Preview

India After 20 Years

Powerful Essays
Open Document
Open Document
8133 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
India After 20 Years
Draft
January, 2007

INDIA’s GROWTH: PAST AND FUTURE

by

Shankar Acharya*

* Honorary Professor and Member Board of Governors, Indian Council for
Research on International Economic Relations (ICRIER)

Paper for presentation at the Eighth Annual Global Development
Conference of the Global Development Network, January 14-16, Beijing.

0

India’s Growth: Past and Future
By
Shankar Acharya1

This paper is divided into five sections. Section I briefly reviews India’s growth performance since 1950 and indicates a few salient features and turning points. Section II discusses some of the major drivers of India’s current growth momentum (which has averaged 8 percent in the last 3 years) and raised widespread expectations (at least, in
India) that 8 percent plus growth has become the new norm for the Indian economy.
Section III points to some of the risks and vulnerabilities that could stall the current dynamism if corrective action is not taken. Section IV appraises the country’s medium term growth prospects. The final section assesses some implications of India’s rise for the world economy.

I

Review of Growth Performance, (1950-2006)
Table 1 summarizes India’s growth experience since the middle of the twentieth

century. For the first thirty years, economic growth averaged a modest 3.6 percent, with per capita growth of a meager 1.4 percent per year. Those were the heydays of state-led, import-substituting industrialization, especially after the 1957 foreign exchange crisis and the heavy industrialization bias of the Second Five Year Plan (1956-61). While the strategy achieved some success in raising the level of resource mobilization and investment in the economy, it turned out to be hugely costly in terms of economic efficiency. The inefficiencies stemmed not just from the adoption of a statist, inward1

The author is Member, Board of Governors and Honorary Professor at Indian Council for Research on
International Economic Relations (ICRIER). He was Chief Economic



References: Acharya Shankar (2002a): “Macroeconomic Management in the Nineties,” Economic and Political Weekly , April 20; reprinted in Acharya (2006a). _____(2002b): “Managing India’s External Economic Challenges in the 1990s”, in M. S. _____(2003): India’s Economy: Some Issues and Answers , Academic Foundation, New Delhi. _____(2004): “India’s Growth Prospects, Revisited”, Economic and Political Weekly, October 9; reprinted in Acharya (2006a) _____(2006a): Essays on Macro Economic Policy and Growth in India, Oxford University Press, New Delhi. _____(2006b): “Economic Growth: Some Reflections”, Economic and Political Weekly, November 4. _____(2006c): “Economic Policy: Mid-Term Report”, Business Standard , August 22, New Delhi. Acharya, Shankar, Isher Ahluwalia, K. L. Krishna and Ila Patnaik (2003): “India : Economic Growth, 1950-2000”, available at http://www.gdnet.org/pdf2/gdn_library/global_research_projects/explaining growth/India_Complete_31Mar04.pdf.; abridged version in Parikh (2006). Aggarwal, Pawan (2006): “Higher Education in India: The Need for Change”, ICRIER Working Paper No Ahluwalia, Montek S. (2002): “Economic Reforms in India since 1991: Has Gradualism Worked?” Journal of Economic Perspectives 16 (3). Bhagwati, J. and P. Desai (1970): India: Planning for Industrialization , Oxford University Press, New Delhi. Bhalla, Surjit (2007): Second Among Equals: The Middle Class Kingdoms of India and China (forthcoming), Institute of International Economics, Washington D.C. Bosworth, B. and S. Collins (2003): “The Empirics of Growth: An Update”, Brookings Papers on Economic Activity 2:2003 , Brookings Institution Press, Washington DC. Bosworth, Barry, Susan Collins and Arvind Virmani (2007): “Sources of Growth in the Indian Economy”, India Policy Forum 2006 (forthcoming). Business Standard (2006): BS 1000 , January, New Delhi. Das, J. and J. Hammer (2004a) : “Strained Mercy: Quality of Medical Care in Delhi”, Economic and Political Weekly February 28. _____(2004b): “Money for Nothing; The Dire Straits of Medical Practice in India”, Policy Research Working Paper No Government of India, Planning Commission (2006): Towards Faster and More Inclusive Growth: An Approach to the 11th Five Year Plan, New Delhi. Kelkar, Vijay (2004): “India: On the Growth Turnpike”, 2004 Narayanan Oration, Australian National University, April, available at Kochhar, Kalpana, Raghuram Rajan, Arvind Subramanian and Ioannis Tokatlidis (2006): “India’s Pattern of Development: What happened, What Follows,” NBER Working Paper No. NCAER (2005): The Great Indian Middle Class , National Council of Applied Economic Research, New Delhi. Panagariya, Arvind (2004a): “India in the 1980s and 1990s: A Triumph of Reforms”, Economic and Political Weekly, June 19. 28 ____(2004b) “India’s Trade Reform” in S ____ (2006) “Transforming India”, mimeo, paper presented at Columbia University Conference “India: An Emerging Giant”, October. Parikh, Kirit (ed.), (2006): Explaining Growth in South Asia, Oxford University Press, New Delhi. Pratham (2006): Annual Status of Education Report, Pratham Resource Centre, Mumbai. Reserve Bank of India (2006): Annual Report, 2005-06 , Mumbai. Rodrik, Dani and Arvind Subramanian (2004): “Why India Can Grow at 7 percent a Year or More”, Economic and Political Weekly , April 17. Sivasubramonian, S (2000): The National Income of India in the Twentieth Century , Oxford University Press, New Delhi. Virmani, Arvind (2004): “Sources of India’s Economic Growth: Trends in Total Factor Productivity,” ICRIER Working Paper No Wilson, Dominic and Roopa Purushothaman (2003): “Dreaming with BRICs: The Path to 2050,” Goldman Sachs Global Economic Paper No World Bank (2005): Economic Growth in the 1990s: Learning from a Decade of Reform, World Bank, Washington DC. ____(2006): Inclusive Growth and Service Delivery: Building on India’s Success, MacMillan India, New Delhi.

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful