russian
Competition Indian
Russian
20%
30%
• Trade restrictions provided Indian companies 35% Indian
40%
advantage over Chinese ones, removal of such will
lead to increased competitiveness
• Increasing competitiveness to lead to the closure of Other Countries
10%
American
30%
Under the terms of the agreement, the India to gain from US technological
MoD/DRDO will provide the necessary transfers in the fields of defense, AI etc.
information to SMEs about the defense
technologies and components that Indian
Armed Forces seek to indigenise. India-Russia
IGA
25% of Defense R&D should be earmarked
for Industry (academia, private sector & Leveraging IGA to source spare-parts for
startups) Russian based weapon systems.
50
OPERATING CREW NO. OF EQUIPMENTS
LINE MAINTENANCE
NO. OF EQUIPMENT
CREW
OPERATING
Total Annual Cost Reduced annual cost divesting
TRAINER FLEET weapon system units
CONTRACTED MAINTEN.
MAINTENANCE
DRIVEN BY NO. OF EQP.
NO. OF EQUIPMENT
50
ADD. SPARE PARTS
OPERATING HRS.
DRIVEN BY OPT. HRS.
OVERHEAD DEFENSE
DEFENSE OVERHEAD
COSTS
FIX OVERHEAD Total Annual Cost Reduced annual cost divesting
weapon system units
OVERVIEW ANALYSIS SOLUTION CONCLUSION
INFLATION ANALYSIS
Hungary
Israel-
Fiscal Policy - Loose fiscal
policy gradually tightened
Fiscal Policy- Tightening of
after 1995
Fiscal policy to combat the
large government deficits.
Monetary Policy - Initially
loose, then supportive of right
Monetary Policy- Using
fiscal stance
quantitative inflation
instruments to target the
Incomes Policy -Restriction of
450% inflation.
wages in states enterprices in
1995 and flexible labour
Income policy- Introduce flat
markets
increment in wages and
inculcating price control.
Chile
Fiscal Policy - Central Brazil-
government fiscalsurplus since Argentina Fiscal Policy -Small operational surplus at outset of
late1980s and 1997 Fiscal Policy - Deficit reduced prior to stabilization program; tight stablization; inadequate fiscal structrual reforms;
position there after, but stabilizers allowed to operate. Fiscal fiscal stance subsequently weakened
Monetary Policy - Targets real impulse 1992-94; thereafter fiscal structural
interest rate to control weakness addressed but nit eliminated Monetary Policy - Loosening in fiscal stance placed
domestic expenditures. Policy increasing burden on monetary
generally directed toward Monetary Policy - Supporting role; remonetization and fall in
reducing inflation interest rates as inflation delcined. Tightened with outflows due Incomes Policy - Following introduction of new
to the currency board regime currnecy, wages to remain fixed during contract
Incomes Policy - Not a factor period. Public prices fixed
Incomes Policy - Freeze on public sector wages, pensions and
prices for nine months
OVERVIEW ANALYSIS SOLUTION CONCLUSION
INFLATION CONTROLS
Fiscal Policy: Israel’s Inflation Graphs
The high fiscal deficit–is to be substantially reduce through:
Monetary Policy:
• RBI to restrict growth of credit by raising reserve requirement and the real
discount rate on deregulated lending
• A minimum term for dollar-indexed (PATAM) deposits was raised to one year
Income Policy:
• The price of necessities goods and services are to be frozen for three months
after an initial increase in prices (due to larger macroeconomic trends).
OVERVIEW ANALYSIS SOLUTION CONCLUSION
Competing with China: Post-Trade Restriction Strategies
R&D SOURCING MANUFACTURING SALES FEEDBACK Lithium
- ion
HIGH battery
Team - QUALIFIRES
SASHANKA SHANEHIL