How
India can become 5 trillion Economy
Introduction
If we look at the last 5 years of India's economy, on an average,
India has grown at about 7.5%. Growth in recent times has dipped.
But whether
it's cyclical or structural is the question. The challenge for India is really
to grow at high rates over a 3-decade period. It's not just about a $5 trillion
economy till 2024, or a $10 trillion economy by 2030. The challenge for India
is to grow at 8% to 9% per annum, year after year, for three decades or more.
·
Prime Minister had
announced the target of a $5 trillion economy for India by
2024. This will make India the third-largest economy in the
world.
·
The focus of plans will
be on boosting services sector contribution to $ 3 trillion, manufacturing to $
1 trillion and Agriculture to $ 1 trillion.
What is a $5-trillion economy?
·
Essentially $5-trillion
economy is the size of an economy as measured by the annual Gross
Domestic Product (GDP).
·
The GDP of an economy is
the total monetary value of all goods and services produced in an economy
within a year.
·
GDP is a way among
countries (economies) to keep score about who is ahead.
·
In 2014, India’s GDP was
$1.85 trillion. In 2018, it is $2.7 trillion and India is the sixth-largest economy
in the world.
·
Apart from the monetary
definition, a $ 5 Trillion Economy calls for pulling all the economic growth
levers—
Investment, consumption, exports, and
across all the three sectors of agriculture, manufacturing and services.
·
It also means improving
all three sectors of the economy, India will more likely achieve its
ambitious Sustainable Developmental Goals (SDGs).
·
By attaining double-digit
growth, India has little hope of employing the roughly one million young
people.
Favourable demographics will emerge as an
upper-middle-income economy with a prosperous and thriving middle class.
Characteristics of a valuable economy
The economy must be evaluated in terms of how
much it contributes to the ease of our living. So following are
some of the characteristics of a valuable economy.
·
Empowered by the economy.
India is placed very low
in the United Nations’ World Happiness Report. Happiness is related
to being educated and experiencing good health. So, the first attribute of the
valuable economy would be access to quality health and education for all.
·
Equality
of opportunity.
According to some measures, India is today more unequal
than China, itself a society widely perceived as highly unequal, which is
related to unequal distribution of income, gender inequality and sex ratio,
already unfavourable to women. Inequality in India can only be ended by
equalising capabilities across individuals. Concerted public action via
education is the means to this outcome.
·
Global Multi Poverty Index
India has lifted 271 million people out of poverty between 2006
and 2016. But still it remains a major issue. As $ 5 Trillion economy is
accompanied by job growth, equality of opportunity and better health and
education, it will indirectly improve the status of social inequality.
Steps Taken by
Government
#1. Increase ease of business and ease of
living to enable the private sector to create wealth over a long period of
time.
Over the last four years, the government has
scrapped a number of laws; over 1,300 to be precise. We've done away with a lot
of procedures, rules and regulations. We've tried to digitize the Indian
economy. We've tried to see that every single department of the government
speaks to its applicants digitally. Through a series of reforms, India has
jumped up 65 positions in The World Bank Ease of Doing Business.
No other large
country has been able to do this. We've jumped up 65 positions, but our
challenge is that in the next two years we must reach the top 50 and in the
next five years reach the top 25.
The challenge is making it easy and simple at
the state level and getting them to compete with each other in the spirit of
competitive federalism. The first year we did this, on hundred outcomes of ease
of doing business, Gujarat was No. 1. The next year, Andhra Pradesh, and the
third year, Telangana. Backward states like Jharkhand and Chhattisgarh did
massive reforms, huge reforms across labor, across a range of sectors to come
fourth and fifth.
This spirit of competitive federalism - ease
of doing business to health, education; and ranking states accordingly helps to
make good governance as good politics, and puts out the data in public domain. There
are about 115 districts of India which remain backward in parameters such as
education, health, maternity, infant mortality, skill, agriculture and
nutrition. Many of them are in the eastern part of India.
we capture their data on a real-time basis,
and we make them compete on 49 indicators across education, health, nutrition,
skill. By lifting these 115 districts above poverty line, India will
automatically grow.
#2. Participation of women in the workforce is a key driver
of India's growth.
India cannot grow at high rates over a 3-decade period without gender parity. In India, only 26% of the women work; the worldwide average is 48%. If such a major chunk of the population is not working and we consciously don't put women into positions of power, it will be very difficult for India to grow.
India cannot grow at high rates over a 3-decade period without gender parity. In India, only 26% of the women work; the worldwide average is 48%. If such a major chunk of the population is not working and we consciously don't put women into positions of power, it will be very difficult for India to grow.
We must give more opportunity to women
consciously. And each one of us must ensure that women are put into position of
power, so that India becomes a nation of gender parity. Without that, India
will not grow. It's not possible. And if India was to reach that worldwide
average of 48%, you will add $700 billion to your economy.
#3. Reforms in Agriculture.
It's not possible to grow over long periods of time without some very major structural reforms in the agriculture sector because that's where close to 58% of India lives. You can't keep growing on subsidies, you can't keep going on just giving assistance to farmers without ensuring better markets, without putting technology, without contract farming and so on. Agriculture sector reforms are critical.
