http://www.asiasentinel.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=2415&Itemid=422


Do Asia's Awakening Giants Have Feet of Clay

Written by Pranab Bardhan    
Wednesday, 21 April 2010 

China and India both face serious hurdles in boosting living standards


Over the past few years the media have been agog over the rise of China and 
India in the international economy - and their remarkable recovery in this 
current global recession. After decades of relative stagnation, these two 
countries, containing nearly two-fifths of the world population, have had 
incomes grow at remarkably high rates since 1985.

In the world trade of manufacturing, China, and in that of services, India, 
have made big strides, much to the consternation - as yet largely unfounded - 
of workers and professionals in rich countries. The industrial growth along 
with acquisition of international companies by China and India attract much of 
the Western media attention.

But more revealing is what has happened to the lives of people inside these two 
countries and under what structural constraints. It's imperative to demolish 
myths that have accumulated in the media and parts of academia around the 
economic achievements of China and India and get a better sense of the real 
challenges faced by them.

In the recent, often breathless, accounts of the economic rise of China and 
India, a set of simple generalizations have become part of the conventional 
wisdom. The familiar story runs along these lines:

"Many decades of socialist controls and regulations stifled enterprise in both 
countries and led them to a dead end. Their recent market reforms and global 
integration have finally unleashed their entrepreneurial energies. Energetic 
participation in globalized capitalism has brought about high economic growth 
in both countries, which in turn led to a large decline in their massive 
poverty.

"In particular, China is now the 'manufacturing workshop of the world' and its 
industrial growth during the past quarter century is hailed as historically 
unique, even better than the earlier East Asian 'miracles.'  India's economy 
has been transformed by service-sector-led growth, but overall growth has not 
been as dramatic as in China. China's better performance suggests that 
authoritarianism may be more conducive to development at early stages, as 
demonstrated earlier in South Korea, Taiwan and Singapore.

"Global capitalism, however, has inevitably brought rising inequalities, more 
in China than in India.  But all is not lost for democracy in China. The 
prospering middle classes will slowly but surely demand more democratic rights 
and usher in democratic progress in China, as they have in South Korea and 
Taiwan."

There are, of course, some elements of truth in this story, but through 
constant repetition it has acquired a certain authoritativeness that, as closer 
scrutiny shows, it does not deserve. The story is far too oversimplified.

First, two relatively small points about industrial growth in China: While 
China is possibly the largest single manufacturing production center in the 
world for many goods in terms of volume, it is not so in terms of value-added; 
the world share of the US or EU in this area is still substantially larger.

Similarly, although the industrial growth rate has been phenomenal in China, 
South Korea and Taiwan grew at a faster pace in value-added terms during the 
first 25 years of their growth spurt. More important, contrary to popular 
impression, China's growth over the last three decades has not been primarily 
export-driven. While China had major strides in foreign trade and investment 
during the last 15 years, before - during the period between 1978 and 1993 - 
the nation had a high average annual growth rate of about 9 percent.

Much of the high growth in the 1980s and the associated dramatic decline in 
poverty happened largely because of internal factors, not globalization. These 
internal factors include an institutional change in the organization of 
agriculture, the sector where poverty was largely concentrated, and an 
egalitarian distribution of land-cultivation rights.

While expansion of exports of labor-intensive manufactures did lift many people 
out of poverty in China, the same is not true for India, where exports are 
still mainly skill- and capital-intensive. It is also not completely clear that 
economic reform is mainly responsible for the recent high growth rate in India. 

Reform clearly made the Indian corporate sector more vibrant and competitive, 
but most of the Indian economy is not in the corporate sector, with 94 percent 
of the labor force working outside this sector, public or private. Consider the 
fast-growing service sector, where India's information-technology-enabled 
services have made a reputation the world over. But that sector employs less 
than half of 1 percent of the total Indian labor force.

While globalization generates some destabilizing forces, the rise of inequality 
is not the highest in the globally more exposed coastal regions of China, but 
rather in less-integrated interior areas. Contrary to popular impression, the 
level of economic inequality is actually lower in globally more integrated 
China than in India. In particular, domestic factors like the much higher 
inequality in land distribution and education drive greater inequality in India.

For the financial press, China and India have become poster children for market 
reform and globalization, even though in matters of economic policy toward 
privatization, property rights, deregulation and lingering bureaucratic 
rigidities both countries have demonstrably departed from the economic 
orthodoxy in many ways. 

If one looks at the figures of the widely-cited Index of Economic Freedom of 
the Heritage Foundation, the ranks of China and India remain low: out of a 
total of 157 countries in 2008, China's ranks 126th and India 115th. Both are 
relegated to the group described as "mostly unfree."

Although there is no doubt that the period of socialist control and regulations 
in both countries inhibited initiative and enterprise, it would be a travesty 
to deny the positive legacy of that period. It is arguable, for example, that 
the earlier socialist period in China provided a strong launching pad 
particularly in terms of a solid base of education and basic health, rural 
infrastructure, a rural safety net from equitable distribution of land 
cultivation rights, regional economic decentralization and high female labor 
participation.

A major part of the legacy of the earlier period in both countries is the 
cumulative effect of the active role of the state in technological development.

The relationship between democracy and development is quite complex, and 
authoritarianism is neither necessary nor sufficient for development. In fact, 
authoritarianism has distorted Chinese development, particularly as powerful 
political families distort the allocation of state finance and unaccountable 
local officials in cahoots with local business carry out capitalist excesses, 
both in land acquisition and toxic pollution.

Democratic governance in India, on the other hand, has been marred by severe 
accountability failures. Nor can one depend on the prospering middle classes to 
be sure-footed harbingers of democracy in China. In many cases the Chinese 
political leadership has succeeded in co-opting the middle classes, including 
the intelligentsia, professionals and private entrepreneurs, in its firm 
control of the monopoly of power, legitimized by economic prosperity and 
nationalist glory. Indian democracy derives its main life force from the 
energetic participation of the poor masses more than that of the middle classes.

While both China and India have done much better in the last quarter century 
than they have during the last 200 years in the matter of economic growth, one 
should not underestimate their structural weaknesses. Many social and political 
uncertainties cloud the horizons of these two countries for the foreseeable 
future. 

Pranab Bardhan is professor of economics at the University of California, 
Berkeley. His most recent book, "Awakening Giants, Feet of Clay: Assessing the 
Economic Rise of China and India," was published by Princeton University Press. 
Click here to read an excerpt. Reprinted with permission from YaleGlobal 
Online, the flagship publication of the Yale Center for the Study of 
Globalization

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