regional and urban competitiveness a case study for india
DESCRIPTION
Presentation delivered at MOC Faculty Workshop at Harvard Business School on December 11, 2012TRANSCRIPT
Assessing India’s Compe00veness
Regional and Urban Compe11veness: A Case Study for India
Professor Amit Kapoor
Honorary Chairman of Ins0tute for Compe00veness, India & Professor of Strategy & Industrial Economics at MDI, Gurgaon, India
Ins1tute for Compe11veness (IFC), India is an independent, interna0onal ini0a0ve centred in India, dedicated to enlarging and dissemina0ng the body of research and knowledge on compe00on and strategy, pioneered over the last 25 years by Professor M.E. Porter of the Ins0tute for Strategy and Compe00veness, Harvard Business School (ISC, HBS), USA. IFC, India works in affilia0on with ISC, HBS, USA to offer academic & execu0ve courses, conduct indigenous research and provide advisory services to corporate and Government within the country. The ins0tute studies compe00on and its implica0ons for company strategy; the compe00veness of na0ons, regions & ci0es; suggests and provides solu0ons for social problems. IFC, India brings out India City Compe00veness Report, India State Compe00veness Report, India Economic Quarterly, Journal of Compe00veness and funds academic research in the area of strategy & compe00veness. To know more about the ins0tute write to us at [email protected].
1
Natural Endowments Population and GDP’s of the world
India
China USA
European Union
7% of the Land area, 5% of the Popula0on, 23%
of the GDP
3% of the Land area, 7% of the Popula0on, 26%
of the GDP
2% of the Land area, 17% of the Popula0on, 3%
of the GDP
7% of the Land area, 20% of the Popula0on, 9%
of the GDP
GDP over the years
Source: WDI and Institute for Competitiveness Analysis
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010
European Union India China United States Rest of the World
39% in 2010
23% in 2010
9% in 2010
3% in 2010
26% in 2010
Ins0tute for Compe00veness, India 4
FRIDAY l DECEMBER 9 l 2011 Reflectw w w . f i n a n c i a l e x p r e s s . c o m 9
The Bharatiya Janata Par-ty’s position on reforms istakensectorbysector.Theparty looks at each sectorforitsstrengthsandweak-
nesses in terms of having to face in-ternational competition once thesector is partly or fully opened up.Importantly,theBJPwishestoensurethat lives, livelihoods or any way oflifearenotwashedoff whentheflood-gates are opened for the much-requiredinvestmentstoflowin.
Pension sector reforms started inearnest during the National Democ-ratic Alliance period, when the newpension scheme came into force onJanuary 1, 2004. Under this scheme,all employees (excluding the mili-tary) recruited since 2004 were toshift from defined benefits to a de-fined contribution regime. Earlier,in August 2003, through an executiveorder, an interim Pension Fund Reg-ulatory and Development Authoritywas set up. Its functions are ex-plained in its title. The necessary le-gal backing could not be obtaineddue to the onset of elections.
After the United Progressive Al-liancecametopower,itintroducedthePFRDA Bill in Parliament. But, notethat the Standing Committee chairedby Shri BC Khanduri had studied theBill in great detail and submitted itsreportin2005,interaliaapprovingthenew scheme introduced by the NDA.Again, due to the general elections in2009, theBillcouldn’tgetpassed.
UPA-II tabled the Bill yet again.AndafterconsiderationbytheStand-ing Committee, this time chaired byShri Yashwant Sinha, a consensuswas reached. However, the govern-ment appears to disagree with twokey recommendations made by theCommittee. The BJP considers thosetwo recommendations as critical to
the sector because of their long-term implications. They are: (a) aminimum assured return on invest-ment, for example, comparable tothe Employee Provident Fund Or-ganisation interest rate, and (b) fix-ing a cap on foreign investment; thatis, foreign direct investment inpension funds should not exceed26%. We want these conditions tobe part of the Bill so that if anygovernment wants to change them,it will have to come back to getParliament’s mandate.
