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India: an emerging power

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Title: India: an emerging power


1
India an emerging power?
  • Mritiunjoy Mohanty
  • IIM Calcutta
  • IEIM, UQAM

2
Preview
  • There is no necessary convergence of interests
    between USA and India
  • Whether India becomes a new power will be depend
    upon how it copes with internal and external
    challenges
  • Indeed coping with these might lead to divergence
    of interests
  • And new coalitions

3
The upside growth and take-off
  • Economy growing at nearly 9 over the last four
    years, i.e., from 2003/4 to 2006/7
  • Will probably maintain that this year
  • Per capita income growth has more doubled
  • Currently at 7.1, as compared with3.4
    experienced during the 1980s and 1990s

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  • Investment and savings ratios in the low 30s,
    which would seem the requirement for modern
    take-off
  • Domestically financed, CAD in the range of 2
  • Increased inflows of capital
  • Huge increases in inward market-seeking FDI in
    the last 4 years
  • Rising accretion of reserves
  • Sustainable macroeconomics

11
Private Capital
  • Indian private capital finally came of age,
    showcasing itself in the 12 bn takeover of Corus
    by Tata Steel, catapulting it no.5 globally
  • Tata Motors, currently no.2 in india in cars,
    frontrunner in the bidding for Ford brands Jaguar
    and Landrover
  • Corporate india on a global buying binge
  • Outbound FDI now almost equal to inward FDI. Next
    year it is predicted to be higher

12
Public Sector
  • A public sector renaissance
  • Partial privatisation
  • Privatisation stopped because of political and
    union resistance
  • On 21st Jan 2008, 7 public-sector firms in Top20
    by market capitalisation and 14 in the Top50
  • End of 2000, there were 5 in the Top20 (one of
    which has been sold) and 8 in the Top50

13
Science and Technology
  • Indias science and technology, seems finally to
    find its feet.
  • In January 2007, ISRO successfully recovered an
    orbiting satellite.
  • It is a technology that only China, the EU,
    Russia and the USA possess.
  • In April 2007 ISRO commercially launched and
    Italian scientific satellite Agile into orbit and
    entered the international satellite launch
    market.
  • Two days ago commercially launched an Israeli spy
    sattelite.
  • Successful launch of the Geosynchronous Satellite
    Launch Vehicle, (GSLV-F04), which placed a
    2-tonne communication satellite, INSAT-4CR into
    orbit.
  • Successfully tested an indigenously made
    cryogenic engine to power GSLVs
  • Indian made super-computer ranked in the top-10
    in the world

14
The international stage
  • Major player in the Doha Round of WTO
    negotiations
  • Important G24 member coalition of shared
    interests
  • Expanded G8
  • The Indo-US nuclear deal and the recognition of
    India nuclear power without signing the NPT
  • The distancing from Pakistan
  • convergence of interests
  • Increase in strategic value an emerging power

15
The downside
  • Internal
  • Unsustainable inequality
  • Agrarian crisis and land hunger
  • Poor quality of jobs
  • Caste inequality related violence
  • External
  • Unstable South Asian neighbours
  • China

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Unsustainable Inequality
  • the gini coefficient has gone up from 32.9 to
    36.2 between 1993-2004
  • Over the same period, the bottom 20 per capita
    expenditure has grown at 0.85 p.a. while the top
    20 has grown at 2.03 p.a.
  • In China the comparable statistics are 3.4 and
    7.1
  • That is Chinas bottom 20 expenditures rise 4
    times faster than Indias.
  • It is this lack of growth at the bottom which
    makes increasing inequality potentially
    unsustainable

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. because
  • An unprecedented agrarian crisis of livelihoods,
    income, employment and profitability has beset
    rural India for more than a decade
  • 86 of Indias workforce is employed in the
    informal sector, the bulk of whom have gained
    little from the rapidly growing economy.
  • Almost 97 of new non-agricultural jobs created
    between 2000-05 in the informal sector.
  • 88 of Dalits and Adivasis population, 80 of
    Other Backward Castes (OBCs) and 84 of Muslims
    belong to the category of the poor and
    vulnerable. These groups constitute roughly 75
    of the population
  • five years later, victims of the Gujarat pogrom
    still live in refugee camps and have not been
    able to return home and there has been no calling
    to account

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and therefore
  • Land related violence
  • The resurgence of armed left-wings groups
  • Caste related violence
  • Not just social but political as well
  • In November 2006, a poor Dalit agricultural
    worker who had been elected the president of
    village panchayat in Tamil Nadu, was killed
    because he refused to oblige his deputy, an
    upper-caste vice-president, and become a
    rubber-stamp president.

19
Unstable neighbours
  • Pakistan
  • Bangladesh
  • Sri Lanka
  • Nepal
  • Burma

20
Economies have fared well
21
  • Democracies and polarisation Bangaldesh and Sri
    Lanka
  • Convergence of interests Pakistan
  • Nepal
  • Burma
  • China

22
Deepening of democracy and lower caste political
mobilisation
  • Affirmative action in politics
  • ensured that there were seats for socially
    disadvantaged groups (including lower castes) in
    all publicly contested elected bodies, from the
    parliament downwards to now the panchayat.
  • Politics of affirmative action lower caste
    mobilisation around quotas
  • Upper caste response politics of religious
    identity
  • It is this political mobilisation and the
    consequent access to political power that
    probably explains one of the most truly
    remarkable aspects of Indias democracy that in
    India it is the poor and not the rich who are
    more likely to vote

23
. new players and tradeoffs
  • Indias first low caste (Dalit) chief minister at
    the head of Dalit majority government
  • Changing elites the rise of the urban
    bourgeoisie and the middle class
  • Eclipse of the rural bourgeoisie
  • Deepening agrarian crisis and caste conflict
  • Agrarian crisis and financial liberalisation
  • Tradeoffs - land reforms will not be supported by
    rural bourgeoisie
  • Tradeoffs - non-agricultural employment for
    reducing poverty rural biased growth strategy
    will not be supported by urban bourgeoisie

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  • The 2004 defeat of the BJP-led coalition
  • The coming of the Congress-led UPA
  • Rural employment guarantee scheme
  • Doha defensive interests
  • Power of the urban bourgeoisie
  • Continuing agrarian crisis
  • Resistance to Indo-US nuclear deal
  • Pragmatic India and stable neigbours
  • No necessary convergence
  • A new coalition of interests

25
  • Thank You
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