By Nouriel Roubini*
India is poised to become the world’s most important country in the medium term. It has the largest population (which is still growing), and with a per capita GDP that is just one-quarter that of China’s, its economy has enormous scope for productivity gains. Moreover, India’s military and geopolitical importance will only grow, and it is a vibrant democracy whose cultural diversity will generate soft power to rival the United States and the United Kingdom.
One must credit Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi for implementing policies that have modernised India and supported its growth. Specifically, Modi has made massive investments in the single market (including through de-monetisation and a major tax reform) and infrastructure (not just roads, electricity, education, and sanitation, but also digital capacity). These investments – together with industrial policies to accelerate manufacturing, a comparative advantage in tech and IT, and a customised digital-based welfare system – have led to robust economic performance following the COVID-19 slump.
Yet the model that has driven India’s growth now threatens to constrain it. The main risks to India’s development prospects are more micro and structural than macro or cyclical. First, India has moved to an economic model where a few “national champions” – effectively large private oligopolistic conglomerates – control significant parts of the old economy. This resembles Indonesia under Suharto (1967-98), China under Hu Jintao (2002-12), or South Korea in the 1990s under its dominant chaebols.
In some ways, this concentration of economic power has served India well. Owing to superior financial management, the economy has grown fast, despite investment rates (as a share of GDP) that were much lower than China’s. The implication is that India’s investments have been much more efficient; indeed, many of India’s conglomerates boast world-class levels of productivity and competitiveness.
But the dark side of this system is that these conglomerates have been able to capture policymaking to benefit themselves. This has had two broad, harmful effects: it is stifling innovation and effectively killing early-stage startups and domestic entrants in key industries; and it is changing the government’s “Make in India” program into a counterproductive, protectionist scheme.
We may now be seeing these effects reflected in India’s potential growth, which seems to have declined rather than accelerated recently. Just as the Asian Tigers did well in the 1980s and 1990s with a growth model based on gross exports of manufactured goods, India has done the same with exports of tech services. Make in India was intended to strengthen the economy’s tradable side by fostering the production of goods for export, not just for the Indian market.
Instead, India is moving toward more protectionist import-substitution and domestic production subsidisation (with nationalistic overtones), both of which insulate domestic industries and conglomerates from global competition. Its tariff policies are preventing it from becoming more competitive in goods exports, and its resistance to joining regional trade agreements is hampering its full integration into global value and supply chains.
Another problem is that Make in India has evolved to support production in labour-intensive industries such as cars, tractors, locomotives, trains, and so forth. While the labour intensity of production is an important factor in any labour-abundant country, India should be focusing on industries where it has a comparative advantage, such as tech and IT, artificial intelligence, business services, and fintech. It needs fewer scooters, and more Internet of Things startups. Like many of the other successful Asian economies, policymakers should nurture these dynamic sectors by establishing special economic zones. Absent such changes, Make in India will continue to produce suboptimal results.
Finally, the recent saga surrounding the Adani Group is a symptom of a trend that will eventually hurt India’s growth. It is possible that Adani’s rapid growth was enabled by a system in which the government tends to favour certain large conglomerates and the latter benefit from such closeness while supporting policy goals. Again, Modi’s policies have deservedly made him one of the most popular political leaders at home and in the world today. He and his advisers are not personally corrupt, and their Bharatiya Janata Party will justifiably win re-election in 2024 regardless of this scandal. But the optics of the Adani story are concerning.
There is a perception that the Adani Group may be, in part, helping to support the state political machinery and finance state and local projects that would otherwise go unfunded, given local fiscal and technocratic constraints. In this sense, the system may be akin to “pork barrel” politics in the US, where certain local projects get earmarked in a legal (if not entirely transparent) congressional vote-buying process.
Supposing that this interpretation is even partly correct, Indian authorities might reply that the system is “necessary” to accelerate infrastructure spending and economic development. Even so, this practice would be toxic, and it would represent a wholly different flavour of realpolitik compared to, say, India’s vast purchases of Russian oil since the start of the Ukraine War.
While those shipments still account for less than one-third of India’s total energy purchases, they have come at a significant discount. Given per capita GDP of around $2,500, it is understandable that India would avail itself of lower-cost energy. Complaints by Western countries that are 20 times richer are simply not credible.
