The size of MSMEs matters in understanding their level of productivity relative to large enterprises in emerging economies including India. This means that micro enterprises trail large companies by a greater margin in comparison to small and medium-size enterprises.
Even as MSMEs play a significant role in economies across the world, they lack in productivity with only around half as productive as large companies, said McKinsey Global Institute in its latest report on spotting business opportunities for MSMEs to boost their productivity.
While the productivity performance differs across countries and sectors, the MSME productivity gap — the distance between productivity (value added per worker, $ thousand purchasing power parity) of MSMEs and large companies — in India is a hefty 74 per cent as MSMEs in the country are just 26 per cent as productive as large companies, the report noted.
The gap is wider in other emerging economies as well such as 94 per cent in Kenya, 75 per cent in Indonesia, 53 per cent in Mexico, etc., in comparison to advanced economies such as the UK with only 16 per cent MSME productivity gap, Japan and Australia with 48 per cent, Germany with 39 per cent, Italy with 45 per cent, etc.
Importantly, the size of MSMEs matters in understanding their level of productivity relative to large enterprises in emerging economies including India. This means that micro enterprises trail large companies by a greater margin in comparison to small and medium-size enterprises.
The report noted that narrowing this productivity gap could be equal to an average of 10 per cent of GDP in emerging economies. In India, reducing this gap is equivalent to 11 per cent of the country’s GDP.
Importantly, the sectors that churn out the highest economic value in India from narrowing productivity gaps are manufacturing, ICT, and professional services.