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Happy New Decade, India

Bhushan

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Happy New Decade, India


Saubhik Chakrabarti Tags : India's Deciding Decade Posted: Friday , Jan 01, 2010 at 0409 hrs New Delhi:

India's Deciding Decade. The 10 years that start tomorrow can end with India becoming a different country, where mass prosperity is taken for granted. Or it can become a country where much changes radically — but many problems persist.

The Indian Express-Indicus Analytics study on how India will look in 2020 has a remarkable finding: even if no reforms happen, India’s GDP can grow at an average annual rate of 9.6 per cent for the next 10 years.

Nine per cent growth for 10 years with no reforms — that’s how well-placed India is as 2010 begins.

But if there are no reforms, and growth is 9 per cent-plus, more than 250 million people, of a total population of 1.3 billion-plus, will still be very poor in 2020. And not even 100 million Indians will be graduates or post-graduates.

With rapid reform, these bad numbers can change dramatically. So 2010-2020 is the deciding decade because India starts it with the most advantageous conditions it’s ever had in its post-Independence history to effect a real paradigm shift.

The Indian Express-Indicus study crunched all sorts of numbers to take a call on the future.

These are the headline good numbers by 2020.

* Even if no significant reforms happen, per capita income will grow at an average of 8% per year. Incomes will be almost double compared to now.

* Fifty million more households in India will join the ranks of the middle class — defined by those earning between Rs 75,000 a year to Rs 10 lakh a year.

* The households-in-middle class number will jump from less than 120 million now to almost 170 million. Taking the accepted multiple of five people per household, this means that roughly 800 million Indians will be middle class out of an end-of-decade population of 1.3-plus billion.

* Average household expenditure will be twice the current levels in real terms; education, health and recreation will be among the fastest growing heads, share of food in people’s budget will fall significantly (although absolute levels spent on food will rise as incomes go up). Penetration of consumer durables like two-wheelers, television and air coolers will be more than 80 per cent of the population.

And here are the not-so-great findings:

* Under policy status quo, more than 250 million people will still be very poor. Agriculture may still have to support far larger numbers of Indians than its relative share (less than 10% by 2020) in the economy will dictate.

* Less than 4 out of 10 Indians will be city dwellers by end-2019. Without power sector reforms, electricity shortage will be a drag on manufacturing. And if we project standards of living state-wise, using the purchasing power parity method (this irons out the excessive differentials that arise from simple rupee-dollar conversions) and compare them globally, we will get some very humbling results.

By end-2019, UP’s standard of living will be what Pakistan’s was in 2005. And Bihar at the end of the decade will offer a standard of living comparable to what prevailed in Djibouti in 2005. MP in 2020? Like Republic of Congo in 2005.

More bad news:

The number of Indians not literate will fall by 10 million in 10 years, but that will still leave nearly 200 million non-literate citizens.

Equally bad news, the number of Indians holding graduate and higher degrees will increase from a low 45 million or so to a still-low 73 million or so. Those with medical degrees/diplomas will go up from a shockingly low 1.3 million now to a still shockingly low 2.1 million in 10 years.


The lessons are clear:


One, Congress-led UPA can easily make the next 10 years 10 per cent-plus GDP growth years if it restarts reforms now. Ten per cent-plus growth over 10 years will have far bigger impact, on poverty levels, for example, than 9 per cent-plus growth. That's the magic of compounding.

Two, agriculture will remain a socio-economic drag unless plenty more jobs are created outside farms.

Three, education will need a massive boost. Just two million doctors and 200 million non-literates in 2020 constitute a scandal.

Four, a fast growing India can afford laggard states even less in the future than now, because better-performing states will be approaching sort-of first world living standards by then. Gujarat's standard of living in 2020 will be like Poland's in 2005 and Delhi's like Portugal's.


Can India do it?

The essays in today's newspaper, on politics, economy, social trends and foreign policy, in our special section -- The Deciding Decade -- explore some aspects of this question. How the Congress practices its politics will be the biggest influence on India.

If all or most cards are played right, how will the budget speech of 2019 read like? Can we create islands of excellence that will act as a pull factor for society at large? Can we please stop missing the foreign policy bus?

