India,
the government would have us believe, is the new growth ''miracle''
in the developing world. According to official figures, GDP growth has
accelerated from its ''Hindu rate'' origins of around 3.5 per cent in
the 1970s and earlier to 5.4 per cent in the 1980s, 6.3 per cent during
the decade starting 1992-93 and an annual average rate of more than
8 per cent during the three years ending 2005-06. Since this acceleration
has occurred in a context of limited inflation, the government is now
targeting a further rise to 9 and even 10 per cent over the Eleventh
Plan.
However,
in the midst of the celebration over the acceleration of growth, certain
features of the growth trend that call for caution are often ignored.
To start with, the 8 per cent rate of the last three years, which is the
first real evidence of India's transition to ''miracle'' status, may be
more an exception rather than the rule. High annual rates of growth of
between 7 and 8 per cent were recorded even during the three-year period
1994-95 to 1996-97, only to be followed by a slump in rates to within
the 4-6 per cent range over the subsequent six years. As a result, the
trend rate of growth fell from 7.1 per cent during 1992-93 to 1996-97
to 5.3 per cent during 1997-98 to 2002-03. Moreover, the GDP figures for
the last three years are still provisional, and are likely to be revised
downwards, even if marginally. Unless there are strong reasons to believe
that the growth rates they reflect are robust and sustainable, it may
be prudent to hold back on the celebration, which declares that higher
growth is the result of accelerated reform and calls for pushing ahead
with policies that increase economic vulnerability.
A
second feature of significance is the structure of this growth. For some
time now the rate of growth of services GDP has been much higher than
the rate of growth of overall GDP. As a result the share of services in
GDP, which was around a third in the mid-1970s, had risen to more than
a half by 2004-05. More than sixty per cent of the increment in GDP during
the period 1993-94 to 2004-05 was due to an increase in GDP from services.
Services have also contributed significantly to the recent acceleration
of the growth rate, with rates of growth of services GDP touching 8.2,
9.9 and 10.1 respectively in the three years ending 2005-06. Though construction
has performed even better, with corresponding figures of 10.9 12.5 and
12.1 per cent respectively, given the high share of services in overall
GDP, that sector would account for an overwhelming share of the higher
rate of growth.
This trajectory does make India's growth experience unusual, if not unique.
The sharp increase in the share of services in GDP in India has occurred
at a much lower level of per capita income than characterised the developed
countries when they experienced a similar expansion. There are, of course,
reasons why growth in developing countries today would reflect a premature
expansion of services. To start with, globally manufacturing units today
rely as much or more on management and control as on technology to raise
productivity and reduce costs. This has increased the services component
in manufacturing GDP. The pressure to reduce costs leads to the outsourcing
of many of these functions, resulting in the services component of manufacturing
GDP appearing as a separate revenue stream and generating a consequent
increase in services GDP. Inasmuch as liberalisation leads to a faster
adoption of imported best practice technologies in developing countries,
they too would tend to reflect this tendency. Secondly, the communications
revolution has cheapened the cost of communication services, resulting
in a much greater and earlier use of such services. Not surprisingly,
the reach of and revenues from communication services has increased substantially
in developing countries, contributing to an increase in GDP from services.
Finally, the shift in emphasis in government spending from participation
in production to provision of a range of public services tends to increase
the share of public administration (not to mention defence) in GDP. Overall,
these factors could trigger a diversification of economic activity in
favour of services at an earlier stage of development than that expected
on the basis of the historical experience of the developed countries of
today.
However, even these factors cannot explain the Indian experience, wherein
unlike many other similarly placed developing countries GDP from services
now exceeds 50 per cent of the total. Services must be growing faster
than warranted by the above factors. What seems to matter at the margin,
is an increase in the exports rather than domestic supply (and consumption)
of services. Services were earlier considered non-tradables since they
required in most cases the presence of the supplier at the point of provision.
But modern developments have made a number of services exportable through
various modes of supply, including cross-border supply through digital
transmission.
Such
exports do seem to play an important role in India. Exports of software
services, which amounted to an average of 7.1 per cent of services GDP
during 2000-01 to 2002-03, stood at an average of 11.2 per cent during
2003-04 to 2005-06 and close to 14 per cent in 2005-06. Software and business
(largely IT-enabled) services dominate services exports, accounting for
52.8 per cent of the total during 2004-05, 56.1 per cent in 2005-06 and
a massive 66 per cent in the first quarter of 2006-07. There is reason
to be sceptical about the sustainability of this process of services-driven
growth, based on exports that are overwhelmingly directed at one or a
few markets. New alternative suppliers may arise increasing competition
and reducing India's dominant market share in the outsourcing business.
The threat of job losses in the developed countries may trigger a protectionist
response against outsourcing of services, as is already happening in some
countries. Or, a slowing of growth in the developed countries may curtail
corporate spending and therefore the demand for outsourced services.
Finally, there is reason to believe that the services surge is indeed
triggering inflation, which is not always reflected in the movement of
whole sale price indices. The annualised month-to-month increase in the
consumer price index for industrial workers, which was at or below 5 per
cent for all but one of the 16 months starting January 2005, has averaged
6.8 per cent during May to September this year. Moreover, the deficit
on the current account of India's balance of payments, which stood at
$10.6 billion in 2005-06, when oil prices were still ruling high, has
touched $6.1 billion in the first quarter of financial year 2006-07 alone.
This has prompted even The Economist to declare that India's economy is
overheating and that the ''recent acceleration largely reflects a cyclical
boom, thanks to loose monetary and fiscal policy.'' In its view, ''India
cannot grow as fast as China without igniting inflation because of its
lower investment rate, particularly in infrastructure, and labour bottlenecks.''
That note of caution, which predicts that the acceleration in GDP cannot
last, is unusual for a source that has repeatedly lauded the performance
of a country it sees as a tiger uncaged by liberalisation. Fortunately,
there is some respect for the evidence rather than the hype at least in
some quarters.
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