70th SKOCH Summit
Saturday | 16 January 2021 | 0800-2000 hrs
PDP BILL AND ITS IMPLICATIONS
‘Data’ has emerged as the essence of most modern-day economies. In this era of big data many firms derive their value from exclusive data access and other intangible assets, as opposed to machinery and other physical assets. The innate characteristics of ‘data’ raise several policy questions related to its value, ownership, regulation and sovereignty. Often to achieve national objectives, conflicts get created and need resolution-in the data space the potential policy conflicts are just more profound. Consequently, only a few countries have enacted data protection regulations while others have started the process. The Indian Government constituted a Data Protection Committee (DPC) in 2017 which proposed a comprehensive law on data protection. The Personal Data Protection Bill, 2019 was introduced in the Parliament on 11 December 2019 and the proposed legislation is currently being analysed by a Joint Parliamentary Committee (JPC). The proposed legislation seeks to provide for the protection of personal data of individuals and proposes a framework for processing of such data by other entities. The overarching goal of this discussion would be to highlight the effectiveness of the proposed legislation in striking a balance between protecting a nascent but fast-growing digital economy in India and the rights of over a billion users.
The panel discussion will deliberate the following questions:
- What are the implementation gaps and challenges in the proposed Personal Data Protection Bill, 2019 including institutionalising and functioning of the Data Protection Authority (DPA)?
- What will be the economic implications of the proposed legislation? How would the compliance requirements impact firms in the long and short run? Will the legislation impact India’s trade competitiveness, especially in the services sector?
- Has privacy emerged as an important form of non-price competition? Do existing/ proposed legislations allow for institutional collaborations to assess and regulate this aspect of privacy? If not, is this necessary?
Beyond Ease of Doing Business Rankings
The Government of India has wholeheartedly adopted the World Bank’s approach to rank countries on its Ease of Doing Business indicators. It has aimed improvements on rankings with a single-minded pursuit. The Government has even launched the Business Reform Action Plan to rank states on business reforms they claim to have implemented, and promoted competitive federalism.
Despite benefits and shortcomings of rankings, it is becoming evident that climbing charts cannot become an end in itself and much more efforts are required on the ground to make life easier for entrepreneurs, both small and large, each facing their unique sets of challenges.
These challenges can be broadly categorised into stock and flow of regulatory requirements. The former relates to existing requirements, and their implementation and the latter with the manner in which such requirements are changed.
Subjecting the existing requirements to a three-step test of legality, necessity and proportionality, and the proposals to a cost-benefit analysis would be necessary to address such challenges. This will require institutionalising reforms such as regulatory impact assessment. The panel discusses the following:
- Is the government right in spending and capacity on ease of doing business rankings or such rankings should be discarded in favour of other result-oriented measures?
- What reforms should government adopt to take its ease of doing business efforts to the next level and is there something we can learn from other successful countries?
- How to overcome bureaucratic preference to status-quoism and apathy to change and what incentives are needed to ensure effective adoption and implementation of such new sets of reforms?
India & Emerging Global Trade Imperatives
In the post-COVID world, with key economies raising barriers to international trade it could seem that the era of large regional trade agreements are over. Two contradictory events recently; the first was that ASEAN+5 made operational the Regional Comprehensive Economic Cooperation Agreement. India as it decided in 2019, stayed away. the other is UK walked away from what was essentially a regional trading agreement—the European Union as Brexit. Meanwhile a new US administration takes over, which is far less hostile to the idea of trade agreements.
The world is divided between the need for ensuring safety in their supply networks and so bringing manufacturing closer home, yet realising that growth is only possible to give a fillip to with deeper trade networks. The panel discusses the following:
- Will this then move the needle away from regional trading blocs to bilateral free trade agreements?
- Will countries like India and UK be more keen to enter such agreements?
- What then happens to the 18 odd 18 regional trade agreements India is a signatory to?
Contextualising New Education Policy
India has recently come up with its New Education Policy (NEP). Given the history of policymaking for the education sector in India, since independence, this is the fourth document to have been introduced by the government, the last one being developed in 1992. The promulgation of the new policy raises a fundamental question about the need of having a new policy. One may also ask how new the latest policy document is compared to its predecessors. The Panel Discussion aims at contextualising the policy vis-à-vis the ground level reality. It discusses the following:
- What perceptible changes are observed in the recent policy document in terms of objectives, intent and operational details compared to the earlier ones?
