Title: Growth and Economic Policies in India: 1950-2006
1Growth and Economic Policies in India 1950-2006
2Growth Summary
- 1951-88 3.8 percent per annum
- 1988-2006 6.3 percent
- 2003-07 8.6
- Observation
- No miracle, no debacle
3Key Questions
- Unlike most countries in Africa and Latin America
how did India escape prolonged stagnation or
decline? - why was India unable to break out of the
relatively low rate of growth until the late
1980s? - what accounts for the shift in the growth rate in
recent years? - how has the Indian economy managed to sustain the
higher growth rate of 6.3 percent during the past
two decades? - What accounts for the shift to 8.6 percent?
4Distinguishing Four Phases of Growth
- Table 1.1
- How do we divide these 55 years into a small
number of sub-periods (phases) for orderly
discussion? - Chart (a few slides later)
5Table 1.1 Annual Growth Rates of The GDP
6How to Divide into Sub-periods?
- According to
- Five Year Plans
- Decades
- The Global Economic Environment
- Changes in the Policy Regime
- Differences in the Growth Performance
7Our Preferred Division
- According to the sharpness of differences in the
growth rates tempered by the consideration that
we want to connect the performance with policy
changes. - We distinguish four phases
- Phase I 1950-65
- Phase II 1965-81
- Phase III 1981-88
- Phase IV 1988-06
8(No Transcript)
9Defending the Phases
- Issues raised by Wallacks work on structural
breaks - Cut off between Phases I and II deceleration,
which is especially large if we compare with S.
Korea and Taiwan major shift in the policy
regime - Cut off between Phases II and III not
controversial - Cut off between Phases III and IV Perhaps most
controversial
10Has India Entered Phase V?
11Dollar GDP has grown 16.3 annually during 2003-06
12Other highlights during 2003-04 to 2005-06
- Exports doubled in 9 years during 1990-2000. They
doubled in three years during 2002-06 from 52.7
billion to 102.7 billion. - Services exports doubled in just two years from
26.9 billion in 2003-04 to 60.6 billion in
2005-06. - Share in the world merchandise exports 0.5 in
1990-91, 0.7 in 1999-00 and 1.0 in 2005-06.
Services exports 2.5 in 2005-06. - The exports of goods and services as a proportion
of the GDP 7.2 in 1990-91, 11.6 in 1999-00 and
20.5 in 2005-06. - The total foreign investment has risen from 6
billion in 2002-03 to 20.2 billion in 2005-06.
DFI is less. - In 1990-91, India had approximately 5 million
phone lines in total. Currently, India is adding
more than 7 million phone lines per month. - The sales of passenger vehicles rose from 707,000
in 2002-03 to 1.14 million in 2005-06.
13Why this growth is likely to sustain
- Fundamentally altered initial conditions
- Demographic transition
- Rising savings rate and excellent prospects for
its continued rise - Large stock of foreign exchange means a major
external sector crisis is less likely - A pure cycle effect should have begun to show
signs of a return to the 5-6 range by now.
There are no signs of such a slowdown.
14Sectoral Growth
- Agriculture grew consistently slower than the GDP
- Industrial growth picked up in Phase I but
dropped drastically in Phase II - Services showed a more stable pattern with growth
accelerating particularly in Phase IV.
15Table 1.2 Growth Rates of Sectoral GDP (at
factor cost)
16Sectoral Shares
- The share of agriculture declined consistently
- The share of industry rose initially but
stagnated in Phases III and IV - The share of services rose consistently
17Growth, Productivity and Policies
- We focus on the growth-policy link rather than
growth productivity link because - Productivity studies are fraught with data
problemsno reliable employment data - Policies work through not just productivity but
also reduced underemployment and increased
savings and investment
18Table 1.3 The Composition of the GDP
19Features Common to the Four Phases
- Why India escaped prolonged stagnation or
decline? - Macroeconomic stability
- Political stability
- Gradual and predictable policy changes
- Capacity to implement policies
20Growth and Reforms
- Phase I Open foreign investment policy
relatively open trade policy until the late
1950s investment licensing began to tighten only
towards the late 1950s, early 1960s - Phase II Socialism struck with vengeance
- Phase III Ad hoc liberalization during 1975-79,
1980-84 and then more substantial liberalization
during 1985-86 and 1986-87. - Phase IV Systemic and systematic liberalization
21Debates on Growth DeLong (2003) and Rodrik (2003)
- Rodrik (2003)
- J. Bradford DeLong shows that the conventional
account of India, which emphasizes the
liberalizing reforms of the early 1990s as the
turning point, is wrong in many ways. He
documents that growth took off not in the 1990s,
but in the 1980s. What seems to have set off
growth were some relatively minor reforms.
