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1.49
The
economy appears to have decidedly taken off
and moved from a phase of moderate growth to a new phase
of high growth. Achieving the necessary escape velocity
to move from tepid growth into a sustained high-growth
trajectory requires careful consideration of two issues
and three priorities. The two issues are: the sustainability
of high growth with moderate inflation; and the inclusive
nature of such high growth. The three priorities are:
rising to the challenge of maintaining and managing high
growth; bolstering the twin pillars of growth, namely
fiscal prudence and high investment; and improving the
effectiveness of Government intervention in critical areas
such as education, health and support for the needy.
1.50
On the first issue of sustainability of high growth
without running into high inflation, various indicators
suggest that the current growth phase is sustainable.
1.51
First, higher growth together with the demographic dividend
(from a growing proportion of the population in the working
age group) is likely to lead to a rise in the savings
rate to finance more and more investment. There is already
evidence of this virtuous and mutually reinforcing growth-savings-growth
cycle in the recently released savings and investment
figures for 2005-06.
1.52
Second, efficiency improvements in the economy since 1999-2000
reinforce the confidence in the high-growth phase. The
ratio of net capital stock to gross value added in the
economy, according to the National Accounts Statistics,
went down from 2.78 to 2.60 between 1999-2000 and 2004-05.
While the ratio increased to 2.66 in 2004-05, the rise
was primarily due to a corresponding rise in the ratio
of net capital stock to value added in agriculture. There
is an encouraging and almost steady decline in the ratio
of net capital stock to value added in industry.
1.53
Third, it is not only the sustained increase in savings
and investment, availability of labour at reasonable wage
rates, and efficiency increases, but also the opening
up of new avenues in services, beyond the already well-known
IT and ITES, that bolster confidence in the new high-growth
phase. For example, in a remarkable transition, the tourism
industry has displayed buoyant double-digit annual growth
rates in each of the last three years. Tourism contributes
over 10 per cent of global GDP and its potential in India,
given the countrys enormous natural, human and technological
resources, is well-recognised. The sector, through its
backward and forward linkages, can stimulate many others,
particularly hotels, restaurants, and handicrafts. While
a recent study by National Council of Applied Economic
Research estimates tourisms contribution towards
GDP (both direct and indirect) in India at only 5.90 per
cent, India has already emerged as among the fastest growing
tourist destinations in the world. Given its bio-diversity,
variety of unique destinations and natural locales, India
can transform itself into a 365 days a year destination
with increased emphasis on new products like medical tourism,
rural tourism, and wellness tourism, and marketing India
as a destination for Meetings/Incentives/Conventions and
Exhibitions (MICE).
1.54
Fourth, concerns have been expressed about whether
the country is growing beyond its growth potential thereby
straining its labour force and capital stock, and hence
engendering inflationary instabilities. In India, with
unemployment, both open and disguised, concerns about
over-heating are connected more with capacity utilization
and skill shortages. Rapid growth in capacity addition
through investments can avert the problem of capacity
constraints. Another indicator of over-heating namely,
merchandise import growth, also appears to be within reasonable
limits.
1.55
Fifth, infrastructure, that constrained for years
the growth performance of the economy, appears to be improving.
There are signs of tangible progress in areas such as
power, roads, ports, and airports. Following the road
shows abroad for attracting global financial capital,
the setting up of a US $ 5 billion fund to finance Indian
infrastructure on February 15, 2007 by four major financial
institutions (Citigroup, Balckstone, Infrastructure Development
and Finance Corporation and India Infrastructure Finance
Company), is an encouraging development.
1.56
The second issue is about the nature of this high growth
in terms of inclusiveness. Putting more people in productive
and sustainable jobs lies at the heart of inclusive growth.
But such success, primarily, will depend on the success
in achieving and maintaining high growth. There cannot
be inclusive growth without growth itself. The experience
of East Asia clearly reveals how high growth can eliminate
poverty and transform a developing country into a developed
one.
1.57
The results of the latest NSSOs 61st Round clearly
show how the annual growth rate of employment has not
only accelerated from 1.6 per cent during 1993-2000 to
2.5 per cent during 1999-2005, but crossed the 2.1 per
cent rate recorded during 1983-1994. Unemployment has
gone up not because of high growth, but because growth
was not high enough. It is important to avoid the misconception
that inclusive growth, by necessity, will have to be low
growth.
1.58
The inclusive nature of the growth itself will be conditioned
by the progress that is made in the areas of education,
health and physical infrastructure. A young girl, when
denied the benefit of education, often grows up to be
excluded from participating in the growth process. Similarly,
villagers are literally left behind in the growth process,
when their village does not have the benefit of connectivity,
be it roads, electricity, or communication.
1.59
Among the priorities, first is rising to the challenge
of maintaining and managing high growth. Phase-transition
invariably throws up new problems and challenges. It is
necessary to make the required adjustments in mindsets,
economic behaviour, and policy making. There is no scope
for uneasiness or nervousness about high growth. In the
latter half of the 20th century, the East Asian miracle
has been followed by even more rapid growth in China in
more recent times. Fostering the momentum of growth in
India continues to be a top priority.
1.60
Inflation in recent times has been triggered by the
rapid rise in the prices of primary articles all over
the world. In India, prices of essential food items have
come under pressure. Why? Because of shortcomings on the
supply side and poor and inefficient intermediation between
the producer and the consumer. For managing inflation,
supply side policies are critical, particularly in agriculture.