Here's one last 2020 projection before you start reading our numbers and commentaries.

The one profession that will see a virtual stagnation in employment opportunities is that of clerks. The relative importance of the babu will sharply decline in India.

Surely that's cause for hope?
 
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Harbingers of hope for India in 2010?

Soutik Biswas | Friday, 8 January 2010

Indian boy with tricolour paint on his faceHas India's "Deciding Decade" begun? A study, done by a Delhi-based economic research firm along with a leading newspaper, thinks so. It says that India's GDP can grow at an average annual rate of 9.6% for the next 10 years even if there were no reforms. Incomes will double, the middle class will burgeon and urbanisation will proceed at breakneck speed.

Now the bad news. Even with this scorching growth, more than 250 million people of a total population of 1.3bn will still be "very poor" in 2020, the study says. That's not all: not even 100 million Indians will be graduates or post graduates despite the growth. Clearly, without radical reforms in education and infrastructure taken up with missionary bipartisan zeal, millions of Indians will still be hungry, poor and illiterate. Are India's politicians and bureaucrats up to the task? On present evidence, hardly. But we all live in hope.

The decade has also begun with a rash of good news stories. The government is planning to give out passports within three days of verification, make compulsory baby seats in cars and provide cheaper food for the poor. At least one state is launching madrassas or religious schools where English will be the medium of instruction. The government is also promising to introduce more women-friendly laws, harsher punishment for sexual crimes and fast track courts. All this just proves how much ground India has to cover. And Indian governments are famous for making announcements that take months, sorry, decades to implement. So we will wait and see.

But there is a piece of truly good news that holds out hope for India. Bihar, India's basket case state - poorest, most lawless, underdeveloped - appears to have clocked the fastest rate of growth during 2008-2009. If the Bihar government is to believed, the state's growth rate - 11.4% - is higher than India's industrially developed states. It is being attributed to good governance, buoyant revenues, increased government spending and a swelling unorganised private sector. If this is true then Bihar has all the makings of a miracle economy.

Bihar's remarkable "turnaround" shows the way for India, in a way. It also proves, as political philosopher Pratap Bhanu Mehta says, that "for the first time in modern Indian history, Indians, including the very marginalised, have a sense that change is possible: our destinies are ours to shape".


A sobering thought to keep in mind though. Impressive growth figures are unlikely to stun the poor into mindless optimism about their future. India has long been used to illustrate how extensive poverty coexists with growth. It has a shabby record in pulling people out of poverty - in the last two decades the number of absolutely poor in India has declined by 17 percentage points compared to China, which brought down its absolutely poor by some 45 percentage points. The number of Indian billionaires rose from nine in 2004 to 40 in 2007, says Forbes magazine. That's higher than Japan which had 24, while France and Italy had 14 billionaires each. When one of the world's highest number of billionaires coexist with what one economist calls the world's "largest number of homeless, ill-fed illiterates", something is gravely wrong. This is what rankles many in this happy season of positive thinking.
 
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Sustainable growth that is important.That requires a greater distribution of the wealth, the development of a sustainable middle class and opportunities for the poor in education and employment. Politicians always like the quick fix and that is why things fail and when they fail it is the poor and the middle class that pay the price.:hitwall:
 
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Sustainable growth that benefits all sections of society is the key. No point in having a 500 million strong middle class if 250 million or so are still classified as poor. For India to grow out of poverty certain measures need to be implemented.

Firstly drastic improvements need to be made in agriculture. Now! It is unacceptable that farmers in India, even after 60 years of independence. mostly rely on the rains for harvest. What happened to the canals we were planning? Put on the back burner?

Second, land reforms are needed. A lot of Indian states still have a lawless feudal countryside, land reforms are the only way out of this feudal menace. Third, greater accountability - from our politicians, bureaucrats and more importantly us, the people. If we keep voting morons, our system will be moronic.

Finally, focus on infrastructure. By this i do not mean making metro's in cities. I mean to connect remote places with roads, to have an abundance of schools, hospitals in all districts. To electrify our villages!!

If we do this, then maybe, it might be India's decade. We shall see.
 
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Everything looking good in paper :undecided:
 
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