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Gurcharan Das
INDIA SHINING (1984 – 2004), RIP?
July 12, 2004,
Outlook
It is no use
pretending. While the last general election brought some good
news--especially, a well deserved slap to Narendra Modi’s
fascist face—it also brought bad news. The hugely positive
global sentiment in favour of India that had prevailed until
mid May has received a setback. The clearest example is the
dramatic slowdown in the growth in the nation’s reserves.
Until the week ended May 7, reserves had been growing at the
rate of US $750 million a week. This accretion to reserves had
diminished to less than US $100 million a week. The rupee has
also reversed its appreciating trend. Although this may, in
fact, be good for exports, but the currency trend combined
with the stock market crash demonstrates that sentiment has
changed, and if this is not reversed quickly it will hurt new
private investment in the economy, and longer term growth,
competitiveness, and jobs.
Sentiments are fragile
and often irrational, but they do matter. Entrepreneurs invest
when they are feeling good and stop investing when doubts
creep in. This is what has happened in India. Doubts have
crept in, and the self-confidence that had fuelled investment
during the past nine months has largely evaporated. Both
Indian and foreign investors have once again begun to have
doubts about India as a worthy destination for investment.
Thus P. Chidambaram faces a heroic task. For no matter how
much you tell investors that the fundamentals of the economy
have not changed—that it is still the same sound economy as it
was two months ago—market sentiments have a life of their own,
and they do not always listen to reason.
Although the left
tends to dismiss it, national confidence is a good thing. Ask
any CEO and he will tell you that a sustained positive feeling
among employees often separates success from failure. Ask a
historian of Rome, and he will testify to its amazing power.
Or of 19th century Britain, or Japan between
1960-1990, or even current day China—they will all bear
witness to the clout of self-belief, which makes ordinary
people do extraordinary things. This confidence has been
jolted by this election.
Before relegating
“India Shining” to history’s dustbin it is well to remember
that it did succeed in one space, and there it succeeded
spectacularly. The business class both in India and abroad
bought the idea that India had become a serious player in the
world economy and was poised to make a leap forward. This had
generated tremendous excitement in the corporate world, both
in India and abroad, and for almost a year I could feel a
palpable optimism in my interactions with investors and
business people. The offshoring controversy in America may
also have fuelled it, and the foreign press certainly
reinforced it. From a land of snake charmers India had
suddenly become a serious competitor for the white-collar jobs
of the developed world. I was abroad in February and March
this year and never have I seen such a spate of positive views
expressed by foreign commentators about India.
Right through the
nineties, China had been the big success story. Quietly over
the past couple years, however, India had somehow crept onto
the radar of global media. Hence, during the past year every
time China was mentioned India’s name was attached to it.
Earlier this year the New York Times wrote in a front page
story that China and India were going to write the script for
the 21st century. But the more cautious rendition
was usually “China and to lesser extent, India” as the
Economist put it. This positive perception of India has
diminished, if not ceased entirely, ever since the stock
market crash. The Indian left may have contempt for markets,
but investors watch markets, and since we are part of the
global economy, investor sentiment will determine investment,
growth, and jobs.
I ask myself, why has
this sentiment suddenly changed when the fundamentals about
our economy are the same? In part, I think it is because the
Indian whining story has also affected the business community,
which has concluded that India’s economic prospects were
perhaps never as rosy as they had been led to believe. And the
defeat of the BJP has reinforced this perception. In the
process of trashing the BJP’s tall claims, the opposition
unintentionally ended in trashing India, the country.
Investors began to wonder if the story of India’s prospects
were a bunch of tall claims, when the reality may have been
that it was still the same “under-achiever” which the
Economist has been portraying for years. I don’t think that
Congress meant to trash the country, but this is how it ended,
and our country became the victim of competitive democratic
politics. Self-confidence has always been lacking in our
society, especially in the business community. I don’t know
what and how long it will take to rebuild it. We certainly
have an outstanding economic team in place today, but as I
said before, sentiment is irrational and elusive.
The well intentioned
Common Minimum Program (CMP) of the new government probably
did more to kill this spirit than anything else. The idea of
reservations in the private sector, when the prospect of
labour reform had died--this frightened managers who were
engaged in the hard day to day work of running companies. As
it is, they had to put up with a sub-optimal work culture with
endemic absenteeism, and now this burden of reservations. It
is a future just too awful to contemplate!