- What were the felt-needs of introducing the new policy?
- How well does this policy document capture in a seamless way the interactions among primary, secondary and higher education systems?
- How to take care of the resource constraints that may come in the way of achieving the policy objectives?
Private vs Public: Policy Direction for Public Health
Health policy is a tough call. Thinking about market failure and state capacity from first principles is required in public health and in healthcare. There are market failures in public goods and externalities that essentially constitute ‘public health’. Equally, there are market failures in asymmetric information and market power that shape healthcare. The debate then is whether we need more state or less in public health and healthcare. There is a lot of interest in technological fixes, all the way from National Digital Health Blueprint to Artificial Intelligence to replace doctors. This panel tries to put the role of state, private sector and digital technologies in context such that India may finally get a winning policy prescription for health that is widely acceptable.
Channeling Research into Public Policy
This panel focuses on the role that research institutions, academia, and Universities can play in times when reactions to public policy and governance challenges are increasingly becoming polarised along political lines, mainstream media is largely seen to be biased, and effective and deep research and analysis into questions of public policy is lacking. It focuses largely on four themes:
- In light of the quivering pillars of the fourth estate, is the onus of creating an informed civil society on academia?
- How do we make specialised academic research more mainstream and help create informed debate in light of recent global events?
- How should academia break free from the echo chamber of academic journals?
- What is the role that students and policy professionals could play in catalysing this change?
Arjun Munda
Samavesh ki Lok Niti
Hon’ble Minister of Tribal Affairs
Meenakshi Lekhi
Jai Hind Keynote
Chairperson, Joint Parliamentary Committee on PDP Act
Amitabh Kant
Jai Hind Keynote
CEO, NITI Aayog
Sameer Kochhar
Chairman, SKOCH Group
Suresh Prabhu
Jai Hind Keynote
Member, Rajya Sabha & G20 and G7 Sherpa
Amarjeet Sinha
Emerging Policy Imperatives
Advisor to the Prime Minister
Sudhir Nayar
Unleashing Potential in Times of Crisis
MD, Commercial Sales, Cisco India and SAARC
Nagendra Nath Sinha
Economic Revival and Rural India
Secretary, Ministry of Rural Development
Sunil Kumar
Decentralisation and Transparency
Secretary, Ministry of Panchayati Raj
Bhaskar Pramanik
The Art of Being Good
Corporate Leader & Distinguished Fellow, SKOCH Development
Karuna Gopal
Bringing Felt-Needs to Public Policy
President, Foundation for Futuristic Cities
Ajay Shah
Private Play in Public Health
Independent Scholar
Pradeep S Mehta
Secretary General, CUTS International
Ashwani Mahajan
Public Health and Public Sector:
National Coordinator, Swadeshi Jagran Manch
Mike Seiferling
MPA Programme Director, School of Public Policy, University College London (UCL)
Democracy and Data Privacy
Meenakshi Lekhi
Jai Hind Keynote
Chairperson, Joint Parliamentary Committee on PDP Act
Sameer Kochhar
Chairman, SKOCH Group
Rajarshi Purkayastha (“Raj”)
Operationalising the PDP Vision
Head of Pre-Sales, India, MECAA, SAARC, Tata Communications & Member, Working Group on Future of Governance, CEO’s Association for Inclusive India (CAII)
Rohan Kochhar
Chat with Rohan
Director, Public Policy, SKOCH Group
0800-0805 | National Anthem |
0805-0810 | Welcome: Dr Gursharan Dhanjal, MD & Editor, SKOCH Group |
0810-0815 | Live Voting |
0815-0900 | SKOCH Order-of-Merit Investiture |
0900-0905 | Live Voting |
0905-0915 | Opening Remarks: Mr Sameer Kochhar, Chairman, SKOCH Group |