While the BJP is working consis-tently and continuously on sectoralreforms with an understanding ofpeople’s aspirations and well-being,thegovernment’sapproachcontinuesto be tardy and patchy. A glaring in-stance of the government’s laid-backapproachtoreformBillswasalsoseen
when the PFRDA Bill was introducedin the Lok Sabha in March 2011. Asizeable number of the CongressParty’s own members were absent.But for the BJP fully backing thegovernment, they would have facedembarrassment.
Theimportanceof thepensionsec-tor cannot be overstated in a countrythat has one-eighth the elderly popu-lation of the world. Only 12% of ourworkforce is in the organised sector.Managing their retirement assets isbig business. The BJP is keen andhopeful that the advisory committeeenvisagedintheBill, consisting of allstakeholders, should ensure that themanagement of the pension funds islabour-friendly.
The author is nationalspokesperson,Bharatiya
Janata Party
Roughly 20m persons havejoined the ranks of the el-derly over the last decade.Add another 50m to this by2021.Sincemostsuchwork-
ers may have barely enough savings tosupport their consumption for even afew months after their incomes dry up,and also as they are largely excludedfromexistingpensionprogrammes,theprimary retirement plan for most Indi-anscanonlybetoworktilltheydie.
Yet, pension reforms don’t appearurgent as we stand on the verge of al-lowing yet another year slip by on thePFRDA legislation. With the benefit ofhindsight,weshouldknowalreadythatexisting pension programmes can’twork for most of India—apart from be-ing fiscally unsustainable, the existingEPFO/EPShaslimitedcoverageandof-fersmeagrepensioncover.
But,sevenyearsafterNPSwasman-dated for new government employees,little progress has been made on thePFRDA legislation. At the heart of thepoliticalinertiaaretheself-styledadvo-cates of people who are still strugglingto accept the urgency of pension re-form,especiallyforthepopulationtheyrepresent—oursurveysshowthereisavery large latent demand for a broad-based pension programme among avery large number of Indians who areinterestedinsavingfortheiroldage.
In 2004, it was desirable to have es-tablishedastatutoryregulatorforNPS.By 2011, this has become an urgent ne-cessityasnearly30lakhindividualsarealready covered by a pension systemthatpresentlyreliesoncivilcourtsandtheContractActtoenforcecompliance,instead of achieving this throughregulationsandpenalties.
Ironically, while successive debatesaround the PFRDA legislation havecentered around customer protection,theyhavemanagedtoonlydeferappro-priate safeguards through legislationfor the people who have already joinedthis scheme. In this context, concernsrelated to FDI limits, administered re-turnsandequityinvestmentsareeitherirrelevant,ill-conceivedorunfounded.
The core NPS architecture is de-signed specifically to protect sub-scriber interests over multiple-decadehorizons. For example, pension fundmanagers,whetherdomesticorglobal,cannot derive anything more than theasset management fee that they pre-commitformanagementof NPSassets.DuetotheNPStruststructure,savingsof NPSsubscriberscanneverreflectonthebooksof afundmanageroranyoth-er intermediary. Importantly, NPS cus-tomers are not forced to invest their re-tirement savings into equities and arefree to put all their money into govern-mentbondsif theywish.Butthemajor-ity of the working poor, who are a keytargetaudienceforNPS,areunlikelytoescape old age poverty unless they in-vest at least a part of their modest sav-ingsintoequities.Inthissituation,andespecially in the context of unpre-dictableinflationlevels,benchmarkingNPS returns to the EPF may only pro-ducesub-optimalinvestmentoutcomesand inadequate retirement incomes.There is an essential role for an inten-siveretirement-literacyeffortandforastrongregulatortopreventmalpracticeand to infuse confidence among exist-ing and future customers. Both Sebiand Irda have done this in their sectorsand we should urgently achieve a simi-lar outcome in the pension sector. Thepeople we’re all debating about simplycan’taffordanyfurtherdelay.
