Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
India

When Growth Isn't Inclusive And Benefits Only A Section

Darpan News Desk IANS, 28 May, 2019 08:04 PM

    Just ahead of the 2008 economic meltdown, when India was the flavour of the season at Davos, a top official of the erstwhile Planning Commission made a startling albeit roundabout admission: that the "inclusive growth" mantra of the time was not for the "aam aadmi" but for PLUs (people like us) and those in the higher strata.


    Needless to say, the report I filed got spiked because there was no "direct quote" and inferences couldn't be attributed to the official in question.


    Since then, there has been visual, empirical and written evidence that what the official implied was true: that two sections have been created in the middle class, with one zooming up and the other virtually reduced to hand-to-mouth existence, even as the economy has grown at an average of almost 7 per cent in the past 25 years. Growth certainly hasn't been inclusive.


    In 2014, the slogan changed to "sabka saath, sabka vikas" but a new book, "What The Economy Needs Now" (Juggernaut), through a series of 13 essays, only buttresses the gloomy scenario that lies ahead as prominent economists like Abhijeet Banerjee, Gita Gopinath and Raghuram Rajan detail how to get the country back on track.


    While the reforms of the recent past like GST and the Indian Bankruptcy Code are "commendable", says the overview, "Why Strong, Equitable and Sustained Growth Is Vital for India", it cautions against complacency as India is still one of the poorest countries in the G-20 and poor countries ought to grow faster because "catch-up" growth is easier.


    "Also, the benefits of growth in India have been distributed unequally, with top incomes rising much faster than the rest. We have seen new environmental challenges in the form of sharp increases in both local pollution levels and carbon dioxide emissions that, if unchecked, threaten to stall or reverse progress," the book adds rather ominously.


    What, then, are the solutions?


    Abhijit Banerjee and Raghuram Rajan sum it up: "As we see it, rethinking government is key. Government capacity is limited. We need to target it better while trying to enhance it. Stability in government policy is important so that our farmers and firms can plan better, and markets can play a more effective role. Cooperative federalism - Centre and states working together and learning from each other - is essential."


    They list the eight top challenges India faces:


    * The massive aggregate fiscal deficit of the states and the Centre combined leaves fewer, costlier resources for private investment.


    * Three sectors that are distressed today are agriculture, power and banking - despite massive past government intervention, and often because of it.


    * We need a better business environment - whether to create the jobs for those leaving agriculture, urban schools or universities, or to ramp up our woefully inadequate exports.


    * Sustainable growth requires more effective but less burdensome legislation. Our cities are choking and climate change is upon us.


    * Government has to provide for benefits but it is always not suited to deliver them. As a first step, beneficiaries of all specific government subsidy programmes should have the choice between cash transfers and benefits in kind.


    * We need more skilled personnel in government - at higher levels in technical areas like digitization, trade negotiation and environmental regulation, but also at lower levels outside the larger cities. More lateral entrants, merging into the permanent civil service, are desirable near the top.


    * The Right to Education Act focuses on input requirements for schools that have little bearing on learning outcomes, which have deteriorated alarmingly. Learning must be our central focus (to deliver) a minimum level of basic skills to every child.


    * We must address the coming explosion of non-communicable diseases which will require engagement with front line providers.


    The question now is: Who will bell the cat?

    MORE India ARTICLES

    On Poll Result Eve, 'Kingmakers' Wait In The Wings

    As the world waits with bated breath the results of the 2019 general elections, the Election Commission has laid out a detailed plan for counting of votes and is learnt to have rejected the opposition parties’ demand of counting VVPAT slips before opening EVMs.

    On Poll Result Eve, 'Kingmakers' Wait In The Wings

    Robert Vadra Requests Delhi Court For Permission To Travel Abroad

    Robert Vadra Requests Delhi Court For Permission To Travel Abroad
    The counsel for Robert Vadra requested Special judge to ensure details of his itinerary are not shared with a third party as it was a matter of his security.

    Robert Vadra Requests Delhi Court For Permission To Travel Abroad

    IT Aspirant Blackmailed With Videos Of Her, Found Hanging In Kota Hostel

    The girl allegedly hanged herself from a ceiling fan of her hostel room on Sunday, police said.  

    IT Aspirant Blackmailed With Videos Of Her, Found Hanging In Kota Hostel

    Got High-Power Bikes, SUVs For Better Policing: Delhi Police Tells Court

    Delhi Police told the Delhi High Court that on its directions, it had procured several high-powered motorcycles like Enfield Thunderbird and four-wheelers like Scorpio S5 for efficient and effective policing.  

    Got High-Power Bikes, SUVs For Better Policing: Delhi Police Tells Court

    Telangana’s Sikh Mayor Sardar Ravinder Singh To Offer ‘Funeral For Re 1’ For Poor Families

    At first glance, he looks like any Sikh on a visit to Telangana, but his chaste Telugu takes non-locals by surprise.

    Telangana’s Sikh Mayor Sardar Ravinder Singh To Offer ‘Funeral For Re 1’ For Poor Families

    Punjab Congress Seeks Report On Rift Between Amarinder Singh, Navjot Sidhu

    Amarinder Singh had accused Navjot Sidhu of "damaging" the Congress in the state and suggested that he wanted to be the chief minister himself.  

    Punjab Congress Seeks Report On Rift Between Amarinder Singh, Navjot Sidhu