India’s Long - Term Growth Experience : Lessons and Prospects

India’s Long - Term Growth Experience : Lessons and Prospects

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Author: Sadiq Ahmed
Publisher: Sage Publications
Year: 2007
Language: English
Pages: 102
ISBN/UPC (if available): 9780761936053

Description

India’s rapid growth since 1980 is transforming it into a modern economic power. Measured in nominal US dollars, India’s economy has risen from a low rank of 50 in 1979 to 12th position in 2003. In income-to-purchasing power parity, India ranked fourth in the world in 2003, behind only the United States, China, and Japan. Although still classified as a low-income country in terms of per capita nominal US dollars because of its huge population, if present rates of growth continue, India should reach low middle income status by the end of this decade.

Due to the closed nature of the Indian economy until the 1980s India continues to be a small player in the arena of international trade and investment flows, But with the recent opening up of the economy and rapid growth in the export of goods and services, India is definitely gaining strength. The tremendous surge in the export of services since 2001 is drawing international attention, inducing many IT-based global services to move to India. Also, private capital flows – including foreign direct investment – which were initially very limited, are now showing dynamism.

During the 1970s, the debate in India centered on how to improve upon the historical 3 percent annual growth rate of the economy. Few would have predicted that this “sleeping giant” would wake up to attain – and sustain – an average growth rate of about 6 percent per annum for over 25 years. In fact, with 7.9 percent growth during 2002–05, there is increasing optimism about the economy achieving further growth. This situation has fueled a very lively debate in India, primarily on two aspects. The first concerns the factors underlying India’s long-term growth and the other relates to the sustainability of this growth.

Sadiq Ahmed reviews the debate in the context of India’s long-term growth experience, opportunities, and challenges and examines the factors that helped to achieve rapid economic growth during the past 25 years. He draws on his findings to analyze the main constraints that are likely to affect the country’s growth in the future and highlight the policies that are needed to ease them.

Contents

Acknowledgments

Foreword

1. India’s Emerging global significance:
Can Growth Accelerate Further?

2. Evolution of India’s Long-Term Growth

Trend in Total and per Capita GDP growth: 1950-2004
Sectoral composition of Growth
Labor Force, Employment, and Real Wages
Regional Pattern of Growth: state-Specific GDP
Growth, Poverty, and Human Development

3. Determinants of Growth: growth Accounting

Savings and Investment
Total Factor Productivity
Growth Accounting: A Summing Up

4. Policy framework for Supporting Growth

Macroeconomic Stability
Policies for Improving Incentives for Private Investment
Reforms at the State Level

5. Emerging Constraints to Sustained High Growth

Growth Opportunities and Constraints

6. Summary and Conclusions


References

Index

About the Author