The author is director ofInvest India Micro Pension Services
NIRMALA SITHARAMAN
THE TWO POINTS THE BJPWANTS IN THE PFRDA BILL—AMINIMUM ASSURED RETURNON INVESTMENT, AND AN FDI
CAP OF 26% IN PENSIONFUNDS—ARE CRITICAL IF WE
WANT TO SAFEGUARDWORKER INTERESTS
Post-retirement bluesThe PFRDA Bill—critical if millions of Indians are to get old-age security under the new pension scheme—is held hostage inParliament, with the BJP and Mamata Banerjee ranged against it on issues of assured returns and foreign investment caps
IdeascaFE
India and China are the future driversof the world economy, though the twoeconomies look very different interms of their development patterns
and economic structure. China hasemerged as the manufacturing power-houseinthelast20yearswhileIndiahasbe-come the major player in services.
China’s share in world manufacturinghas witnessed tremendous elevation from2.9%in1991to13.7%in2011.Theincrementin the Chinese economy’s contribution toworld manufacturing has come at the costof the European Union, whose share haddeclinedto20.9%in2010from33%in1991.Itbecomes much more pronounced when welook at the fact that per capita manufactur-ing GDP of China has increased by 8 timescompared to 1991, reaching $806 in 2010while India’s is just $122 (see figure). Theshare of India in world manufacturing is amere 1.8% and has increased by just 1%over the past 20 years.
At the same time, the US contributionhasremainednearlystagnant,whichisduetotheirspecialisationincapitalgoodsman-ufacturing, while Chinese manufacturingis dominated by consumer goods. Chinamay have succeeded in capturing a biggerchunk of world manufacturing, but its percapitamanufacturingGDPisstillfarbelowthat of the US, which was $6,147 as of 2010.
India’s growth is presumed to be drivenby the services sector, which contributes amaximum 65.2% to its GDP. However, therole of manufacturing in India’s develop-ment can’t be discounted considering thefact that it contributed 16% to the country’stotalGDPin2010.Totalworkforceemployedin the manufacturing sector is estimated tobe more than 40 million, which amounts to9%of thetotalworkingpopulationof India.It is interesting to note that the share ofmanufacturing to GDP in India hasn’tchanged much over the past 20 years, due toboththeincreaseintheshareof theservicessector and the decrease in the share of agri-culture, which has declined to just 14.6% in2010from31.4%in1991.Indiahasmorethan142,000 factories operating in the manufac-turing sector and needs to redefine its man-ufacturing strategy to drive its futuregrowthandtocreatemoreemployment.
Manufacturing growth has a multipliereffect on the economy. The development ofmany other dependent sectors, like logis-tics, insurance and raw-material produc-tion, is driven by the growth of manufac-turing as it is one of the biggest consumersforthesesectors. InstateslikeGoa,Gujarat
and Jharkhand, manufacturing con-tributes nearly 27% of the total GDP, whichmakes it extremely important for thesestates to focus on developing policies to fos-ter the development of this sector. It is in-teresting to note that the manufacturingsector in Orissa and Chhattisgarh hasgrown by more than 16% against India’soverallmanufacturinggrowthrateof 9.3%over the past five years, and it is driving thefuture growth of these states (see figure).
The two states of Maharashtra and Gu-jarat together form 34% of the total grossoutput of India’s manufacturing sector,which makes them the manufacturing gi-ants of the country. It is very important to
map the manufacturing sector’s perfor-mance at both the state and firm levels toimprove overall manufacturing competi-tivenessinIndia.Atthestatelevel,theman-ufacturing sectors of Uttar Pradesh, WestBengal and Kerala are found to be the leastproductive, having a ratio of total out-puts/inputs of nearly 1.2 and requiring ur-gent attention from the government. Thefirms in Himachal Pradesh and Uttarak-hand have the highest labour productivity,where the net value added by employees onanaverageismorethanR1lakh(seefigure).In states like Bihar, firms are found to bevery efficient in using their capital and areproducinggrossoutputthatismorethan10
times their fixed investments.Today, manufacturing in India requires
urgent attention from policymakers, to ad-dress the challenges at both the macro andmicro levels. There is a need to reduce thetax burden to improve profitability, and toprovide for the upgradation of workers’skills and technology. Costs of productionhavereachedextremelyhighlevelsbecauseof rising land prices; this needs to bechecked.Highpowercosts,lowerefficiencyanddecliningavailabilityof qualitylabourarealsoaffectingcompetitiveness.Thegov-ernment should adopt a cluster-based de-velopment strategy to push high growth inthe manufacturing sector. It needs to devel-
op a strategic policy framework to identifyand develop innovative clusters that have agreat potential in exports and can generatemore employment. There is a need todevelop investment mechanisms to fosterpublic-privatepartnershipsthatcaninvestin sick clusters and focus on improving thelatter’s productivity.
