The
economic performance of the NDA government since it came to power is
an issue fraught with controversy. The spin doctors of the BJP, the
major party on the currently ruling coalition, have decided that high
economic growth is a major achievement of the NDA, and this has been
emphasised in the electoral campaign thus far.
But
even the growth performance claimed by the current government has been
contested by critics, who claim that the most recent claims made, of
more than 8 per cent growth in the current year, are because of the
low economic activity in the previous year due to the drought and its
effects on agricultural production. In this context, it is worth examining
the growth patterns of the previous years in more detail.
It seems premature and possibly irresponsible to base economic arguments
on any estimates for the current year, which after all is still continuing,
and for which any projections are likely to be subject to very major
revisions. Therefore, we conduct an exercise based on data up to 2002-03,
for which reasonably reliable official series exist.
In
order to assess the performance of the NDA government in terms of various
economic growth indicators, we look at two periods: the six-year period
preceding 1 April 1998, and the six-year period after 1 April 1998.
For convenience, we will refer to these as Period 1 and Period 2. This
allows us to assess the performance of the NDA government (Period 2)
compared to its immediate predecessors in the form of the United Front
and Congress-led governments (Period 1).
Chart
1 indicates the trend rate of growth of GDP (at both factor cost and
market prices) over the two periods. However, since some analysts may
find the trend rate problematic given that the periods under consideration
are each only of six years duration, Chart 2 provides the compound rates
of growth for the same periods, based on the initial and end years.
It
is obvious that by both measures, growth of national income decelerated
quite substantially in Period 2, that is, under the NDA government.
In fact, the period from April 1998 until March 2003 appears to have
experienced a deceleration of growth compared to the earlier fifteen
year period as well.
Of course, it could be argued that the aggregate growth estimates are
affected by the poor performance of the economy in 2002-03 because of
the bad monsoon which adversely affected agricultural production. This
is certainly very evident in Charts 3 and 4, which show the trend and
compound rates of growth of production of all crops and of foodgrains
in particular.
Growth of agricultural production was actually negative during this
period, mainly because of the drought-induced collapse in production
in the last year. Indeed, the apparently fabulous recovery of the current
year, which has been cited so much in government and ruling party handouts,
is essentially nothing more than the reflection of the recovery of agriculture
consequent upon a very good monsoon.
This brings home the unfortunate reality that the Indian economy is
still heavily dependent upon the monsoon, which can still create major
changes not only in agricultural output but also in aggregate economic
activity. This is despite the much increased external openness of the
economy, which has now been exposed to international trade and capital
flows more than ever before. It also undoes some of the claims made
by the votaries of such policies, that economic liberalisation had unleashed
such animal spirits in the economy that agriculture was no longer of
macroeconomic significance and that the growth impetus of the economy
is no longer affected by it.
Even in industrial production, the slowdown of the second period is
very marked. Chart 5 indicates a sharp deceleration of the index of
industrial production, by both trend and compound rates of growth. This
cannot be blamed on the last year alone; the entire six-year period
indicated sluggish expansion of industrial output.
Why has this happened? Some clues can be gleaned from the pattern of
aggregate investment, described in Chart 6 in terms of the rates of
growth of real gross domestic capital formation. Such investment increased
at a reasonable rate in the earlier period, above 9 per cent per annum
in real terms. However, in the second period (the tenure of the NDA
regime) the increase in investment had slumped to only around 5 per
cent per annum.
Even this low rate of increase is of dubious significance, since both
public and private corporate investment stagnated or even declined over
this latter period. Indeed, such increase as did occur in capital formation
after 1998 came about mainly because of household sector capital formation.
This is determined in the national accounts as a residual, and essentially
reflects increases in domestic construction activity.
Investment declined because public investment has stagnated or declined
under the NDA regime. Despite the recent promises of national highway
expansion and other such indicators of material prosperity, the NDA
government has spent less (in real per capita terms) on productive investment
for infrastructure and economic growth, than any government in independent
India.
It is well known that in India, as in almost all other developing countries,
there are strong positive linkages between public and private investment.
Typically, high rates of public investment call forth and enable more
private investment activity.
However, the policy makers of the NDA appeared to believe that they
could further reduce the amount of productive public expenditure and
expect private entrepreneurs to take up the slack and increase aggregate
investment. Obviously, this was not likely to happen in the absence
of any other major positive stimulus. So it is not surprising that the
NDA's tenure has been associated with lower rates of growth of industrial
production and economic activity generally, than the preceding period.
This is not to deny the rapid growth that has definitely occurred in
certain sectors in this period, such as telecom and IT-enabled services.
However, these sectors are still extremely small, and their admittedly
extraordinary growth (reflecting the effects of rapid worldwide technological
change as well) has occurred over very low bases. Further, such growth
as has occurred has not been enough to counteract the effects of deceleration,
stagnation or even decline in the larger, more important industries
and in agriculture and many other services.
Indeed, the bulk of economic activity over this period did not show
much acceleration, certainly when compared to the earlier period. This
is in conformity with other indicators such as employment generation,
especially in the organised sectors, which also indicate stagnation
or insufficient expansion.
These basic arguments are not changed even if the most current year's
data are included. For example, consider the effects of incorporating
the projected GDP growth of 8.4 per cent in 2003-04 (which is what the
CSO's advance estimates suggest). Even this gives a compound rate of
growth of real GDP at market prices of 5.8 per cent per annum in the
period from April 1998, compared to 6.3 per cent in the earlier period.
The trend rate of growth is also lower than in the previous period,
even if the current year's high estimate is included. However, it is
worth reiterating that using the current year's estimates is extremely
problematic, since such advance estimates are typically revised quite
drastically and therefore can be quite misleading.
So the official figures suggest that whatever else may be the NDA's
strengths, successful macroeconomic management is not among them. This
is evident in the slack that remains in the economy in the form of high
unemployment and underemployment, wasteful build-up of reserves through
allowing unnecessary capital inflows that are not being productively
used, and of course through the appalling waste of public food stocks
that were exported away at below BPL prices when hundreds of millions
within the country remained hungry. But it is even apparent in the aggregate
growth performance, which unfortunately has not been anywhere near as
impressive as the current government's propaganda would have us believe.