Wednesday, 25 September 2013

India Vs China - Sustainability of Growth


India and China have both been recognized for rapid economic growth. But India’s growth pattern is dramatically different. China has a global reputation for exporting manufactured goods. It has experienced a manufacturing-led growth. India has side-stepped the manufacturing sector, and made the big leap straight from agriculture into services. Their differences in growth patterns are striking. They raise big questions in development economics. Can developing countries jump straight from agriculture into services? Can services be as dynamic as manufacturing? Can late-comers to development take advantage of the globalization of service? Can services be a driver of sustained growth, job creation, and poverty reduction?

India’s growth pattern in the 21st century is remarkable because it contradicts a seemingly iron law of development that has held true for almost two hundred years since the start of the Industrial Revolution. This law – which is now conventional wisdom – says that industrialization is the only route to rapid economic development for developing countries.

China and India: The race to growth
First it was China. The rest of the world looked on in disbelief, then awe, as Chinese economy began to take off in 1980s at what seemed like lightning speed and the country positioned itself as a global economic power. GDP growth, driven largely by manufacturing, rose to 9.9 percent in 2010 after reaching 8.7 percent in 2009. China used its vast reservoirs of domestic savings to build an impressive infrastructure and sucked in huge amounts of foreign money to build factories and to acquire the expertise it needed. It continues to receive large amount of foreign direct investment – more than any other country in quite a few years.

India began its economic transformation almost a decade after China did but has grabbed just as much attention by early 2000s, prompted largely by the number of jobs transferred to it from the West. At the same time, the country rapidly created world-class businesses in knowledge-based industries such as software, IT services, and pharmaceuticals. These companies, which emerged with little government assistance, helped propel the economy: GDP growth stood at 10.1 percent in 2010, up from 7.4 percent in 2009. But India's level of foreign direct investment is a fraction of China's.

Both countries still have serious problems: India has poor roads and insufficient water and electricity supplies, policy paralysis all of which could thwart its development; China has massive bad bank loans that will have to be accounted for. The contrasting ways in which China and India are developing, manufacturing vs services, prompt debate about whether one country has a better approach to economic development and will eventually emerge as the stronger.

But can service-led growth be sustained?
Service-led growth is sustainable because the globalization of services is just the tip of the iceberg. Services are the largest sector in the world, accounting for more than 70% of global output. The service revolution has altered the characteristics of services. Services can now be produced and exported at low cost. The old idea of services being non-transportable, non-tradable, and non-scalable no longer holds for a range of modern impersonal services. Developing countries can sustain service-led growth as there is a huge room for catch up and convergence.

The Services Revolution could upset three long-held tenets of economic development. First, services have long been thought to be driven by domestic demand. They could not by themselves drive growth, but instead followed growth. In the classical treatment of services, any attempt to expand the volume of services production beyond the limits of domestic demand would quickly lead to deterioration in the price of services, hence a reduction in profitability, and hence the impulse towards expanded production would be choked off.

Second, services in developing countries were considered to have lower productivity and lower productivity growth than industry. As economies became more service oriented, their growth would slow. For rich countries, with high demand for various services, the slowdown in growth was an acceptable consequence of the higher welfare that could be achieved by a switch towards services. But for developing countries such a trade-off was thought to be inappropriate.

Third, services jobs in developing countries were thought of as menial, and for the most part poorly paid, especially for low skilled workers. As such, service jobs could not be an effective pathway out of poverty.

Future Prospects
India’s development experience offers hope to late-comers to development in Africa as of now. The marginalization of Africa during a period when China and other East Asian countries grew rapidly has led some to wonder if late-comers to development like Africa are doomed to failure. The process of globalization in the late 20th century led to a strong divergence of incomes between those who industrialized and broke into global markets. It seemed as if the bottom billion would have to wait their turn for development, until the giant industrialisers like China became rich and uncompetitive in labour-intensive manufacturing.

While both countries have grown in different ways, future prospects wise, China stands better as manufacturing is a capital intensive and is not easily replaceable & is time consuming.

In comparison, services sector on which India’s growth has been primarily dependent and is comparatively easily replaceable. Also, the primary reason for growth of services sector in India is due to availability of:
  • Cheap labour
  • Skilled labour & knowledge
  • Large scale operations
However, these are not limitations and can be manageable. And with internal issues within developed countries against outsourcing and also other third world countries like Taiwan, Vietnam also growing and offering cheaper options than India, it shall be a struggle for India to sustain its growth. The earlier India realizes this and works towards alternatives for growth and not relying overtly on developed countries for its growth, the better it shall be.

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