There is a need for state-specific ap-proaches. After all, each state is at a differ-ent stage of development in the manufac-turing industry and, therefore, needsdifferentstrategiestoimproveitsmanufac-turing competitiveness.! Strong manufacturing states (Gujarat,Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, Karnataka,Andhra Pradesh, Goa, Haryana and Jhark-hand) need an innovation-driven strategy.These states need to move towards moretechnological advancement to improvetheir production efficiency. These statesshould invest in developing advanced skill-sets for manufacturing and become moreexport competitive.! Weaker manufacturing states (Tripura,Sikkim, Nagaland, Kerala, Jammu andKashmir, Delhi, Bihar, Assam, and West-Bengal)needaninvestments-drivenstrate-gy. They need to give more incentives to in-dustry in terms of taxes, power costs andlogistics, and try to facilitate more privateinvestments in the sector.!Medium manufacturing states (Chhattis-garh,HimachalPradesh,MadhyaPradesh,Orissa, Punjab, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradeshand Uttarakhand) need a factors-drivenstrategy. These states need to focus in low-ering the costs of inputs of production, de-veloping the right set of skills and talent,and removing the barriers to doing busi-ness. These states should initiate public-private partnership mechanisms to attractinvestments and improve productivity.
Before devising policies for cluster devel-opment, it should be understood that manu-facturingclustersneedtobemoreintegratedand deeper than service clusters. How clus-ters that are not export-oriented fit into theglobal value chain of manufacturing needstobeanalysed.Indiahasabigpotentialof be-coming a good manufacturing-outsourcingbase for manufacturing clusters due to thepresenceof rawmaterialsandcheaplabour.But our clusters will need more marketingand brand-building assistance to improvetheir export competitiveness against thelikes of China. Indian manufacturing play-ersneedtopitchupproductqualityforwest-ern markets rather than focusing too muchonpricecompetitionfromChina.
Amit Kapoor is honorary chairman,Institute for Competitiveness, India,
and Anshul Pachouri is seniorresearcher at the institute
Decoding manufacturing competitivenessIndia needs state-specific approaches to consolidate and attract investment
GAUTAM BHARDWAJ
EPS/EPFO-TYPE ASSUREDRETURNS ARE UNVIABLE—THE EPS HOLE IS R50,000 CRALREADY. MANDATINGTHIS MAKES NPS ANON-STARTER AND HURTSMILLIONS WHO NEED NPSCOVER FOR THEIR OLD AGE
AMIT KAPOOR &ANSHUL PACHOURI
The State of Manufacturing in India
Agriculture and Allied
Industry
Manufacturing
Services
Construction Transport, Storage & Communication
Finance, Business & Real Estate Services
Community and Personal Services
-10
-8
-6
-4
-2
0
2
4
6
8
10
-10 0 10 20 30 40 50 60
% C
hang
e in
the
Con
tribu
tion
to G
DP
(199
4-20
00)
Percentage Contribution in GDP (2000)
Structural shift in Indian Economy (1994-2000)
Ins0tute for compe00veness Analysis
Agriculture and Allied
Industry
Manufacturing
Electricity, Gas and Water Supply
Services
Construction Transport, Storage & Communication Finance, Business & Real Estate Services
Community and Personal Services
-15
-10
-5
0
5
10
15
-10 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70
% c
hang
e in
con
tribu
tion
2000
-201
0)
Percenatge Contribution in GDP (2010)
Structural shift in Indian Economy (2000-2010)
Ins0tute for compe00veness Analysis
Geographic Influence on Compe00veness
World Economy
Broad Economic Areas
Group of Neighboring Na0ons
Na0on
State, Provinces