0915-0930 | Jai Hind Keynote – Ms Meenakshi Lekhi, Chairperson, Joint Parliamentary Committee on PDP Act |
0930-0940 | Operationalising the PDP Vision: Mr Rajarshi Purkayastha (“Raj”), Head of Pre-Sales, India, MECAA, SAARC, Tata Communications & Member, Working Group on Future of Governance, CEO’s Association for Inclusive India (CAII) |
0940-0955 | Chat with Rohan: Mr Rohan Kochhar, Director, Public Policy, SKOCH Group in Conversation with Ms Meenakshi Lekhi, Chairperson, Joint Parliamentary Committee on PDP Act |
0955-1000 | Live Voting |
PDP Bill and its Implications
Meenakshi Lekhi
Chairperson, Joint Parliamentary Committee on PDP Act
Gulshan Rai
Former National Cyber Security Coordinator & Distinguished Fellow, SKOCH Development Foundation
Rajat Kathuria
Director and Chief Executive, Indian Council for Research on International Economic (ICRIER)
Smita Purushottam
Founder and Chairperson, The Science, Indigenous Technology & Advanced Research Accelerator (SITARA)
Parminder Jeet Singh
Executive Director, IT for Change
Shivangi Nadkarni
Co-Founder & CEO, Arrka
Astha Kapoor
Co-Founder, Aapti Institute
1000-1005 | Opening Remarks: Dr Rajat Kathuria, Director and Chief Executive, Indian Council for Research on International Economic (ICRIER) |
1005-1010 | Dr Gulshan Rai, Former National Cyber Security Coordinator & Distinguished Fellow, SKOCH Development Foundation |
1010-1015 | Ms Smita Purushottam, Founder and Chairperson, The Science, Indigenous Technology & Advanced Research Accelerator (SITARA) |
1015-1020 | Mr Parminder Jeet Singh, Executive Director, IT for Change |
1020-1025 | Ms Shivangi Nadkarni, Co-Founder & CEO, Arrka |
1025-1030 | Ms Astha Kapoor, Co-Founder, Aapti Institute |
1030-1055 | Discussion and Live Voting |
1055-1100 | Closing Remarks of the Chair: Ms Meenakshi Lekhi, Chairperson, Joint Parliamentary Committee on PDP Act |
‘Data’ has emerged as the essence of most modern-day economies. In this era of big data many firms derive their value from exclusive data access and other intangible assets, as opposed to machinery and other physical assets. The innate characteristics of ‘data’ raise several policy questions related to its value, ownership, regulation and sovereignty. Often to achieve national objectives, conflicts get created and need resolution-in the data space the potential policy conflicts are just more profound. Consequently, only a few countries have enacted data protection regulations while others have started the process. The Indian Government constituted a Data Protection Committee (DPC) in 2017 which proposed a comprehensive law on data protection. The Personal Data Protection Bill, 2019 was introduced in the Parliament on 11 December 2019 and the proposed legislation is currently being analysed by a Joint Parliamentary Committee (JPC). The proposed legislation seeks to provide for the protection of personal data of individuals and proposes a framework for processing of such data by other entities. The overarching goal of this discussion would be to highlight the effectiveness of the proposed legislation in striking a balance between protecting a nascent but fast-growing digital economy in India and the rights of over a billion users.
The panel discussion will deliberate the following questions:
- What are the implementation gaps and challenges in the proposed Personal Data Protection Bill, 2019 including institutionalising and functioning of the Data Protection Authority (DPA)?
- What will be the economic implications of the proposed legislation? How would the compliance requirements impact firms in the long and short run? Will the legislation impact India’s trade competitiveness, especially in the services sector?
- Has privacy emerged as an important form of non-price competition? Do existing/ proposed legislations allow for institutional collaborations to assess and regulate this aspect of privacy? If not, is this necessary?
