(article taken from hindu).

A new economic agenda
The question before a probable Narendra Modi-led government in 2014 is
whether the statistically undeniable economic slide of the last decade
can be halted and a fresh impetus be given to growth in the Indian
economy. The answer is "yes" if good governance norms are properly
enforced to enable the Indian economy to grow at 12 per cent per year
in GDP for a decade which means efficiently deploying resources to
reduce the current incremental capital output ratio from 4.0 to 3.0,
and by incentivising the people to save more to increase the current
rate of investment (which is domestic saving plus net foreign
investment). The United Progressive Alliance (UPA) government, judged
statistically by the dangerous level of fiscal and capital accounts
deficit indicators, has squandered national financial and physical
resources mainly due to a lack of accountability, corruption and high
transaction costs arising for archaic bureaucratic procedures. Modest
goals within reach This picture emerges from comparative statistics of
National Democratic Alliance (1998-2004) and UPA (2004-2014) rule.
Efficient, corruption-free deployment of existing resources that
implies a reduction in the capital-output ratio, means a 12 per cent
GDP growth rate per year, i.e., a doubling of GDP every six years, and
that of per capita income doubling every seven years. This growth rate
over a five-year period can take us into the league of the top three
most populated nations of the world, i.e., of the United States, China
and India -- that is by 2020. Thereafter, India would be able to
overtake China over the next decade. That should be the goal of
governance for us today. India is not yet an economically developed
nation. India has demonstrated its prowess in the IT, biotech and
pharmaceutical sectors and has accelerated its growth rate to nine per
cent per year in the first decade of this century, up from an earlier
40-year (1950-90) socialist era average annual growth rate of a mere
3.5 per cent, to become the third largest nation in terms of GDP at
Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) rates. However, it still has a backward
agricultural sector of 62 per cent of the people, where there are
farmer suicides because of inability to repay loans. There is a
national unemployment rate that is of over 15 per cent of the adult
labour force, a prevalence of child labour arising out of nearly 50
per cent of children not making it to school beyond standard five, a
deeply malfunctioning primary and secondary educational system, and
300 million illiterates and 250 million people in dire poverty.
India's infrastructure is pathetic, with frequent electric power
breakdowns even in metropolitan cities, dangerously unhealthy water
supply in urban areas, a galloping rate of HIV infection, and gaping
potholes that dot our national highways. For a second generation of
reforms To become a developed country, therefore, India's GDP will
have to grow at 12 per cent per year for at least a decade.
Technically this is within India's reach, since it would require the
rate of investment to rise from the present 28 per cent of GDP to 36
per cent, while productivity growth will have to ensure that the
incremental output-capital ratio declines from the present 4.0 to 3.0.
These are modest goals that can be attained by an efficient
decision-making structure, tackling corruption, increased Foreign
direct investment (FDI) and use of IT software in the domestic
industry. But for that to happen, what is required are more vigorous
market-centric economic reforms to dismantle the remaining vestiges of
the Soviet model in Indian planning, especially at the provincial
level. The Indian financial system also suffers from a hangover of
cronyism and corruption which has left government budgets on the verge
of bankruptcy. This too needs fixing. It cannot be rectified by a
Reserve Bank of India vitiating the investment climate with an
obsession to contain inflationary pressure. It is like killing a
patient to lower his body temperature. India's infrastructure requires
about $150 billion to make it world class, while a new innovation
climate requires investment in the education system of six per cent of
GDP instead of 2.8 per cent today. But an open competitive market
system can find these resources provided the quality of governance and
accountability is improved. Auctioning of natural resources such as
spectrum, coal, oilfields, and land for commercial exploitation can
largely substitute for tax impositions. Obviously, a wide-ranging
second generation of reforms is necessary for all this to accelerate
India's growth rate to 12 per cent per year. India has many advantages
today to achieve a booming economy. We have a young population (an
average of 28 years compared to the U.S.' 38 years, and Japan's 49
years) that could be the base for it to usher in innovation in our
production process (a demographic dividend); an agriculture sector
that has internationally the lowest yield in land and livestock-based
products, and also, at the lowest cost of production, a full 12 months
a year of farm-friendly weather, and an internationally competitive,
skilled and low wage rate, semi-skilled labour at the national level.
The advantages are already being proved to the world by the
outsourcing phenomenon of skills in the developed world and the cheap
supply of labour to oil-rich countries. Demography as an advantage
Since the world view of economic development has now completely
changed, economic development is no more thought of as being
capital-driven, but knowledge-driven instead. For application of
knowledge, we need innovations, which means more original research
which in turn needs more fresh young minds -- the cream of the youth --
to be imbibed with learning and at the frontier of research. For
decades since independence in 1947 we had been told that India's
demography was its main liability, that India's population was growing
too fast, and what India needed most was to control its population,
even if by coercive methods. Globally, India today leads in the supply
of youth, i.e., persons in the age group of 15 to 35 years, and this
lead will last for another 40 years. Therefore, we should not squander
away this "natural resource." We must, by proper policy for the young,
realise and harvest this demographic potential. China is today the
second largest world leader in terms of having a young population. But
the youth population there will start shrinking from 2015, i.e., less
than a decade from now because of a lagged effect of the one-child
policy. Japanese and European populations are already fast aging. The
U.S. will however hold a steady trend thanks to a liberal policy of
immigration, especially from Mexico and the Philippines. But, even
then, the U.S. will have a demographic shortage in skilled personnel.
All developed countries will experience a demographic deficit. India
will not have to experience this if we empower our youth with multiple
intelligences. Our past liability, by a fortuitous turn of fate, has
now become our potential asset. Thus, India -- by unintended
consequences of a relatively unfettered population growth -- is now
gifted with a young population. If we educate this youth to develop
cognitive intelligence to become original thinkers, imbibe emotional
intelligence to have a team spirit and develop a rational risk-taking
attitude, inculcate moral intelligence to blend personal ambition with
national goals, cultivate social intelligence to defend the civic
rights of the weak, gender equality, have the courage to fight
injustice, and the spiritual intelligence to tap into the cosmic
energy (Brahmand) that surrounds the earth, we can then develop an
intellectually more advanced species of human being; an Indian youth
who can be relied on to contribute to make India a global power within
two decades. Only then will our demographic dividend not be wasted.
This goal thus has to be at the core of the economic agenda for the
rest of this decade for a new government in 2014. (Subramanian Swamy,
a former Union Cabinet Minister, is the chairman of the BJP Committee
for Strategic Action in the 2014 Lok Sabha election.) To become a
developed country, India's GDP will have to grow at 12 per cent per
year for at least a decade. Technically this is within reach, since it
would require the rate of investment to rise from the present 28 per
cent of GDP to 36 per cent



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