Metropolitan Areas
Rural Areas
7 Ins0tute for Compe00veness, India
The business environment at a given loca0on is the cumula0ve outcome of policy at all levels of geography Microeconomic Compe00veness raises the importance of lower levels of geography The alloca1on of responsibili1es across levels of geography is a crucial policy challenge
The Research
Ins0tute for Compe00veness, India 8
Compe00veness Assessment
States
State Compe00veness
Report
Sustainable Compe00veness
Report
Ci0es
City Compe00veness
Report Liveability Index Open Ci0es
Index
Districts
District Compe00veness
Parliamentary Cons0tuency
Compe00veness
Ranking Compe00veness
• Model looks at explaining SGDP per capita that is by far the best measure of prosperity
• The model is inspired by World Economic Forums – Global Compe00veness Index developed by Professor Michael Porter
• Innova0ve framework that is embedded in theory • Extensive use of hard data to reflect on performance of states and reduce
sampling errors and personal biases • Selec0on of indicators is based on theory and are grouped in way that inform
overall policy for corporate to take informed decisions while establishing strong framework for assessing policies at various levels
• Calibrated weights are applied to the set of indicator values to generate an overall Index score
• PCA is used to defining weights for the indicators so as to take care of mul0collinearity
• Log data is used at 0mes so that undue advantage is not given to size of popula0on et al
9 Ins0tute for Compe00veness, India
What we present
• An integrated index grounded in academic research and measured through hard data
• Concentrate our work on understanding determinants of produc0vity that a state economy can sustain
• Provide insights for firms and policy makers • Present ideas and evidence on how business environment has an impact
on produc0vity of companies • Capturing basic insights about state, city, district performance and help
organiza0ons make loca0on decisions
10 Ins0tute for Compe00veness, India
Microeconomic Compe00veness: The Diamond (Understanding Business Environment)
11 Ins0tute for Compe00veness, India
Context for Firm Strategy and Rivalry
Related and Suppor0ng Industries
Factor Condi0ons
Demand Condi0ons
Local rules and incen1ves that encourage investment and produc0vity e.g. salaries, incen0ves for capital investments, intellectual property protec0on Vigorous local compe11on i.e., openness to foreign and local compe00on; sophis0ca0on of company opera0ons
Availability of suppliers and suppor1ng industries Presence of clusters instead of isolated firms
Sophis0ca0on of local customers and needs i.e., strict quality, safety, and environment standards
Access to high quality business inputs i.e., natural endowments, human resources, capital availability, physical infrastructure, administra0ve infrastructure, informa0on infrastructure, scien0fic and technological infrastructure
Successful economic development is a process of successive upgrading, in which the business environment improves to enable increasingly sophis0cated ways of compe0ng
Near Term State Prosperity Performance
Highly Produc0ve and Prosperity Rising versus India
Andhra Pradesh
Arunachal Pradesh
Assam
Bihar
Chhalsgarh
Delhi
Goa
Gujarat
Haryana
Himachal Pradesh
Jammu & Kashmir Jharkhand
Karnataka
Kerala
Madhya Pradesh
Maharashtra
Manipur
Meghalaya Mizoram
Nagaland
Orissa
Punjab
Rajasthan
Sikkim
Tamil Nadu
Tripura
Unar Pradesh
Unarakhand West Bengal
0
20000
40000
60000
80000
100000
120000
140000
0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16