Inclusive Growth and Public Policy
Amarjeet Sinha
Emerging Policy Imperatives
Advisor to the Prime Minister
Nagendra Nath Sinha
Economic Revival and Rural India
Secretary, Ministry of Rural Development
Sunil Kumar
Decentralisation and Transparency
Secretary, Ministry of Panchayati Raj
Sameer Kochhar
Chairman, SKOCH Group
Rajarshi Purkayastha (“Raj”)
Operationalising the PDP Vision
Head of Pre-Sales, India, MECAA, SAARC, Tata Communications & Member, Working Group on Future of Governance, CEO’s Association for Inclusive India (CAII)
Manisha Kochhar
Chairperson, SKOCH Development Foundation
1100-1102 | Welcome: Ms Manisha Kochhar, Chairperson, SKOCH Development Foundation |
1102-1110 | Opening Remarks: Mr Sameer Kochhar, Chairman, SKOCH Group |
1110-1125 | Emerging Policy Imperatives: Mr Amarjeet Sinha, Advisor to the Prime Minister |
1125-1135 | Economic Revival and Rural India: Mr Nagendra Nath Sinha, Secretary, Ministry of Rural Development |
1135-1145 | Decentralisation and Transparency: Mr Sunil Kumar, Secretary, Ministry of Panchayati Raj |
1145-1150 | Closing Remarks: Mr Rajarshi Purkayastha (“Raj”), Head of Pre-Sales, India, MECAA, SAARC, Tata Communications & Member, Working Group on Future of Governance, CEO’s Association for Inclusive India (CAII) |
1150 | Live Voting |
Duties in Participatory Democracy
Bhaskar Pramanik
The Art of Being Good
Corporate Leader & Distinguished Fellow, SKOCH Development
Sameer Kochhar
Chairman, SKOCH Group
Sudhir Nayar
Unleashing Potential in Times of Crisis
MD, Commercial Sales, Cisco India and SAARC
Karuna Gopal
Bringing Felt-Needs to Public Policy
President, Foundation for Futuristic Cities
Rohan Kochhar
Chat with Rohan
Director, Public Policy, SKOCH Group
1150-1153 | Welcome: Mr Sameer Kochhar, Chairman, SKOCH Group |
1153-1200 | The Art of Being Good: Mr Bhaskar Pramanik, Corporate Leader & Distinguished Fellow, SKOCH Development Foundation |
1200-1205 | Unleashing Potential in Times of Crisis: Mr Sudhir Nayar, MD, Commercial Sales, Cisco India and SAARC |
1205-1215 | Chat with Rohan – Duties in Participatory Democracy – Mr Rohan Kochhar, Director, Public Policy, SKOCH Group in conversation with Mr Sudhir Nayar, MD, Commercial Sales, Cisco India and SAARC |
1215-1220 | Bringing Felt-Needs to Public Policy: Ms Karuna Gopal, President, Foundation for Futuristic Cities |
1220 | Live Voting |
Beyond Ease of Business Rankings
Suresh Prabhu
Jai Hind Keynote
Member, Rajya Sabha & G20 and G7 Sherpa
Sameer Kochhar
Chairman, SKOCH Group
Pradeep S Mehta
Secretary General, CUTS International
Reema Nanavaty
Executive Director, Self Employed Women’s Association
Srinivas Rao
CEO, Global Alliance for Mass Entrepreneurship
Manish Sabharwal
Founder, Teamlease
1220-1223 | Welcome: Mr Sameer Kochhar, Chairman, SKOCH Group |
1223-1238 | Jai Hind Keynote: Mr Suresh Prabhu, Member, Rajya Sabha & G20 and G7 Sherpa |
1238-1241 | Mr Pradeep S Mehta, Secretary General, CUTS International |
1241-1246 | Moderator: Mr Pradeep S Mehta, Secretary General, CUTS International |
1246-1251 | Mr Manish Sabharwal, Founder, Teamlease |
1251-1256 | Mr Srinivas Rao, CEO, Global Alliance for Mass Entrepreneurship |
1256-1301 | Ms Reema Nanavaty, Executive Director, Self Employed Women’s Association |
1301-1320 | Discussion and Live Voting |
1320-1355 | LUNCH |
1355-1430 | Live Voting & SKOCH Order-of-Merit |
The Government of India has wholeheartedly adopted the World Bank’s approach to rank countries on its Ease of Doing Business indicators. It has aimed improvements on rankings with a single-minded pursuit. The Government has even launched the Business Reform Action Plan to rank states on business reforms they claim to have implemented, and promoted competitive federalism.
Despite benefits and shortcomings of rankings, it is becoming evident that climbing charts cannot become an end in itself and much more efforts are required on the ground to make life easier for entrepreneurs, both small and large, each facing their unique sets of challenges.
These challenges can be broadly categorised into stock and flow of regulatory requirements. The former relates to existing requirements, and their implementation and the latter with the manner in which such requirements are changed.
