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December 12, 1999
Not
As Bad As It Looks
Since
my college debating days, and as a writer, I have always preferred argument
to data. Not that facts aren't essential to a good argument; reasoning,
as any good lawyer will tell you, always requires evidence. It's just
that a dry recitation of facts has always struck me as less tempting
to write. And yet I am going to use this column to inflict data on my
unaccustomed readers. Of course, there is the formulation, "lies, damned
lies and statistics". Yet sometimes statistics can tell a remarkable
story, pointing to larger truths hidden behind the data. I have been
collecting some interesting new statistics about what I once called
"my beloved and impossible country", and feel my readers might be as
struck by them as I am.
Consider,
for instance, the following:
-
Despite
a host of ill winds buffeting the Indian economy - from the 'Asian
flue' of 1997 to the international sanctions that followed our nuclear
tests at Pokharan in 1998 - the country's Gross Domestic Product (GDP)
has been expanding steadily. Were it not for Kargil, we might already
have hit the 7 percent growth figure; barring similar misfortunes,
we should make that mark in 2000, and maintain it through the first
decade of the new century. No wonder that, in October, the prestigious
American firm Moody's Investors Service raised its estimation of India's
credit outlook from 'stable' to 'positive'. One of the reasons India
was not infected by the 'Asian flu' is that we have an unusually strong
domestic economy and we are not as reliant as others on foreign capital
and foreign markets. In fact, domestic consumption in India is almost
80 percent of the country's GDP, comparable to a highly developed
country like the United States. By comparison, even China, with its
vast population, has domestic consumption levels accounting for only
59 percent of its GDP. This makes India much less vulnerable than
most to external shocks.
-
We
aren't doing badly in the global inflation stakes, either. The British
news magazine The Economist recently estimated that Russia will experience
88 percent inflation in 1999. Turkey nearly 61 percent, Indonesia
almost 25 percent - and India between 6 and 7 percent. That's one
race we don't want to win, and as of now we seem to be managing the
inflation challenge prudently.
-
Official
Development Assistance (ODA) - government to government aid - is now
well below private capital flows. We are receiving only about US$
1.6 billion in ODA, about Rs.65 (or not even $2) per Indian. By contrast,
Nepal and Sri Lanka get $19 dollars per head in aid; Pakistan gets
5. Foreign Direct Investment targets, though, are aiming at $10 billion
a year - $10 per Indian. That's where the money is - with private
firms, not aid agencies.
-
Foreign
Direct Investment in India went from just about a $100 million in
1991 to a peak of nearly $3 billion in 1997. It has dropped since
then, to under 2.5 billion last year (1999 numbers aren't in yet).
But with international investors reassured by the country's post-election
stability, and the Government making the right pro-reform noises,
the auguries are good for a better performance in the first years
of the next century than in the entire preceding half-century. Last
month, the benchmark Mumbai Foreign Investors Exchange rose a new
high. There's no obvious obstacle to it continuing to climb.
-
If
you examine the country's export of manufactured goods, India has
an unusually high percentage of high-technology goods - 11 percent
of our exports are high-technology, whereas Pakistan's for example,
is only 3 percent. (China's is 21 percent, so we still have some catching
up to do, and the US' is 44 percent). For a developing country, this
is still a remarkable advertisement for our high-technology skills.
-
Our
electricity consumption, though, is poor, at 347 kilowatt hours per
capita; the US' is 11,796 kWh per American, and even China, with a
larger population than ours, consumes 687 kWh. Clearly there is room
for improvement here, but our growth rate is high (though exceeded
by Pakistan's).
-
We
keep talking about the pool of trained scientists and engineers in
our country, but the number of research and development personnel
in India are much lower, both in absolute terms and as a percentage
of the population, than either China or Japan.
-
Our
population, now past the billion mark, is slated to overtake China's
by the year 2020. But the news is not all bad:the birth rate (the
number of births per thousand, currently two) is dropping and so is
the fertility rate (the number of births per woman). Life expectancy
has risen from 50 in the 1970s to 60 today and should reach 65 by
2010. Current projections suggest that India's population will stabilise
at 1.3 billion around 2030 - unless AIDs and natural disaster confound
the demographer's projections.
-
The
percentage of India's population living in the cities has grown from
25 percent in 1991 to 28 percent and is projected to reach 33 percent
by 2016. This will take us from about 200 million city-dwellers at
the next decade and a half, a truely appalling prospect for urban
planners. The infrastructure development challenge is daunting; so
is the challenge of urban governance.
Who
says statistics aren't interesting? Here's one that encapsulates both
the economic and population figures above. We have some 280 million
Indians between the ages of 15 and 29. That's a rather large number
of young people, who need to be absorbed into the economy if they are
not to become disaffected and easy prey for militant movements. That
statistic alone should underscore the case for pro-growth economic reform.
I shall return with more numbers next fortnight.
Fortnightly
Updated
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