Gross Domes1c Product per Capita CAGR rate, 2008-‐2010
High but declining versus India
Low and declining versus India Low but rising versus India
High and rising versus India
All
India
Avera
ge
57.28
Inde
x Po
ints
All India GSDP /Capita rate (CAGR) of 8.36 %
All India Average of 46,836 Rupees/capita
Gross Dom
es1c Produ
ct per Cap
ita, 201
0
Composi0on of Haryana’s Economy in Greater Depth
Agricuture
Forestry and logging
Fishing
Mining and quarrying
Manufacturing Electricity, gas and water supply
Construc0on
Trade, hotel and restaurant
Railways
Transport by other means
Storage
Communica0on
Banking and insurance
Real states, ownership of dwellings and business services
Public sdministra0on and defence
Other services
-‐1
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
0 5 10 15 20 25 30
Haryan
a /N
a1on
al GSD
P share (Percent) ,20
10
Average of Change in contribu0on of (Haryana /Na0onal sectoral), CAGR is 15.26%
Strong and Growing Posi0on
Change in contribu1on of GSDP of Haryana to total Indian GSDP, CAGR (2000-‐2010)
Average of (Haryana/ Na0onal sectoral )GSDP share is 3.5%
State Private Sector Wage Performance
Jammu & Kashmir
Himachal Pradesh
Punjub
Unaranchal
Haryana
Delhi
Rajasthan
Unar Pradesh
Bihar
Nagaland
Manipur
Tripura
Meghalaya
Assam
West Bengal
Jharkhand
Orissa
Chalsgarh Madhya Pradesh Gujarat
Maharashtra
Andhra Pradesh
Karnataka
Goa
Kerala Tamil Nadu
0
20000
40000
60000
80000
100000
120000
140000
160000
0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 Wage Growth (CAGR), 2001 to 2008
Low and declining versus India Low but rising versus India
Average Wage : Rupees 64,741
Wage Growth rate 4.53%
Highly and rising wages rela0ve to India
High but declining versus India
Average Wages in Rup
ees ,2008
Long Term State Labour Produc0vity
Jammu & Kashmir
Himachal Pradesh
Punjab
Haryana
Unar Pradesh
Rajasthan
Delhi
Unarakhand
Bihar
Orissa West Bengal
Assam
Meghalaya Tripura
Mizoram
Manipur
Nagaland
Arunachal Pradesh
Sikkim
Jharkhand
Gujarat
Maharashtra
Goa
Madhya Pradesh
Chhalsgarh
Andhra Pradesh
Karnataka
Kerala
Tamil Nadu
0
50000
100000
150000
200000
250000
300000
350000
400000
0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20
GSDP /Labor force par1cipant growth rate(CAGR)
High but declining versus India
Low and declining versus India
All India Average of of 1,18,112 Rupees/Labour force par0cipant
All India Average of 11.37 %
Highly produc0ve and Produc0vity rising versus India
Low and rising versus India
GSD
P at Current Pric
es per labo
ur fo
rce pa
r1cipa
nt,201
0
Short Term State Labour Produc0vity
Jammu & Kashmir
Himachal Pradesh Punjab
Haryana
Unar Pradesh
Rajasthan
Delhi
Unarakhand
Bihar
Orissa West Bengal
Assam Meghalaya
Tripura Mizoram
Manipur
Nagaland
Arunachal Pradesh
Sikkim
Jharkhand
Gujarat
Maharashtra
Goa
Madhya Pradesh
Chhalsgarh
Andhra Pradesh Karnataka
Kerala
Tamil Nadu
0
50000
100000
150000
200000
250000
300000
350000
400000
0 5 10 15 20 25 30
GSDP /Labor force par1cipant growth rate(CAGR)
Low but rising versus India
All India Average 57.28 Index Points
All India Average of 15.11%
All India Average of of 1,18,112 Rupees/Labour force par0cipant
Highly produc0ve and Produc0vity rising versus India
High but declining versus India
Low and declining versus India
GSD
P at Current Pric
es per labo
ur fo
rce pa
r1cipa
nt,201
0
Long Term State Job Growth
Jammu & Kashmir Himachal Pradesh
Punjab Haryana
Unar Pradesh
Rajasthan
Delhi
Unarakhand
Bihar
Orissa
West Bengal
Assam
Meghalaya Tripura Mizoram Manipur Nagaland Arunachal Pradesh
Sikkim
Jharkhand
Gujarat
Maharashtra
