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SPEECHES
/ STATEMENTS
FM's Address on India : Economic
Growth and Outlook
September 27, 2007
Following is the text of the address
of Finance Minister, Shri P. Chidambaram on India: Economic
Growth and Outlook delivered at the Peterson Institute
for International Economics in Washington, United States:-
I am grateful for the
invitation to deliver a talk at the Peterson Institute
for International Economics. I understand that one of
the objects of the Institute is to promote informed
dialogue on international issues. The world is still
divided in many ways developed versus developing,
North versus South, and rich versus poor. It is necessary
to bridge this divide, and dialogue can do so. Dialogue
can promote better appreciation of the issues; dialogue
can also anticipate emerging trends.
Let me share with you our recent
experience in managing the Indian economy and the outlook
for the medium term. The India story is now rather well
known, but some aspects bear repetition. In the most
recent four year period 2003-04 to 2006-07
Indias GDP has grown at an average rate of 8.6
per cent a year. In particular, 2006-07 was a splendid
year turning out a growth rate of 9.4 per cent. All
the indicators are positive. Gross Domestic Capital
Formation (GDFC) that is investment in
relation to GDP is estimated at a little over 35 per
cent. Inflation measured by the wholesale price index
(WPI) is 3.3 per cent. Foreign exchange reserves stand
at over US $ 230 billion. All sectors of the economy
are contributing to the growth rate, although we are
not entirely satisfied with the performance of the agriculture
sector.
It is now three years and four months
since the present Government assumed office. The Government
has brought greater stability and clarity to the policy
environment. In many cases, the policy is backed by
law or regulation. In key sectors, Government has ceded
authority to independent regulatory bodies.
Government has also remained steadfast
on the path of fiscal prudence and discipline. Within
weeks of assuming office and before presenting the first
budget, we notified the Fiscal Responsibility and Budget
Management Act (the FRBM Act). Despite pressure on resources,
we have complied with the obligations under the Act.
The fiscal deficit for the current year has been budgeted
at 3.3 per cent and the revenue deficit at 1.5 per cent,
and we believe we are on course to achieve the targets
set by the FRBM Act.
What are the factors that are driving
economic growth in India?
Firstly, it is domestic consumption.
The annual growth in real consumption expenditure over
the past four years has been, on average, 6.3 per cent.
With easy liquidity conditions spurring demand for personal
loans, and adequate capacity in the manufacturing sector,
there has been a consumption boom.
Secondly, rise of investment. The
consumption boom that started at the beginning of this
decade has triggered an investment boom. Real investment
has grown at a robust rate since 2002-03, averaging
17 per cent a year in the past four years. During this
period, the contribution of investment to growth has
exceeded the contribution of final consumption expenditure.
The current investment rate, as a proportion of GDP,
is 35.1 per cent, and it is expected to increase in
the medium term.
Thirdly, increase in employment.
The rate of growth in the labour force that was 1.60
per cent in the previous period of six years accelerated
to 2.54 per cent during the period 1999-00 to 2004-05.
Thankfully, the rate of growth of employment too accelerated
from 1.57 per cent in the first period to 2.48 per cent
in the second period. We have, therefore, more persons
employed and contributing to the national output. Paradoxically,
we also have, in absolute number, more persons unemployed.
Fourthly, increase in productivity
of both capital and labour. Rodrick and Subramanian,
in an IMF working paper of 2004, pointed out that India
seems to have large amount of productivity growth from
relatively modest reforms. A more recent paper by Barry
Bosworth, Susan Collins and Arvind Virmani (2006) has
confirmed this. They have concluded that output per
worker grew at 1.3 per cent annually during 1960-80
and total factor productivity (TFP) was barely above
zero. In contrast, growth in output per worker nearly
tripled to 3.8 per cent during 1980-2004, while TFP
increased tenfold to 2 per cent.
The outlook for the medium term is
extremely positive. We believe it is possible to sustain
the factors that are driving economic growth and consolidate
the gains.
There are, of course, some risks.
