Showing posts with label Great Power. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Great Power. Show all posts

Thursday, August 23, 2018

Q&A on Economy & Trade

 Interview given to Bijoy Kumar Sing of PTI on August, 9, 2018:


Q1: What is you assessment of current macroeconomic situation in India? Some experts believe that  the macro situation is becoming more challenging in the last year of Modi  government? FDI growth hits 5-year low in 2017-18, rupee has depreciated, oil prices and inflation are rising? 
A1: Economic growth, which has been subject to many ups and downs over the past seven years, seems to be back on a recovery path. The most important indicator of this is the rate of growth of real fixed investment, an essential element of sustained, sustainable growth. On the external front some challenges such as the threat of rising interest rates and commodity prices are the negative face of a rise in developed country growth. So they are partly offsetting. The rise in oil prices due to Geopolitical factors, like Iran sanctions are however a concern.  The US-China Tariff war however provides an opportunity to increase India’s exports to the USA and to attract, labor intensive elements of the global supply chain unsettled by higher “China risk”, to India. Domestically the main risk to macro stability, is politically driven Govt consumption spending at the cost of investment and fiscal prudence. If this temptation is resisted, the country will be back on a firm 7.5% plus growth track. 

    Q2: India has emerged as the sixth largest economy replacing France? How do you see this development?
A2: in a series of papers since 2004, I had predicted the rise of China and India as economic powers (https://sites.google.com/site/drarvindvirmani/india-great-power ). India will become the fifth largest economy in 2018 and the 3rd largest, after USA &  China, by 2025 (in current US dollars). According to the index I developed for making these projections, VIPP, India will become a great power by ~ 2035. It is very important for our elites to understand both the strengths and the limitations of these developments. We must start planning our global interactions and acting like a leading power, without ignorantly imagining that we are already a Great Power (that is 20yrs away). 

    Q3: The US actions on trade have emerged as the biggest worry for global growth. What will be impact of rising trade tensions on Indian economy and what should be India's strategy?
A3: We must distinguish between US trade actions against market economies like EU, Canada, Mexico and other market economies from those against non-market China. The conventional wisdom that everyone will loose from a trade war applies to the former, but not to the latter. A single party dictatorship has dozens of ways of imposing non-tariff barriers on imports & foreign investment, that free open democracies, run by rule of law, cannot even imagine. The US-China tariff war will have some short term disruptive effects on global economy, but provides great opportunity for India to attract Labour intensive, export oriented and Indian market oriented investment from those currently located in China. The Indian Govt, private industry and PSUs must make an effort to attract them to India.

    Q4: The general elections are less than a year away and there is a possibility of populist policies being announced by both the central and state governments. Is there a possibility of slippages in the fiscal deficit?
A4: Historically every Govt pushes up what are referred to as populist expenditure in the year or so leading up to the election. The test is if they keep it modest and don’t disturb the trend in fiscal responsibility. There is therefore always a risk of fiscal slippage. At State level, this is partly linked to losses incurred by State electricity distribution. 

    Q5: Prime Minister Narendra Modi had said that demonetisation will reduce generation of black money in India. But money deposited by Indian's in Swiss banks rose by 50 per cent last year. So, how do you read the effects of demonetisation nearly two years later.
A5: The data that I have seen shows that money deposited by Indians in Swiss banks has been on and remains on a downtrend. As as demonetization, I had written the week after demonetization that it would reduce the growth rate of the economy by about 0.5-0.6% in the 6 months following the demonetization or about 1% for the year as whole (assuming the recovery takes a year). My subsequent estimates show a loss of 1.2% of GDP in the 12 months following demonetization. On the positive side I had predicted an increase in income tax compliance, which seems to be happening (as per limited data available). The effect on black money in real estate and elsewhere did take place, but seems to have been less permanent. 

    Q6: There is common perception that departures of foreign' economic advisers (Raghuram Rajan, Arvind Panagariya and Arvind Subramanian) underline the Modi administration's rejection of free trade and open market approaches to policy in favor of protecting domestic industries and farmers. Your comments.
A6: Since I retired from the post of Chief Economic Advisor at the end of 2009, my successors as CEA (Kaushik Basu, RaghuRam Rajan and Arvind Subramanian) have all returned to jobs abroad, after completing their Indian tenure. The same happened in the case of Arvind Panagriya of NIti. In my judgement this is not primarily due to any disagreement on free trade and open markets, which is indeed one of the weak points of the current Govt (I have argued for trade reform in the, Bibek Debroy edited, book, “India at 70, Modi @3.5 “ )

    Q7: Recently Commerce Minister Suresh Prabhu had said that 40 per cent of India's GDP will come from exports by 2025, and India's economy will be a USD 5 trillion economy 2025. At present, exports constitute only 18 per cent of USD 2.6 trillion GDP. Do you agree with Prabhu?
A7: An open economy is one of the drivers of growth in a connected and liberal world, which is why I have continuously argued for reform and liberalization of EXIM policy(agriculture) and of import tariffs and export duties. I continue to do so. However, given the anti- free trade sentiments sweeping the world, we have to be a little more selective and cautious in dealing with non-market, non democratic countries which find it easy to follow non-transparent policies that harm our interests. This poses a challenge for instance in concluding the RECEP agreement.

