The 19th century was thought of as belonging
to Britain and the 20th century to America. Many now believe that the 21st
century will be Asia’s
The sheer market size and growth potential of China and
India place them at the centre of the Asian century. Over the past 20 years,
these two countries have almost tripled their share of the global economy. When
adjusted for purchasing power parity, the Indian economy is now roughly the
same size as Japan’s. One Goldman Sachs estimate suggests that India’s economy
will surpass the US economy by 2043. For long the world’s second-largest
country, India’s population is expected to pass China’s in less than two
decades.
Despite all this, India is likely to remain a lower middle-income country well
into the Asian century, lagging behind its BRICS counterparts. India has the
world’s largest concentration of poor people: in 2010, more than 840 million
Indians lived on less than $2 a day, and 400 million on less than $1.25 a day.
By the time India becomes the most-populated country in the world, its already
large challenges relating to
urbanisation and the provision of adequate
infrastructure, jobs, drinking water, and food for its citizens will be immense.
India’s size and its rising middle-class power may have led many to rightly
highlight its role in powering the Asian century, but, ironically, it is less
clear how India’s own poor people will be empowered to rise out of poverty.
This raises a number of questions. Located in the right
place at the right time, how can India thrive in this Asian century? What
opportunities will Asia’s rise offer India? What opportunities will India’s
rise offer Asia? Most importantly for the average Indian, how will the shift of
economic and strategic power to Asia shape the massive economic and social
transformation underway in the world’s largest democracy? Already a lower
middle-income country, how can India avoid the middle-income trap? More
immediately, how can India regain the growth momentum it had generated in the
mid-2000s, address its rapidly growing fiscal pressures, and reduce the
unprecedented fragility of its current account deficit?
These are large and complex questions. It is important to
ask them now because in a very real sense the world’s expectations of India
perhaps exceed India’s expectations of itself. India’s failure to address these
questions will have far-reaching consequences, giving rise to a greater gulf
between India’s potential and its achievements, and making it that much harder
for India to catch up with the rest of a rapidly rising Asia. Much will depend
on the far-sighted leadership that Indian leaders do or do not provide in
designing, implementing and evaluating the right policy frameworks to achieve
the goal of ‘faster, sustainable, more inclusive growth’ that the Indian
government’s 12th Five Year Plan (2012–17) has set for itself.
Three scenarios are worth considering. The first, and
most favourable is a win–win situation in which India gains greatly from the
rise of Asia, much as India’s market size contributes to the Asian century.
India successfully leverages its demographics and its trade and cultural
proximity to Asia’s economic centres to transform its workforce and its
manufacturing and service sectors into a highly competitive, connected and
innovative force through sound public policies, and investments in education,
skills and infrastructure. In the second, less-welcome, scenario India muddles
through. It meets some of the expectations of India’s role in the Asian century
but does not gain ground relative to other Asian countries and perhaps falls
further behind. The third and least-desirable scenario sees the Asian century
largely bypass India. Given the commercial, political and strategic
relationships that India already has with the rest of Asia, this scenario is
hopefully also the least likely. But the very fact that it is unlikely could
breed domestic complacency and keep India from gaining fully from the Asian
century.
What will it take for India to make the first scenario a
reality? Analysts have identified seven domestic pillars that aided the early
and rapid transformation of Asia’s newly industrialising economies: policies
that supported free markets, science and technology, meritocracy, pragmatism, a
culture of peace, rule of law and education. These pillars will require further
refinement, as India will also have to address newer domestic challenges,
including global warming, the provision of clean energy and water to its
citizens, and the threat of corruption and public ineffectiveness, which
appears to have worsened in recent years.
On the external front, India’s trade and investment
relations with Asia will play a major role, not just within Asia but also in
its relationships with North American, European and African markets. India has
already signed nearly 20 regional trade agreements and is currently negotiating
several more. As hopes dim for a successful multilateral trading regime, India
must expend its energies not just in signing bilateral agreements but also in
helping to bring about an FTA in groups such as the ASEAN+6 or the Regional Comprehensive Economic
Partnership arrangement.
To enhance public awareness of the immense advantages and
significant risks that India will face in the Asian century, India’s National
Council of Applied Economic Research in New Delhi (NCAER) is exploring a
multi-year research program on India in the Asian century. The research program
will focus on identifying opportunities in the short, medium and long term to
increase the economic and other net benefits to India from the global economic
and strategic shift to Asia.
Short-term actions are those that India could take
in the next five years, and medium- and long-term actions are those that could
be implemented before 2025. An important part of this project would be to
foster joint work with Asian partner institutions. If India is not to miss the
boat in the Asian century, there is much work to be done.
Shekhar Shah is Director-General of the National
Council of Applied Economic Research (NCAER), New Delhi. He
is grateful to Dr Rajesh Chadha, Senior Fellow at NCAER, for the many useful
discussions on the topic.
This article appeared in the most
recent edition of the East Asia Forum Quarterly, ‘Coming to terms with Asia’.
No comments:
Post a Comment