(Rodrik 2003). - Critique by Panagariya (2004)
- Modest reforms and modest acceleration during
1981-88 - Spurt during 1988-91 was preceded and accompanied
by important reforms - Growth was partially fueled by unsustainable
fiscal deficits and external debt, which set of a
crisis the 1991 crisis.
22Debates on Growth and Reforms Rodrik and
Subramanian (2005)
- R-S An attitudinal change on the part of the
government in favor of private business around
1980 rather than liberalizing reforms resulted in
a permanent shift in the growth rate. They claim
that pro-business policies that favor incumbent
producers rather than pro-market policies that
promote new entrants and aim to benefit consumers
account for once for all shift in the growth rate
that took place in the early 1980s. - Srinivasan (2005) This is a disappointing
paper. It sees a mystery and fails to convince
through analysis why it does. Had the authors
been familiar with Indian economic literature,
they might not have written it! The literature
has not only noted the growth acceleration in the
1980s but has also questioned its sustainability
on the grounds of its possibly being debt-led and
fueled by employment and real wage expansion in
the public sector.
23Debates on Growth and Reforms Rodrik and
Subramanian (2005) (continued)
- Panagariya (2007)
- Play by the R-S rules Define Phase III as
1981-92 and Phase IV as 1992-06 Growth rates at
5.2 and 6.3 still exhibit acceleration - Pro-business versus pro-market spurious
distinction. Pro-business measures are an
integral part of pro-market reforms. - Political-economy dictated reform by stealththis
constrained the government to reforms within the
existing policy frameworki.e., reforms R-S call
pro-business - Factually, the government did introduce
(pro-market) reforms that eased up entry of new
firms - R-S also wrong on trade liberalization
24Growth and Reforms Atul Kohli (2006)
- Kohli also relies on the pro-market and
pro-business terminology, but defines them
differently than R-S. - He calls pro-market strategy as one that allows
free play to markets to achieve efficient
allocation of resources and promotes competition.
As for pro-business strategy, it is viewed as
one that has developed more via real world
experience, especially from the rapid growth
successes of some East Asian economies. - Panagariya (2007)
- This distinction also reflects confusion since
outward orientation, timely depreciation to avoid
overvaluation of the domestic currency,
labor-market flexibilities, and license-free
entry of new businesses and expansion of the
existing ones, advocated by pro-market
economists, were all integral part of the real
world experience of the fast-growing economies
of East Asia. - Giving monopoly of the entire sectors (iron and
steel, telecommunications equipment) to the
government, as India did during the 1960s and
1970s, cannot be characterized as pro business.
Likewise, creating private sector oligopolies
through licensing (Ambassador and Fiat cars) may
favor specific businesses but is not truly
pro-business.
25Growth and Reforms Deepak Nayyar (2005)
- It was the socialist rather than pro-market
policies that yielded the most important
structural change in India. - The shift from less than 1 percent growth during
the first half of the 20th century to the 3 to 4
percent rate during 1951-80 was proportionately
much larger than any shift subsequent to 1980. - Khatkhate (2006)
- A comparison of the structural change in
1951-80 with the pre-independence decades is both
fatuous and facetious.During the latter
pre-independence period there was no autonomous
economic policy geared to the interests of a
nation. The objective functions were different.
It was a colonial policy, addressing the
interests of the home country. Any policy,
statist or otherwise, with Indias interests at
the center, would have achieved better results
than under a colonial regime. The real question
is whether the statist policies were superior to
other alternatives but this question can never be
answered for want of counterfactual evidence. - If socialism is so good, growth during 1965-81
should have been even higher than in 1951-65.