Subjecting the existing requirements to a three-step test of legality, necessity and proportionality, and the proposals to a cost-benefit analysis would be necessary to address such challenges. This will require institutionalising reforms such as regulatory impact assessment. The panel discusses the following:
- Is the government right in spending and capacity on ease of doing business rankings or such rankings should be discarded in favour of other result-oriented measures?
- What reforms should government adopt to take its ease of doing business efforts to the next level and is there something we can learn from other successful countries?
- How to overcome bureaucratic preference to status-quoism and apathy to change and what incentives are needed to ensure effective adoption and implementation of such new sets of reforms?
India & Emerging Global Trade Imperatives
Amitabh Kant
Jai Hind Keynote
CEO, NITI Aayog
Sameer Kochhar
Chairman, SKOCH Group
Deepshikha Sikarwar
Senior Editor, Economic Times
Rajat Kathuria
Director and Chief Executive, Indian Council for Research on International Economic (ICRIER)
Sachin Chaturvedi
Director General, Research and Information System for Developing Countries (RIS)
Amitendu Palit
Senior Research Fellow and Research Lead, ISAS, National University of Singapore
1430-1435 | Opening Remarks: Mr Sameer Kochhar, Chairman, SKOCH Group |
1435-1450 | Jai Hind Keynote – Mr Amitabh Kant, CEO, NITI Aayog |
1450-1455 | Moderator: Ms Deepshikha Sikarwar, Senior Editor, Economic Times |
1455-1500 | Prof Sachin Chaturvedi, Director General, Research and Information System for Developing Countries (RIS) |
1500-1505 | Dr Rajat Kathuria, Director and Chief Executive, Indian Council for Research on International Economic (ICRIER) |
1505-1510 | Dr Amitendu Palit, Senior Research Fellow and Research Lead, ISAS, National University of Singapore |
1510-1530 | Discussion and Live Voting |
In the post-COVID world, with key economies raising barriers to international trade it could seem that the era of large regional trade agreements are over. Two contradictory events recently; the first was that ASEAN+5 made operational the Regional Comprehensive Economic Cooperation Agreement. India as it decided in 2019, stayed away. the other is UK walked away from what was essentially a regional trading agreement—the European Union as Brexit. Meanwhile a new US administration takes over, which is far less hostile to the idea of trade agreements.
The world is divided between the need for ensuring safety in their supply networks and so bringing manufacturing closer home, yet realising that growth is only possible to give a fillip to with deeper trade networks. The panel discusses the following:
- Will this then move the needle away from regional trading blocs to bilateral free trade agreements?
- Will countries like India and UK be more keen to enter such agreements?
- What then happens to the 18 odd 18 regional trade agreements India is a signatory to?
Contextualising New Education Policy
C Raj Kumar
Vice Chancellor, Jindal Global University
Sameer Kochhar
Chairman, SKOCH Group
Vimala Ramachandran
Founder, ERU Consultants and Former National Fellow and Professor, National Institute of Educational Planning and Administration (NIEPA)
N V Varghese
Vice Chancellor, National Institute of Educational Planning and Administration (NIEPA)
Sudhir Aggarwal
Director – Business Development, Government & Education, Microsoft Corporation (India)
1530-1535 | Opening Remarks: Mr Sameer Kochhar, Chairman, SKOCH Group |
1535-1540 | Moderator: Dr C Raj Kumar, Vice Chancellor, Jindal Global University |
1540-1545 | Prof N V Varghese, Vice Chancellor, National Institute of Educational Planning and Administration (NIEPA) |
1545-1550 | Prof Vimala Ramachandran, Founder, ERU Consultants and Former National Fellow and Professor, National Institute of Educational Planning and Administration (NIEPA) |
1550-1555 | Mr Sudhir Aggarwal, Director – Business Development, Government & Education, Microsoft Corporation (India) |
1555-1600 | Reserved |
1600-1630 | Discussion and Live Voting |
India has recently come up with its New Education Policy (NEP). Given the history of policymaking for the education sector in India, since independence, this is the fourth document to have been introduced by the government, the last one being developed in 1992. The promulgation of the new policy raises a fundamental question about the need of having a new policy. One may also ask how new the latest policy document is compared to its predecessors. The Panel Discussion aims at contextualising the policy vis-à-vis the ground level reality. It discusses the following:
- What perceptible changes are observed in the recent policy document in terms of objectives, intent and operational details compared to the earlier ones?