Many of them are beyond our control and, hence, we are
compelled to take precautionary measures that will minimise
the adverse effects of these risks. The two annual monsoons
are always uncertain factors. By and large, the monsoons
determine the area under cultivation and the output
of food grains and other food articles. As a precautionary
measure, we had to import some quantities of wheat last
year and again this year. The price of crude oil is
an enormous external risk. Since these outrageous prices
cannot be fully passed through to the consumers in India,
the burden falls largely on the domestic budget and
constrains our capacity for investment. The depreciation
of the value of the dollar vis-a-vis the rupee has thrown
up an unexpected downside risk: it has challenged our
exports and our tax revenues, and we may find ourselves
in a situation where we need to provide for the consequences
of an appreciating currency.
Ladies and Gentlemen! Let me not
give you the impression that our work is done. Far from
the work being completed, the road ahead is long and
difficult. Governing India is, at the best of times,
a complex task. During a period of high growth, the
task does not become easier, as one may be wont to think.
While sustaining high growth is one kind of challenge,
the more difficult challenge is spreading the benefits
of growth and making it more inclusive.
Despite a marked reduction in poverty,
about 26 per cent of the population of India lives in
extreme poverty. A larger proportion of the population
is affected because of the inadequacy or absence of
many public goods and services such as clean drinking
water, sanitation, schools, basic healthcare, electricity
and roads. Democracy especially a vibrant and
noisy one offers many seemingly attractive alternative
models for the elimination of poverty. We know that
many of those have not worked in the past and we shall
not repeat those mistakes. We believe that growth is
the best antidote to poverty, provided that the growth
is broad based and inclusive.
Our government believes that in
a developing country growth is an imperative and nothing
should be done to affect the process of growth. At the
same time, our government believes that it is the duty
of the government to provide a measure of economic and
social security to the very poor who are, at present,
beyond the pale of the market economy. We have, therefore,
adopted an ambitious social and economic agenda that
extends to matters such as guaranteed wage employment,
affirmative action in education, death and disability
insurance, health insurance, old age pension, scholarships
and education loans, empowerment of women and right
to information.
I am aware of the oft-repeated criticism
that the growth process has benefited only a small section
of the people and, therefore, we must change course.
I reject that criticism. It is based on a superficial
and ill-informed view of the transformation that is
taking place in India. More people are discovering that
there are opportunities at the bottom of the pyramid
and more people at the bottom of the pyramid are demanding
their share of the economic opportunities thrown up
by the growth process. For instance, in the last three
years, banks have more than doubled the amount advanced
as farm loans: the volume has increased from Rs 844
billion in 2003-04 to Rs 2050 billion in 2006-07. Who
gets these loans? It is farmers who have an average
land holding of one hectare, and every year over 5 million
new borrowers have been added to the portfolio of banks
and given farm loans. In 2006-07, 8.35 million new farmers
were brought under the bank credit system.
Take another example. India runs
the largest programme of micro credit a fact
that is not widely known. At the end of March 2007,
2.6 million self help groups nearly all of them
women only groups were credit-linked
to the banks. Beginning with consumption credit, an
overwhelming majority among them has graduated to production
credit. These groups borrow amounts up to Rs 200,000
for purposes such as land development, rearing cattle
or sheep, poultry, garment making, food processing,
manufacture of toys and retail shops. The amount of
credit advanced to SHGs at the end of March 2007 was
Rs 180 billion.
More than anything else, it is growth
that has allowed the Government to increase public expenditure
in sectors such as health and education. In 2003-04,
the Central governments budget had allocated Rs
70 billion for the health sector and Rs 70 billion for
the education sector. In 2007-08, those allocations
had grown manifold to Rs 143 billion for health and
Rs 286 billion for education.
However, outlays do not mean outcomes,
and this is our prime concern. There is not yet in place
a mechanism that will ensure that the deliverables are
indeed delivered or that the public goods and services
are of acceptable quality and have reached the intended
beneficiaries. Some of the problems are due to poor
design of the programme. Besides, there is still too
much dependence on the government machinery and an unwillingness
to experiment with alternative models like food stamps
or school vouchers. There is also, regrettably, a considerable
degree of waste and pilferage.
Our best chance lies in encouraging
more openness and more competition. An open society
and an open polity will eventually embrace an open economy.