Businessmen have
repeatedly expressed the view that they would happily pay to
lift the poor if they had the slightest faith that the money
would reach the poor. They agreed that the best way to lift
the poor was through good primary schools and primary health
care. Hence, they didn’t mind the proposed education cess. But
they worried about the condition of our municipal schools: 93
percent of Bengali primary schoolchildren can’t write their
names in Bangla; 30 percent of teachers are absent in Bimaru
states, 50 percent don’t teach and most beat their pupils.
Unless we first reform our schools (by giving parents’
associations a voice, for example, in the teacher’s pay) we
would only be wasting the nation’s hard earned money. As it
is, India spends around Rs 1 lakh crores on education (which
is higher than most countries as a percent of GDP), but
because of teacher absence and other inefficiencies, a third
is perhaps wasted. That is a waste of Rs 30,000 crores!
“India shining” is a nice expression and it’s a pity that it
got mixed up with politics. Since it is synonymous with
India’s economic success, not surprisingly both the BJP and
the Congress wanted to take the credit. The BJP claimed that
its policies were responsible for the past year’s fine
performance and the changed mood; the Congress argued that
the economy grew faster under their man, Narasimha Rao. Both
were right (and wrong). The truth is that India’s economy
has been shining for two decades, growing around 6 percent a
year, making it the fifth fastest major economy in the
world.
After stagnating for centuries, our economy did finally pick
up after Independence. It grew 3.5 percent a year between
1950 and 1980; but our population also grew 2.2 percent;
hence the net affect was 1.3 percent per capita income
growth (3.5 minus 2.2)—this is what we mournfully called
“the Hindu rate of growth.” Things began to change with
modest liberalisation in the eighties when annual GDP growth
rose to 5.8 percent while population growth remained at 2.1
percent; thus, income per capita moved up to a more
respectable 3.7 percent. This happy trend continued in the
reforms decade of the nineties when growth averaged 6.2
percent a year, and population, in fact, slowed to 1.8
percent average; thus, per capita income rose by a decent
4.4 percent a year.
What these numbers mean is that if our per capita GDP had
continued growing at the pre-1980 level, then Indian incomes
would have reached current American per capita income levels
only by 2250. But if our economy continues to grow at the
present 6 percent rate, and if population grows at 1.5
percent, then we will reach American income levels by 2066.
This is a gain of 216 years, and this is what “India
shining” really means. And it is worth dying for! It means
that it is finally possible to believe that we shall soon be
able to conquer India’s age-old worry over want and hunger.
It is easier to explain why India was shining in the
nineties. The brave reforms of Narasimha Rao’s government
opened our economy, dismantled controls, lowered tariffs and
taxes and broke public sector monopolies. And the economy
responded magnificently. But how does one explain the
pick-up in the 1980s? And here I think we don’t give enough
credit to Rajiv Gandhi. He too opened the economy, albeit
reticently and modestly—lowering marginal taxes and tariffs,
removing the most irritating import restrictions, and
liberalised industrial licensing through “broadbanding”.
Although modest, these efforts seem to have had a bigger
impact that even the sweeping reforms of the 1990s.
Bradford Delong, an American economist, wrestles with this
puzzle in In Search of Prosperity: Analtytic Narratives
on Economic Growth, edited by Dani Rodrik of Harvard.
The real miracle, however, is that all the governments after
Rao surprisingly continued the reforms, albeit in a
frustratingly slow way. Yet this elephant-like pace has made
India one of the fastest growing major economies in the
world. So, the lesson is that if you consistently reform in
one direction in a democracy, it adds up. Since we haven’t
had strong reformers at the top, like Thatcher or Deng, is
it possible that the reform process has become
institutionalised?
This “adding up” over time has enhanced our national
confidence, and which to my mind is central to the notion of
“India shining”. Thus, it is the Indian people who are
shining as they have overcome all the obstacles put in their
way by self-serving bureaucrats, politicians, monopolistic
industrialists, left intellectuals and labour leaders—in
short, all the vested interests of the Licence Raj. But for
all Indians to shine, we must begin to seriously
reform agriculture and education. This ought to be the
agenda of this government.
This election has reminded us that left’s historic role is
to make the right sensitive to the needs of the poor and to
humanize capitalism in the process. Unfortunately, our left
is bankrupt in terms of ideas, and thinks that throwing good
money at old problems will solve them. Moreover, the left
has not ditched its naďve faith in state control when our
nation is groaning under the weight of red tape. This
statism makes the left look stupid. In the end, the problems
of India’s poor will not be solved by ideology but by good
implementation. And this needs mental application. We have
to focus on the “how”, not the “what”. It is easier to abuse
the India’s bourgeoisie, but more difficult to come up with
real answers to real problems.
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