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Can India replace China as driver of world GDP growth over next 20 years?

ashok mourya

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China, and not emerging markets, has propelled World GDP in the last 20 years. Now, with the Chinese economy slowing down, will India take its place?

Manas Chakravarty
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The share of emerging markets in World GDP has improved from 42.3% in 1996 to 58.1% in 2016, according to the IMF’s latest World Economic Outlook database. Photo: Abhijit Bhatlekar/Mint
The share of emerging and developing markets—153 of them—in world gross domestic product (GDP) has improved from 42.3% in 1996 to 58.1% in 2016, according to the International Monetary Fund’s latest World Economic Outlook database. (See chart 1—The share of global output has been computed by taking GDP on a purchasing power parity basis).

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This increase in share is a remarkable achievement and seems to be a ringing endorsement of the benefits of opening up the economy and of globalization. It’s a rise of 15.8 percentage points in the share of global output in the last 20 years. These years have been the heyday of globalization, which has led to a spurt in the growth of developing economies.

But the story gets much more nuanced. If we disaggregate the numbers, we find that China’s share of world output has gone up from 6.3% in 1996 to 17.8% in 2016 (See chart 2). In other words, the lion’s share, or 11.5 percentage points out of the 15.8 percentage point increase in the share of developing economies is due to the extraordinary growth of China alone. That means China contributed as much as 72.8% of the growth in the share of developing economies in world GDP in the last two decades. Remove China from the picture and the performance of the other developing economies gets toned down considerably.

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Now let’s consider India (See chart 2), which also did well as it liberalized its economy, with its share of world GDP going up from 3.9% in 1996 to 7.2% in 2016, or by 3.3 percentage points. That means India and China together accounted for 14.8 (11.5+3.3) percentage points of the growth in the share of developing economies, out of the total increase in share of 15.8 percentage points. Putting it more starkly, China and India contributed 93.7% of the total increase in the share of developing countries in global output in the last 20 years.


In fact, developing countries other than in Asia saw their cumulative share of global GDP decline a wee bit from 26.6% in 1996 to 26.5% in 2016. Developing Asia, on the other hand, saw its share rise from 15.7% to 31.6% over the period (See chart 1). Were the last 20 years really a period of globalization, or would Asianization be a more fitting description? Put differently, practically the entire decrease in share of the advanced economies in world GDP in the last two decades has gone to developing Asia.

A look at regions other than Asia throws up a much more sober assessment of globalization. In the last 20 years, the share of the Middle East, North Africa, Afghanistan and Pakistan region went up a bit, from 7% in 1996 to 7.6%—just 60 basis points. Sub-Saharan Africa’s share also improved by 60 basis points, from 2.4% to 3%. The share of emerging Europe increased by a mere 20 basis points. The CIS countries’ share of global output was stagnant. But these small gains were offset by a decline in the share of Latin American developing nations’ share of world GDP from 9.4% to 7.9% in the last two decades.

A look at the figures for Mexico underlines the problem. Mexico’s share of world GDP declined from 2.3% in 1996 to 1.9% by 2016 (See chart 3). And this was despite the common border with the US and despite Nafta. With such advantages, Mexico should have become the poster boy of globalization. Alas, in Mexico’s case, the words of its late dictator Porfirio Diaz, ‘Poor Mexico, so far from God, so near to the United States,’ have rung more true. The country’s story shows that as economies become more developed, they have to develop new sources of competitiveness and move up the value chain or see other, lower-cost competitors steal their jobs and output.

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The star of the last 20 years hasn’t really been emerging markets—it has been China. For us, the question is, now that Chinese growth has slowed down considerably, can the next couple of decades be India’s?

Manas Chakravarty looks at trends and issues in the financial markets.


 
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An article seems incomplete. It only brings up the question but provides no answers whatsoever. Can India replace China? How? With what? We did what we did by following a clear strategy and we caught a historical break a.k.a. globalization. What will India do? Will call centers, H1b visa getters give India sustained high economic growth for 20+ years? Will India become an economic superpower without going through industrialization? I doubt anyone knows the answers. But I do know the Indians will never stop talking:rolleyes1:
 
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The problem is the scale.

For example the USA with very low percentage GDP growth every year, is still adding more to their nominal GDP every year than India is. By a big margin.

At India's current stage of development, they should be growing at double-digits. But even after Modi's "magic" in changing the GDP calculation, they are still far away from that.
 
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That I can not say but One thing I can say surely is that India shall be intellectual capital of the world in Next 2 decades. No multinational shall be able to work without R & D or development center in India. We shall have the biggest high skill manpower pool and maximum numbers of engineers. We shall be a space power and biggest manufacturer of Automobiles and Automobiles part.

We shall be undisputed leader in IT and related services.
 
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No multinational shall be able to work without R & D or development center in India.


Beijing takes top place in Fortune Global 500 company headquarters
en.people.cn | Updated: 2017-03-22


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The Central Business District of Beijing is illuminated by light, Feb 10, 2017. [Photo/VCG]


Beijing is now home to the headquarters of 52 companies on the Fortune Global 500, the most of any city in the world for four straight years.

Companies in service sectors account for three-fourth of all the headquarters. In addition, 161 major multi-national corporations have regional headquarters in the city.