Goa
Madhya Pradesh
Chhalsgarh
Andhra Pradesh
Karnataka
Kerala
Tamil Nadu
0
10000000
20000000
30000000
40000000
50000000
60000000
70000000
80000000
90000000
0 0.5 1 1.5 2 2.5 3 3.5
Job growth rate CAGR, 2001-‐2010
All India average of 1,62,99,464 Jobs /State
All India Average 57.28 Index Points
All India Average of 2.05%
Gaining Jobs Losing Jobs
Num
ber o
f Job
s, 2010
Near Term Unemployment Rate
Andhra Pradesh Arunachal Pradesh
Assam
Bihar
Chalsgarh
Goa
Gujarat
Haryana
Himachal Pradesh Jammu
jharkhand
Karnataka
kerala
Madhya Pradesh
Maharashtra
Manipur
Meghalaya
Mizoram Nagaland
Delhi
Orissa Punjab
Rajasthan
Sikkim Tamil Nadu
Tripura Unar Pradesh
Unarakhand
West Bengal
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
-‐30 -‐25 -‐20 -‐15 -‐10 -‐5 0 5 10 Change in Employment rate 2008 to 2010
All India Average of 9.39%
All
India
Avera
ge
57.28
Inde
x Po
ints
All India Average of -‐6.55%
Below average Unemployment
Unemployment Rising
Above Average Unemployment
Une
mploymen
t rate 2010
Healthcare
Andhra Pradesh
Arunachal Pradesh Assam
Bihar
Chhalsgarh
Delhi
Goa
Gujarat
Haryana
Himachal Pradesh
Jammu & Kashmir Jharkhand
Karnataka
Kerala
Madhya Pradesh
Maharashtra Manipur
Meghalaya
Mizoram
Nagaland
Orissa
Punjab
Rajasthan
Sikkim
Tamil Nadu Tripura
Unar Pradesh
Unarakhand West Bengal
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
0 1000 2000 3000 4000 5000 6000
Total Government Expenditure on Medical, Health and Sanita1on in Crores
All India Average 3.95%
All India
All India Average 1407.59 Crores
Percen
tage of T
otal governm
ent E
xpen
diture on Med
ical, H
ealth
an
d Sanita1o
n
Debt to GDP ra0o
0 20 40 60 80 100 120
Andhra
Assam
Chalsgarh
Goa
Haryana
Jammu & Kashmir
Karnataka
Madhya Pradesh
Manipur
Mizoram
Orissa
Rajasthan
Tamil Nadu
Unar Pradesh
West Bengal
30.1 115.9
28 39.7
15.2 13.8
35.5 32.1
19 55.7
70.1 33.6
24.3 34.3 34.4
25.1 77.4
37.3 109.1
59.4 30.6
35.2 41.1
80.6 25.5
42.2 43.5
41.1 42.8
Debt to GDP Ra1o of States
Prescribed limit according to WTO for developing
economies
Prescribed limit according to the growth and stability Pact of EU
Ins0tute for Compe00veness, India 24
11!WWW.ECONOMICTIMES.COM
Policy
MYTHILI BHUSNURMATHThe world economy may not be outof the woods yet after the havocwrought by the financial excessesof the last decade, but the reality isthere is no turning the clock backon financial liberalisation.
However, received wisdom evenin the West has veered away froman effusive espousal of financialopenness and capital mobility to amore nuanced view; one that disti-nguishes between good and bad fi-nancial liberalisation. The formeris now seen as beneficial for econo-mic growth while the latter couldbring more grief than benefits.
The good thing about this new in-sight is that a great deal of the rece-nt research now focuses on identi-fying types of financial integra-tion; distinguishing between thosethat enhance economic growthand those that are destabilisingand harmful. In contrast, most ofthe previous empirical work failedto pay sufficient attention to thedifferential effects of differenttypes of capital flows.
Needless to say, economists differwidely in their analysis of the im-pact of financial liberalisation ongrowth. Some point to the dangersof asset price overshooting as a re-sult of excessive foreign investordemand for emerging markets’stocks, bonds, real estate and otherfinancial assets. Others argue thatsurges in capital inflows raise fin-ancial and macroeconomic risk asincreased private capital inflows,especially in the form of debt, leadto lending boom-and-bust cycles.
