[*Apart from the elaborately reasoned claim of data manipulation via
methodological flaw, which has since been contested as expected, the
article flags the manufacturing sector as the soft underbelly of the Indian
economy. And, hence, the acute problem of unemployment*.]

<
https://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/india-growth-rate-flawed-accounting-ignores-growing-problems-by-ashoka-mody-2023-09
>
India’s Fake Growth Story
Sep 6, 2023ASHOKA MODY
<https://www.project-syndicate.org/columnist/ashoka-mody>

Indian authorities are downplaying inconvenient macroeconomic facts so that
they can celebrate seemingly flattering headline figures ahead of hosting
the G20 summit. But in covering up the growing struggles faced by the vast
majority of Indians, they are playing a cynical and dangerous game.

PRINCETON – Behind the billboards in Delhi advertising this month’s G20
summit are slums whose residents can no longer
<https://indianexpress.com/article/cities/delhi/livelihood-on-hold-homes-behind-hoardings-slum-dwellers-ask-how-are-we-supposed-to-survive-8916964/?utm_campaign=Worker%2BWeb&utm_medium=email&utm_source=Worker_Web_24>
earn
a living. Their roadside stalls and shops have been demolished, lest they
tarnish Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s carefully curated image of a rising
India.

India’s GDP statistics are also on display as part of this “branding and
beautification” exercise. With an annual growth of 7.8%
<https://mospi.gov.in/sites/default/files/press_release/PressNoteQ1_FY24.pdf>
in
the second quarter of this year, India appears to be the world’s
fastest-growing major economy. But, again, behind the billboards are human
struggles on a massive scale. Growth, in fact, is low, inequalities are
rising, and job scarcity remains acute.

The G20-inspired billboards touting India’s latest GDP figure include a
mysterious line about “discrepancies.” Normally an innocuous reporting
convention in national accounts, the discrepancy is the difference between
domestic income (earned by producing goods and services) and expenditure
(what residents and foreigners pay when buying those goods and services).
In principle, expenditure should equal income earned, because producers can
earn incomes only when others buy their output. In practice, however,
estimates of income and expenditure differ in national accounts everywhere,
because they are based on imperfect data.

Typically, this discrepancy does not matter for calculating growth rates,
because income and expenditure, even if they differ somewhat, have similar
trends. But every now and then, the two series follow very different paths,
with hugely consequential implications for evaluating economic performance.

The Indian National Statistical Office’s latest report
<https://mospi.gov.in/sites/default/files/press_release/PressNoteQ1_FY24.pdf>
is
a case in point. It shows that while income from production increased at an
annual 7.8% rate in April-June, expenditure rose by only 1.4%*.* Both
measures clearly have many errors. The NSO nonetheless treats income as the
right one and *assumes *(as implied by its “discrepancy” note) that
expenditure must be identical to income earned. This is an obvious
violation of international best practice. The entire point of the
discrepancy line is to acknowledge statistical imperfections, not to make
them disappear. The NSO is covering up the reality of anemic expenditure at
a time when many Indians are hurting, and when foreigners are showing only
a limited appetite for Indian goods.


The proper approach is to recognize both income and expenditure as
imperfect macroeconomic aggregates, and then to combine them
<https://www.clevelandfed.org/en/publications/economic-commentary/2023/ec-202301-discrepancy-between-expenditure-income-side-estimates-us-output>
to
assess the state of the economy. Hence, the Australian, German, and UK
governments adjust their reported GDP using information from both
<https://cepr.org/voxeu/columns/new-measure-us-gdp> the income and
expenditure sides.

Moreover, while the United States uses expenditure as its primary metric of
economic performance (unlike income in India), the US Bureau of Economic
Analysis accounts for the often sizable difference between income and
expenditure by reporting the average
<https://apps.bea.gov/iTable/?reqid=19&step=2&isuri=1&categories=survey#eyJhcHBpZCI6MTksInN0ZXBzIjpbMSwyLDNdLCJkYXRhIjpbWyJjYXRlZ29yaWVzIiwiU3VydmV5Il0sWyJOSVBBX1RhYmxlX0xpc3QiLCI0MyJdXX0=>
of
the two as its composite measure. When we apply the BEA method to Indian
data, the most recent growth rate falls from the headline 7.8% to 4.5% – a
marked decline from 13.1%
<https://www.businesstoday.in/latest/economy/story/indias-gdp-growth-accelerates-to-78-in-q1fy24-396417-2023-08-31>
in
April-June 2022, when the post-COVID-19 rebound first triggered the current
wave of India hype.

That hype never stood up to an elementary analysis of the data
<https://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/india-economy-boom-is-a-myth-actually-failing-most-people-by-ashoka-mody-2023-03?barrier=accesspaylog>,
but it has persisted because it serves the interests of Indian and
international elites. They prefer to forget that India’s GDP growth rate
was 3.5% in 2019, before falling sharply during COVID, or that it slowed
again to an average of 3.5% since then, even after the 13.1% dead-cat
bounce in the second quarter of last year. The latest data not only confirm
slowing growth, but also alert us to the underlying causes: rising
inequalities and job scarcity.

Those inequalities are reflected in the increased import content of
domestic expenditure, which is up from 22% before COVID to 26%. With the
help of an overvalued exchange rate
<https://www.ft.com/content/c3a28628-5b92-4db7-a8c2-0f41bea05969>, rich
Indians are buying fast cars, gilded watches, and designer handbags – often
on shopping sprees in Zurich, Milan, and Singapore – while the vast
majority struggle to buy necessities
<https://www.theindiaforum.in/economy/state-indian-economy-today-what-numbers-actually-say>
.

The data also show why the Indian economy is failing to create jobs,
especially those that would support a dignified standard of living. Apart
from public administration, the most rapid income growth by far this past
quarter (at 12.1%) was in finance and real estate. This post-liberalization
feature of Indian development, now augmented by “fintechs,” generates only
a handful of jobs for highly qualified Indians. Public administration also
is growing robustly, but this, too, creates only limited job opportunities.
Among other growth sectors, construction (helped by the government’s
infrastructure drive) and low-end services (in trade, transport, and
hotels) mostly create financially precarious jobs that leave workers one
life event away from severe distress.

The dog that refuses to bark is manufacturing, the primary source of
employment in every successful developing economy. Following decades of
disappointing growth, India’s post-COVID manufacturing performance has been
particularly weak. This reflects the country’s chronic inability to compete
in international markets for labor-intensive products – a problem made
worse by the slowdown in world trade and weak domestic demand for
manufactured products, owing to appalling income inequality.

Indian authorities are choosing to dismiss inconvenient facts
<https://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/shamika-ravi-writes-statisticians-can-be-wrong-8831615/>
so
that they can parade seemingly flattering images and headline figures ahead
of the G20 summit. But they are playing a cynical, dangerous game. Slippery
national account statistics betray a desire to wish away slowing growth,
rising inequalities, and grim job prospects. The authorities would do well
to recognize – and reconsider – the path they have set India on.


[image: Ashoka Mody]
<https://www.project-syndicate.org/columnist/ashoka-mody>
ASHOKA MODY <https://www.project-syndicate.org/columnist/ashoka-mody>

Writing for PS since* 2012*
*31* Commentaries

Ashoka Mody, Visiting Professor of International Economic Policy at
Princeton University, previously worked for the World Bank and the
International Monetary Fund. He is the author of *I**ndia is Broken: A
People Betrayed, Independence to Today*
<https://www.sup.org/books/title/?id=34425> (Stanford University Press,
2023).





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