- What were the felt-needs of introducing the new policy?
- How well does this policy document capture in a seamless way the interactions among primary, secondary and higher education systems?
- How to take care of the resource constraints that may come in the way of achieving the policy objectives?
Private vs Public: Policy Direction for Public Health
Ajay Shah
Private Play in Public Health
Independent Scholar
Ashwani Mahajan
Public Health and Public Sector:
National Coordinator, Swadeshi Jagran Manch
Rohan Kochhar
Chat with Rohan
Director, Public Policy, SKOCH Group
Nita Tyagi
Core Volunteer – Healthcare, iSpirt Foundation
1630-1635 | Opening Remarks: Mr Rohan Kochhar, Director, Public Policy, SKOCH Group |
1635-1645 | Private Play in Public Health: Dr Ajay Shah, Independent Scholar |
1645-1655 | Public Health and Public Sector: Dr Ashwani Mahajan, National Coordinator, Swadeshi Jagran Manch |
1655-1705 | Ms Nita Tyagi, Core Volunteer – Healthcare, iSpirt Foundation |
1705-1730 | Discussion and Live Voting |
Health policy is a tough call. Thinking about market failure and state capacity from first principles is required in public health and in healthcare. There are market failures in public goods and externalities that essentially constitute ‘public health’. Equally, there are market failures in asymmetric information and market power that shape healthcare. The debate then is whether we need more state or less in public health and healthcare. There is a lot of interest in technological fixes, all the way from National Digital Health Blueprint to Artificial Intelligence to replace doctors. This panel tries to put the role of state, private sector and digital technologies in context such that India may finally get a winning policy prescription for health that is widely acceptable.
Public Policy for Tribals and the Marginalised
Arjun Munda
Samavesh ki Lok Niti
Hon’ble Minister of Tribal Affairs
Sameer Kochhar
Chairman, SKOCH Group
Deepak Khandekar
Secretary, Ministry of Tribal Affairs
1730-1735 | Opening Remarks: Mr Sameer Kochhar, Chairman, SKOCH Group |
1735-1750 | Samavesh ki Lok Niti: Mr Arjun Munda, Hon’ble Minister of Tribal Affairs |
1750-1800 | Mr Deepak Khandekar, Secretary, Ministry of Tribal Affairs |
1800-1805 | Observations on Achievements of the Ministry of Tribal Affairs: Mr Rajarshi Purkayastha (“Raj”), Head of Pre-Sales, India, MECAA, SAARC, Tata Communications & Member Working Group on Future of Governance, CEO’s Association for Inclusive India (CAII) |
1805-1820 | Live Voting & SKOCH Order-of-Merit Investiture |
1820-1845 | SKOCH Award |
Channeling Research into Public Policy
Gursharan Dhanjal
Managing Director & Editor, SKOCH Group
Mike Seiferling
MPA Programme Director, School of Public Policy, University College London (UCL)
R Sudarshan
Dean, Jindal School of Government and Public Policy (JSGP), O P Jindal Global University
Rohan Kochhar
Chat with Rohan
Director, Public Policy, SKOCH Group
Arushi Jain
Associate Director, Bharti School of Public Policy – ISB
Sony Pellissery
National Law University – Bengaluru
Indranil Mukhopadhyay
Associate Professor, Jindal Global University
1845-1850 | Welcome: Mr Rohan Kochhar, Director, Public Policy, SKOCH Group |
1850-1855 | Opening Remarks: Dr Gursharan Dhanjal, Managing Director & Editor, SKOCH Group |
1855-1905 | Keynote: Dr Mike Seiferling, MPA Programme Director, School of Public Policy, University College London (UCL) |
1905-1910 | Moderator: Prof R Sudarshan, Dean, Jindal School of Government and Public Policy (JSGP), O P Jindal Global University |
1910-1915 | Prof Arushi Jain, Associate Director, Bharti School of Public Policy – ISB |
1915-1920 | Prof Sony Pellissery, National Law University – Bengaluru |
1920-1925 | Dr Indranil Mukhopadhyay, Associate Professor, Jindal Global University |
1925-1945 | Discussion, Q&A and Closing |