It's not possible to grow over long periods of time without some very major structural reforms in the agriculture sector because that's where close to 58% of India lives. You can't keep growing on subsidies, you can't keep going on just giving assistance to farmers without ensuring better markets, without putting technology, without contract farming and so on. Agriculture sector reforms are critical.
#4. Primary Sector
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The Government has several on-going initiatives across sectors
focused on growth. In agriculture the Government is aiming to reorient policy
focus from being production-centric to becoming income-centric.
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The Commerce Ministry has formulated India’s first ever Agricultural
Export Policy with a focused plan to boost India’s agricultural
exports to $ 60 billion by 2022 thereby assisting the Agriculture Ministry in
achieving its target of $ 100 billion and to integrate Indian farmers and the
high quality agricultural products with global value chains and to double
India’s share in world agriculture.
#5. Manufacturing Sector
·
The emphasis on incomes provides a broader scope towards
achieving the needed expansion of the sector. The proposed Industrial
Policy 2018 provides an overarching, sector-agnostic agenda for the
enterprises of the future and envisions creating a globally competitive Indian
industry that is modern, sustainable and inclusive.
·
Ministry of Commerce is making all efforts to ensure that in
public procurement preference is given to Make in India. Its aim is
to make India the hub of manufacturing, India has emerged as one of the fastest
growing economies.
·
India has jumped 3 places on the Global Innovation Index from
rank 60 in 2017 to rank 57 in 2018.
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Start-up India is
a flagship initiative of the Government of India, intended to build a strong
ecosystem that is conducive for the growth of start-up businesses, to drive
sustainable economic growth and generate large scale employment opportunities.
·
In Union Budget 2018-19, the Government of India reduced the
income tax rate to 25 per cent for all companies having a turnover of up to Rs
250 crore.
·
Under the Mid-Term Review of Foreign Trade Policy (2015-20), the
Government of India increased export incentives available to labour intensive
MSME sectors by 2 per cent.
·
The Government of India has launched a Phased
Manufacturing Programme (PMP) aimed at adding more smartphone
components under the Make in India initiative thereby giving a push to the
domestic manufacturing of mobile handsets.
·
The Government of India is in talks with stakeholders to further
ease foreign direct investment (FDI) in defence under the automatic route to 51
per cent from the current 49 per cent, in order to give a boost to the Make in
India initiative and to generate employment.
·
The Ministry of Defence, Government of India, approved the
“Strategic Partnership” model which will enable private companies to tie up
with foreign players for manufacturing submarines, fighter jets, helicopters
and armoured vehicles.
#6. Service Sector
·
The Champion Services sector initiative is also under way to
accelerate the expansion of select service sectors.
·
The 2019 Union Budget talks about plans with a pan-India focus
to give a further boost to Sagarmala, Bharatmala and UDAN projects,
besides the dedicated industrial and freight corridors.
·
The budget proposes further opening of FDI in aviation sector,
media, animation AVGC and insurance sectors in consultation with all
stakeholders. 100 per cent FDI will be permitted for insurance intermediaries.
FEASIBILITY OF BECOMING $5 TRILLION ECONOMY
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If India grows at 12% nominal growth (that is 8% real GDP growth
and 4% inflation), then from the 2018 level of $2.7 trillion, India would reach
the 5.33 trillion mark in 2024.
·
But last year, India grew by just 6.8%. This year, most
observers expect it to grow by just 7%. So India must keep growing at a rapid
pace to attain this target.
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The Economic Survey 2018-19 highlighted that international
experience, especially from high-growth East Asian economies, suggested that
such growth can only be sustained by a “virtuous cycle” of savings, investment
and exports catalysed and supported by a favourable demographic phase.
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Investment, especially private investment, is the
key driver that drives demand, creates capacity, increases labour productivity,
introduces new technology, allows creative destruction and generates jobs.
Investment in Human Capital
Skill
Skill india mission launches by Indian government to fulfill the
growing need in india for skilled manpower across sectors.
Health
Ayushman Bharat Yojna started by Indian government, its aim to
making interventions in primary, secondary and tertiary care system and
second main objective is to address
healthcare holistically.
Education
Samagra siksha abhiyan , which includes 3 other schemes itself,
1. Sarva siksha abhiyan
2. Rashtriya Madhyamik siksha abhiyan
3. Teacher Education
Basically the aim is to
provide equal opportunity for schooling
Employement
Govt has increases the wages of MGNREGA for rural
employment to boost up the rural domestic demand and improve livelihood
opportunities for the poor .
Conclusion
As govt increased the investment in
human capital formations and in other sectors. We can also reap the benefits of our demographic
dividends. Human capital is an important asset for the economy as it boosts
domestic demand and consumption spending. If we connect all the dots of
investment with other sectors and Investing
in human capital formation is critical for achieving the goal of $5 trillion
economy.
Very informative š
ReplyDeletethanks Riya
DeleteWell written š¤
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