| Welcome
to Kerala Business
Kerala is rich in
industrial potentialities and infrastructure facilities
such as hydro-electric power, rich forests, rare
minerals like ilmenite and monozite and the efficient
system of transport and communications. Traditional
industries are handloom, cashew, coir and handicrafts.
Other important industries are rubber, tea, ceramics,
electric and electronic appliances, telephone
cables, transformers, bricks and tiles, drugs
and chemicals, general engineering, plywood splints
and veneers, Beedi and cigar, soaps, oils, fertilizers
and Khadi and village industry products.
A number of manufacturing
units have also sprung-up for production of precision
instruments, machine tools, petroleum and petroleum
products, paints, pulp paper, newsprint, glass
and non-ferrous metals. Principal export products
are cashewnut, tea, coffee, spices, lemongrass
oil, sea foods, rose wood and coir. The State
has an abundance of important minerals like ilmenite,
rutile, monazite, zircon, sillimanite, clay and
quartz sand.
Total number of industrial
units in Kerala as on 31 March 1998 was 474. There
are 110 public sector undertakings in the State.
Out of 34 units established up to March 1999 27
Technopark are in the field of Information Technology.
The Software Technology Parks of India is already
running complexes in Thiruvananthapuram with 17
units functioning under its umbrella directly
and three other units in private premises, all
engaged primarily in the export of computer software
from the country. Thirty one companies with a
total capital investment of Rs 6,545 lakh are
functioning at Technopark in Thiruvananthapuram.
There are about 1,91,672 persons employed in the
Khadi and village industries sector in the State.
Agriculture forms
the main occupation of the people. About 50 per
cent of the population depend upon agriculture
for their livelihood. A unique feature of the
State is the predominance of cash crops. Kerala
is a major producer of coconut, rubber, pepper,
cardamom, ginger, cocoa, cashew, arecanut, coffee
and tea. Tree spices like nutmeg, cinnamon, cloves,
etc., are also cultivated. Rice and tapioca are
important food crops. Coconut is the most important
cash crop of Kerala while pepper earns the maximum
foreign exchange. Banana, pineapple, mango and
jackfruit are major fruit crops. Kerala is not
self-sufficient in food production.
The State has a gross
cropped area of 3.87 lakh hectares under paddy
cultivation during 1997-98. Although Kerala has
lost its leading position in the production of
coconuts with only 41 per cent of the total national
production, it continues to be the predominent
supplier of milling copra. During the 1997-98
the State continues to hold the monopoly in pepper
production. The State accounts for more than 86
per cent of the area under rubber, 53 per cent
under cardamom, 27 per cent under coffee and 9
per cent under tea. The area under rubber in the
State, during 1997-98 was 4.63 lakh hectares. |