While the scandal surrounding the Adani empire does not seem to extend beyond the conglomerate itself, the case does have macro implications for India’s institutional robustness and global investors’ perceptions of India. The Asian financial crisis of the 1990s demonstrated that, over time, the partial capture of economic policy by crony capitalist conglomerates will hurt productivity growth by hampering competition, inhibiting Schumpeterian “creative destruction,” and increasing inequality.
It is thus in Modi’s long-term interest to ensure that India does not go down this path. India’s long-term success ultimately depends on whether it can foster and sustain a growth model that is competitive, dynamic, sustainable, inclusive, and fair.
Nouriel Roubini, Professor Emeritus of Economics at New York University’s Stern School of Business, is Chief Economist at Atlas Capital Team and the author of Megathreats: Ten Dangerous Trends That Imperil Our Future, and How to Survive Them (Little, Brown and Company, 2022). Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2023, published here with permission.
15 Comments
You fail to focus on the major threat to India's economic future that is global warming.
In the last edition of Gaia (James Lovelock) the predicted impact of global warming on the middle of the earth in the coming 20 years is catastrophic. Consider the pollution, flooding, heatwaves and high risk of disease already apparent in India.
https://www.amazon.com.au/Vanishing-Face-Gaia-Final-Warning/dp/04650190…
Apparently of not much concern.
May22 As the USA and Europe retreat from prosperity, India seems determined to overtake China, with a 400 million ton boost to coal production in the next two years, and a massive relaxation of environmental rules and other incentives to boost coal mining and industry..............India’s coal needs are set to double by 2040.
https://phys.org/news/2022-05-india-environment-coal-citing-heatwave.ht…
Also they have at least 250million cattle.
Absolute numbers count.
I was hopeful about India too. I loved the country when I visited, but it might be worth watching the BBC doco "The Modi question". India seems to be heading down an authoritarian pathway. Their behaviour with regard to supporting Russia economically through the Ukraine invasion is unconscionable.
A comment by the Indian Foreign affairs minister equivalent "Jaishankar even said Europe has to grow out of the mindset that Europe's problem is the world's problem but the world's problems are not Europe's problem"
"The external affairs minister said the government's aim in a difficult global situation is that the welfare of the Indian people is ensured, however challenging the circumstances. "Indian foreign policy is there to serve the Indian people; we will do whatever it takes to discharge that responsibility," he added.
In stark contrast to NZ.
All countries are looking after their own interests but the rule of law is one of them. I expect we agree that maintaining good relations with the USA makes sense for NZ but that does not mean we send NZ troops in Iraq, Afghanistan, etc. Personally I strongly support Ukraine but NZ should not have given military support - just humanitarian.
""Jacinda Ardern and Foreign Minister Nanaia Mahuta announced that New Zealand will provide a further $5 million contribution of non-lethal military assistance to support Ukraine, and are making available a range of surplus defence equipment to share with Ukraine at their request.""
I feel we need to pick and choose where we assist militarily. I'm not opposed to military assistance (training) to the Ukraine. Afghanistan we could have given a miss and probably Iraq to. Humanitarian fine and I did my bit on that front for Ukraine.
On the home front the govt has effectively sanctioned Russian fertiliser by slapping on a 35% duty. The US has not sanctioned Russian fertiliser, at all, at least not for 3 months more or back.
In addition I think the US still has tariffs on Al and steel from NZ, a hangover from Trump days. So much for your allies.
We have how many migrants from India in nz and yet we dont have a hindu language media/news service to make sure those migrants residing in nz are able to see balanced nz media in a language they understand.. seems like a smart move to increase our own soft power would be to invest in such hindu language media
The Indians in NZ are fluent in English. Like many from the north of England they may sometimes have a strong accent. They do not need a Hindu language media/news service to see balanced NZ media. Is there any balanced NZ media even in English? Which of the many Indian languages?
Can India influence the West to adopt policies and practices to help the Third World ?
Can conferences and meeting like these help ?
What to Watch as India Hosts G-20 Finance, Central Bank Chiefs.
G20 India: What to Watch as Finance, Central Bank Chiefs Meet - Bloomberg
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