A revolutionary change has been wrought in the sectors
where monopolies were dismantled and the sector was
thrown open to competition. Two examples would suffice:
one, telecommunications and the other, aviation. Not
too long ago, a customer had to register for a landline
telephone and wait for many years to be given one. She
would have to book a long distance call
and hope that she could get through within a few hours.
And she would have to pay exorbitant rates depending
on the distance between the caller and the
called person. Mobility was a dream; the telephone itself
was a nightmare. Mobile telephony is growing at over
5 million new connections every month, and in August
this year 7 million new connections were added .
The air transport sector has witnessed
a similar revolution. The entry of private airlines
has democratised flying. Many second and third tier
towns are now connected by air. Domestic passenger traffic
has grown, on average, by 30.5 per cent a year over
the last two years. Two green field airports are being
built. Two metro airports are being modernised and upgraded,
and before that task is over, plans are being drawn
up for a second airport in these two metros. Two more
metro airports and 35 non-metro airports have been taken
up for modernisation and expansion.
Competition is driving growth in
many other sectors: steel, textiles, pharmaceuticals,
automobiles, home appliances, packaged food, computer
hardware and software, banking and insurance. It is
axiomatic that more openness and more competition will
benefit the sectors that remain closed or restricted
as a matter of policy, and that is the direction in
which we would like to move.
The competition is not among domestic
players alone. Indias manufacturing and services
sectors face increasing competition from overseas manufacturers
and service providers. Many foreign companies have entered
the Indian market through imports or local production.
Far from being overawed or vanquished, Indian business
has boldly ventured into other countries and has opened
offices abroad, acquired factories and established new
facilities. Foreign direct investment has become a two
way street. In 2006-07, while foreign direct investment
flows into India were US $ 19.5 billion, the outflow
of capital amounted to US $ 11.9 billion.
On August 15, 2007, India turned
60. It is, compared to the United States or many other
countries, a young nation. It is also a young nation
in another sense. One-third of the population is below
the age of 15 years. India is the only large country
in the world where the size of the working age population
will grow and will exceed the number of dependent
children and old persons -- until 2025, the year up
to which projections of population have been made, and
perhaps even beyond till 2045. The size of the work
force will grow, incomes will grow, savings will grow
and investments will also grow. The challenge is to
seize the opportunity and turn India into an economic
powerhouse.
We are happy that the world is taking
note of India and other emerging economies. If the developed
countries of the world are serious in their intention
to achieve the Millennium Development Goals, they must
realize that the goals will not be achieved until they
are achieved in India and China. We recognize that as
we take our place in the world we have to assume our
share of responsibility, consistent with our need and
capacity, to make the world a better and safer place.
In the past and now too
India has accepted responsibilities. For example, though
we are an energy deficient country, we have accepted
the principle of common and differentiated responsibilities
in the area of climate change. At Heiligendamm, the
Prime Minister of India made an important statement
when he offered that Indias per capita CHG emissions
would never be allowed to exceed the per capita CHG
emissions of developed countries. That statement has
been strongly endorsed by Chancellor Angela Merkel.
That statement opens the way to find a just and fair
agreement on the complex issues concerning climate change.
In the area of non-proliferation,
though we are not a signatory to the NPT, we have put
substance over form and maintained an impeccable record
of non-proliferation. The India-United States agreement
on civil nuclear cooperation is premised on that record.
On the economic front, we acknowledge
that we share responsibility for ensuring the stability
of the global economy. We have maintained fiscal prudence
and discipline. We have taken precautionary measures
to avoid high-risk financial transactions. We have contained
inflation and will always be on alert. We have in place
necessary regulations to ensure that capital flows
inward and outward are orderly.
Much of what has been accomplished
or adopted in India is not unique to India.
Many other countries have done the same and, in this
behalf, I can cite the cases of Argentina, Brazil, China,
Egypt, Mexico and South Africa. As I said at the beginning
of my speech, the world is still divided in many ways.
A new division (or is it rivalry?) appears to be on
the horizon between the G 7 countries and the
fast growing, emerging economies. Just as we are willing
to share responsibility with the developed countries,
the G 7 countries must also share responsibility with
the emerging economies. That, indeed, would be the most
wise and prudent course to make the world a better and
safer place.
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