Friday, August 25, 2017

Indian Independence: 70 years



Q1. What does the report card of the last 70 years read like – have we done enough to make India an economic power?
 A1: The first 30yrs of independence were wasted in socialist economic experimentation as Indian economy fell further behind the world (average). With gradual reversal of anti market policies since 1980 & then in 1990s we have started catching up with the Rest of the world. 
Q2. Where are we headed in the next 30 years, going by the present indicators?
A2: In the next 30yrs India will grow faster than the slowing Chinese economy, and therefore close most of the economic gap(%) which has opened with China in the last 30yrs.
 Q3. What specifics do we need to undertake if we are to become the world leader in the next 30 years – in economy, technology, strong institutions?
A3: Sustaining fast growth for next two decades requires both policy and institutional reform: The former includes Public Sector units(PSU), Public sector Banks(PSBs), land & labor markets to increase the flexibility & mobility of factors among different uses. Institutional reform includes legal, judicial, police, political & bureaucratic reform.
 Q4. Have the political leadership and the economic decision making and leadership served the country well in the last 70 years?
A4: Economic decision making by political leaders has been affected more by ideology than by data based economic analysis, showing what policies & programs solve problems & which create more problems than they solve. This started changing in phases: The first phase was in the 1980s, the second in the 1990s and the third has started in the 2014-15.
 Q5. Has economic democracy been concomitant with political democracy in the country?
A5: Constitutional democracy is the only system consistent with modern concepts of equal rights for all humans, and we must all work together to constantly improve its functioning. In my view it is a convenient evasion to blame all problems on bureaucrats & politicians. The failure is of Intellectuals, & all varieties of experts who propound on economic development policy. Their lazy use of ideology as a substitute for facts, data and analysis of problems, solutions & outcomes, shares much of the blame for bad policies and failed programs.
 Q6. How do you look at agriculture, manufacturing, services in the last 70 years? How do you look at their evolution in the next 30 years?
A6: The socialist control model of development of Agriculture and manufacturing through controls, public sector as drivers & domestic protection was a failure and is primarily responsible for Indian growth lagging behind World average till 1989. Import liberalization, particularly of capital goods(earlier restricted to USSR) in the 1980s and in the 1990s along with FDI was a major driver of productivity & growth acceleration in manufacturing. Agriculture sector remains shacked by controls and regulations, and consequently remains a repository of low productivity jobs. Two good monsoons provide a golden opportunity for abolition of import, export, trade & GM seed controls along with R&D, extension & spilling to spur productivity growth
 Q7. What have been the three biggest decisions of the last 70 years in the space of economic decision making?
A7: One, the removal after 1980 of production, investment, trade & Export-import (Exim) controls imposed during 1950-80, Two, the liberalization of the foreign exchange regime (which I recommended in a PC note in late 1980s & subsequently wrote the paper on "Dual exchange Rate" in November-December 1991), Three the constitutional amendment replacing many indirect taxes by GST
 Q8. What has been the role of the private enterprise in the overall growth of the country? What more can the state do to encourage private enterprises?
A8: It's a misunderstanding to think the License-Permit-Quota Raj has been dismantled. Controls & control mentality is deeply embedded in our political-bureaucratic-intellectual systems of governance. The "Ease of Doing business" (EoDB)  & "Tax Terrorism" elimination initiatives are another effort to identify & remove these oppressive controls. Agriculture & Education are two areas where controls remain oppressive & dis-functional? Both education & health sectors could benefit from modern, rational regulations

Q9. Can the right to food, right to health, right to education, and right to work become fundamental rights in the next 30 years, as India turns 100, in 2047?
A9: In my view the Indian adoption of "Rights approach" represents a gross failure to recognize and reform failed governance institutions corrupted by the ideologically driven LPQ Raj. The democratic constitution and our democratic polity defined development policy objectives have always focused on public welfare since independence. The reason they haven't been accomplished so far is bad policy, corruption & bad governance. Without reforming these there cannot be a sustained improvement in child malnutrition, health, education & employment creation. Passing of rights laws just serves to salve the conscience of Intellectuals.
 Q10. Where will be role of the private enterprise in the country, in the next 30 years?
A10: In a 2002 EPW paper I proposed a "New Development Paradigm." That Government, Private & Non-profit sectors must focus on areas they must and can do most effectively. Thus govt. must focus on Macro-economic policy, "Public Goods" & public goods infrastructure & social security nets, private sector on production & distribution of all goods & services, and NGOs/NPOs on social reform & social needs. I am hopeful we can reach this ideal in the next 20-25 years.
 Q11. Any concluding thoughts on when India turns 100 (in 2047) and where we are in 2017, when India turns 70?
A11: According to my definition of "Great Power" & "Super Power" India will likely become a Great power around 2035 (joining China in this category) and a Super power around 2050. Thus on India's 100th anniversary we will be celebrating the arrival of India into a Tri-polar World with two other super powers USA and China.

An edited version of this interview appeared in Business World on 24 August 2017, at http://businessworld.in/article/Connect-And-Collaborate/24-08-2017-124735/