Such policies will not only help in fighting inflation
but also reinforce growth. What is important to note is
that international experience shows that troublesome inflation
need not be the price to be paid for favourable high growth.
The fight against inflation has to be calibrated so that
policies contain inflation without compromising growth.
With appropriate policies, it should be possible to maintain
and manage high growth without inflation.
1.61
Finding immediate answers to inflation induced by
commodity-specific supply shortfalls is difficult. A durable
solution to such inflation problem has to be found in
increasing yields and domestic output for products such
as pulses, edible oils, rice and wheat. There is tremendous
scope for increasing yield levels through technology diffusion.
Simultaneously, there is a need to recognize that there
could be a potential contradiction between a remunerative
price for the farmer and a fair price for
the consumer in the short run. The same contradiction
arises in the case of pricing of petroleum products. The
reconcilitation of such a contradiction ought not to be
in terms of an expensive compromise of fiscal rectitude.
1.62
The second priority is bolstering the twin pillars
of high growth, namely, fiscal prudence and high investment.
The growth resurgence observed in the economy is not an
accident but the result of sound policies and several
reform measures. The experience of the past few years
has clearly demonstrated the benefits of fiscal prudence
along the FRBMA lines. Reforms, along with the high growth,
have brought about a surge in investment in the past few
years. While accelerating growth and the demographic dividend
will continue to boost savings and investment, simultaneously,
policies have to be designed in a flexible manner to enhance
investments in the economy to lay a robust foundation
for growth. There is need for investment, both public
and private, domestic and foreign. But it is important
to resist the temptation of fiscal profligacy in the anxiety
to enhance public investment. Adhering to fiscal rectitude
has never been easy in any country at any time. Like going
up a hill, the adjustments become harder as the destination
gets closer. Indias investment grade sovereign rating
reflects not only the perceived strong economic prospects,
strength of its balance of payments and the capital markets,
but also its improving fiscal position.
1.63
The third priority is improving the effectiveness
of Government intervention in critical areas especially
in the social sector. The goal of inclusive growth can
be achieved only through effective government intervention
in the areas of education, health and support to the needy.
Value for every tax rupee spent has to be ensured by emphasizing
the outcomes and avoiding any wastage or leakages in the
delivery mechanism of public goods and services. Appropriate
design of programmes and placing effective monitors over
the programmes are critical in this regard.
1.64
A comparison of two alternative schemes to generate
self-employment opportunities among the rural poor, namely
the Prime Ministers Rozgar Yojana (PMRY) and SHG-Bank
linkage, illustrates the importance of programme design.
Recovery under PMRY has been around 35 per cent in the
three years ending in 2005. The programme of linking self-help
groups (SHG) of the rural poor with the banking system
(SHG-Bank linkage), to strengthen the credit delivery
in rural areas was launched in 1992 through NABARD as
a pilot project and mainstreamed in 1996. The focus of
SHG-Bank linkage is largely on small and marginal farmers,
agricultural and non-agricultural labourers, artisans
and craftsmen. The uniqueness of the programme is zero
subsidy. It has been reported that the recovery rates
under the SHG-Bank linkage programme are close to 90 per
cent. The contrast leads to obvious conclusions. A loan
programme with poor recovery cannot be sustained over
a long period.
1.65
To make significant progress in social infrastructure,
mere expansion of the coverage or the number of programmes
is not enough. With the launch of the National Rural Employment
Guarantee Scheme (NREGS), which provides the country with
a potential social safety net, there is need to revisit
the multiplicity of poverty alleviation schemes. The effective
implementation of NREGS is critical for improving inclusiveness.
It should reduce poverty and improve rural infrastructure;
and any failure to do so will be an indicator of its ineffective
implementation.
1.66
Improvement in the quality of social services is an urgent
necessity for all social sector programmes. While a large
number of school-age children still remain to be enrolled
in primary schools, an independent survey has revealed
that many students learn by Class 8 what they should have
learnt by Class 2. However, there are success stories
also in different parts of the country that wait to be
replicated.
1.67
Subsidies are an important fiscal policy tool for
correcting market failures, particularly under-consumption
of basic essentials such as food. By the end of the Eleventh
Five Year Plan, with the need to feed an estimated additional
150 million people, the system will confront new challenges.
Such challenges will include changing dietary patterns
with increasing income and changes in lifestyle. The NCMP
mandate of targeting all subsidies sharply at the poor
and the truly needy like small and marginal farmers, farm
labour and urban poor remains to be implemented. The inconclusive
debate on subsidies needs to be resumed, and tangible
progress made for cost-effective income transfers to the
truly needy. Alternative mechanisms for the delivery of
subsidy are available. They must be tried atleast on a
pilot basis, and the experience should lead to the invention
of alternative and more effective mechanisms.
1.68
A sense of optimism characterizes the current economic
conjuncture. Fostering the momentum of growth continues
to be a top priority. Sustainability of such growth will
depend on carefully calibrating policies to tame inflation
without dampening growth; formulating appropriate supply-side
measures, particularly in agriculture; better design and
more effective delivery of social services, such as education,
health and poverty-alleviation, to make growth more inclusive;
and putting fresh impetus behind infrastructure. Downside
risks from a rapid unravelling of global macroeconomic
imbalances, volatile oil prices, and delays in the completion
of the Doha Round remain, but, for the present, they appear
to be limited.
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