Beijing plans to further improve its policies to create the best possible environment for these companies in 2017.
 
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With China slowing, India should and will replace China as a driver of GDP growth of the world, but first it should cross the $10 trillion GDP to have impact on the global scale.
 
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No, it will not replace China. But it will replace most of existing developed countries as driver to world GDP for sure.
However it will complement China in world trade & GDP over next 20 years given we have political stability.
 
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Beijing takes top place in Fortune Global 500 company headquarters
en.people.cn | Updated: 2017-03-22


b083fe955aa11a3c1bcc12.jpg

The Central Business District of Beijing is illuminated by light, Feb 10, 2017. [Photo/VCG]


Beijing is now home to the headquarters of 52 companies on the Fortune Global 500, the most of any city in the world for four straight years.

Companies in service sectors account for three-fourth of all the headquarters. In addition, 161 major multi-national corporations have regional headquarters in the city.

Beijing plans to further improve its policies to create the best possible environment for these companies in 2017.

With the rise of economy China has observed in last 2 decades, Beijing is a natural contender for this place. However we are all set to take a giant leap in many areas including high tech and high skilled areas. A situation is emerging very fast in the world where you cannot think of surviving without our operation being there in India. We are going to be R & D hub of the world and a manufacturing hub of high tech goods though I am not sure of every manufacturing.
 
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A couple of years ago, when India revised GDP base, all of sudden, Indians picked up their confidence and poised to replace China as THE engine of the world economy. "Move over, China!" was all we heard from Indian media and officials alike. A few years have passed, India is still the same old India, but China is on the next stage.
 
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The problem is the scale.

For example the USA with very low percentage GDP growth every year, is still adding more to their nominal GDP every year than India is. By a big margin.

At India's current stage of development, they should be growing at double-digits. But even after Modi's "magic" in changing the GDP calculation, they are still far away from that.

Nominal GDP only really matters if your consumers use the dollar within the country....or if there is at least larger exposure of the whole economy to global trade (and thus the US dollar and effectively pegged to US dollar currencies).

India is still in early transition regarding that (as seen in its PPP/nominal differential)....as is China (but China is definitely ahead given its trade-based economic strategy since the 90s)....largely because India never scaled the trade route like China did (China smartly used its govt organised/directed meager resources/liquidity for sustained capital acquisition in the 90s whereas India was more focused on consumption related subsidies even after its 1991 reforms...the inertia of which still continues to this day but is at least heading in the right direction in India now).

Thus nominal (in any other foreign currency, not just USD) is becoming more relevant for India only with time (and much longer time frame than say China), so for now PPP is the better measure (even with its own set of flaws) for both but especially India....because in theory PPP at least purports to try measure direct volumes (discriminated by quality bands) rather than extrapolating the foreign-based demand/supply of a country's trade (and hence the currency it prints) to the entire economic make up (like nominal does)....which is always a stretch if you are a developing country (though it depends on global integration/permeation like I said earlier).

This is also the first year (as far as me paying close attention since the early 2000s) that I am seeing Indian exports increasing in volumes, value alongside its currency also appreciating big time (which is a sign of massive demand for the rupee and plenty of economic "slack" being realised in short order). The effects of this will have to be monitored up to say 2020 to determine if this is a longer term trend. ...especially alongside GDP "formalisation" and the major incoming GST reform. It is certainly leading to a huge growth in overall economic activity. This year itself should continue some very valuable clues...so lets see.
 
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The problem is the scale.

For example the USA with very low percentage GDP growth every year, is still adding more to their nominal GDP every year than India is. By a big margin.

At India's current stage of development, they should be growing at double-digits. But even after Modi's "magic" in changing the GDP calculation, they are still far away from that.

According to some folks USD is highly over-valued. Addition of nominal GDP may not represent more goods and services produced, consumed or exported in the economy. Actually in this I agree with Li Keqiang approach to measure the economy. Focus on those data which is hard to falsify. Electricity consumed, Volume of items shipped etc for a majorly manufacturing economy. I believe there are similar indices for majorly service based economies.

Here is world economics Li Keqiang index for China

http://www.worldeconomics.com/Papers/China Growth Monitor_cac90741-8882-4311-969e-3ae0e3e2575c.paper

And it is tracking a growth rate closer to 5% for China compared to official 6.9/6.7 figure.
 
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I always find it curious that Chinese think India is bragging. Perhaps more so because they are not aware of freedom of thought and expression. A lot of 'bragging' comes from Indian media. Indian media houses are privately owned one and they have their own interests and their own agenda in publishing whatever they publish. Unlike China where anything which is not blessed by CPC is never published, in India it is possible for different media and journalists to publish according to their own will.

OK, whether you have private press or not, bragging is bragging. Why you find it curious? Besides, it is not fair to blame all "bragging" on Indian media, here is why:

1. Who said that "in 5 years, the world will forget about Shanghai, the taking point will be Mumbai"?
2. Who said that "India will be a Superpower by 2012"?
3. Who said that "Indian will have manned space mission by 2015'?
4. Who said that "India will develop a 32.8 exaflops super-supercomputer by 2017"?
5. Who told the press "India will conduct manned moon mission by 2020"?

Do you think India media made up all these stories?
 
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