India shows spurt in efficient execution of projects: Project Management Institute
Corporations were able to reduce the wastage on project executions by over 20 per cent to $97 million in 2016 from the year ago's $122 million.

"For the first time in five years, more projects are meeting original goals and business intent while being completed within budget and that fewer projects are deemed failures," the Project Management Institute said.
It said India reported the lowest average monetary waste on projects of $73 million per $1 billion, followed by both China and the Middle East at $82 million per $1 billion each.
Explaining the reasons behind how such a change occurs, PMI's managing director for the country Raj Kalady said, "A formal approach to project and programme management can be the link that ensures that an organisation has the capabilities for change and strategy execution that it needs."
Globally, corporations were able to reduce the wastage on project executions by over 20 per cent to $97 million in 2016 from the year ago's $122 million.
Among the sectors, healthcare showed the worse losses at $112 million per $1 billion, followed by telecom ($106 million), energy ($101 million), Government ($97 million) and construction ($94 million), while information technology was the lowest at $78 million of losses per $1 billion, the report said.
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