Reinhart and Reinhart find a rob-ust empirical association betweensurges in financial capital inflowsand banking crises, while Cowanand Raddatz find that industriesthat are more dependent on exter-nal finance decline significantlymore during a sudden stop, espe-cially in less developed countries.
A recent NBER paper adds to thisgrowing literature by examiningthe differential impact of threebroad types of financial capital in-flows — portfolio debt, portfolio eq-uity and foreign direct investment— on the growth of manufacturingindustry in a large sample of coun-tries: 37 industries in 99 countriesfrom 1991 to 2007. It uses both cross-country and within-country dataand evaluates whether and howeach type of financial capital in-flows affects the development ofindustrial sectors that are most inneed of external finance.
Not surprisingly, it finds portfo-lio inflows — both debt and equity— have a mixed association withgrowth, and tend to be associatedwith negative growth effects forlarge surges. FDI is the most stableof the three broad types of privatecapital inflows as well as the onlyone with a statistically significant-ly positive correlation with manu-facturing sector growth. FDI in-flows exhibit a positive associationwith aggregate manufacturing gr-owth during most of the sample pe-riod, with the volumes of inflowsinto individual countries such thata significant positive economic im-pact is observed in all selected
countries both at the aggregate lev-el and specifically for industries inneed of external financing.
But FDI might not be an unmiti-gated blessing. In line with exist-ing empirical literature, the paperfinds a negative association betwe-en FDI and growth following pro-longed periods of steady FDI in-flows into a country. The authorssurmise this may be due to the waythese inflows interact with exter-nal financing needs of industries.For instance, ‘green’ FDI (new FDI)may compete for external financ-ing with domestic firms and, par-ticularly in the case of emergingmarkets, may crowd incumbentfirms out of local bank lending.
Extending theanalysis over timeto externally fina-ncially-dependentindustries, the pa-per finds there arefrequent oscillati-ons between debt,equity and directinvestment finan-cing. This is pos-sibly because ofherding from one
type of financing to another as‘bottlenecks’ are repeatedly form-ed when one source takes too muchprecedence over the other.
In sum, the paper concludes unre-gulated financial flows have a mix-ed effect on the overall performan-ce of the real sectors in emergingmarkets. In essence, therefore, wh-ile the merits of openness are un-disputed, it is for each country tochart its own course, depending onits macroeconomic fundamentalsand political economy considera-tions. The days of rocket scientistsand neat answers are over. Amen!(Capital Flow Types, External Financ-ing Needs and Industrial Growth,June 2011, NBER Working Paper, Josh-ua Aizenman and Vladyslav Sushko)
Grey Matter | Research Explained
No Broad Brushfor Capital InflowsNot all capital flows are necessarily beneficial
AMIT KAPOOR
The current EU economic crisis hasraised concerns over high sovere-ign debt and its harmful effect on
economies that has left Greece and Portu-gal in crises. The theory of debt says thatonce external debt becomes very large,economies are unable to generate pri-mary balance to repay the debt, causingcurrency deflation and adverse shocks.In light of the global impact of debt, wetry to discern the state of affairs in India.
India has to pay external debt of $305.9billion that accounts for 17.3% of GDPand 10.3% of total public debt on India asof March 31, 2011. The gross public debton India is more than 70% of GDP, as perIMF, in the year ending 2011. The coun-try’s external debt has grown at the rateof 12.3% annually during 2006-11 whilethe economy has grown at an annualgrowth rate of just 7.3%, which is alarm-ing and will leave future generations un-der higher debt burden. This month, theInstitute for Competitiveness’ state per-formance barometer looks at the condi-tion of debt across the states and assessestheir position in managing their financeslooking through the lens of fiscal deficit,debt-to-GDP and interest payment sharein revenue receipts of the government." Higher fiscal deficit makes debt bubblelarger and compromises with growth: Ut-tar Pradesh has very high fiscal deficit of24% of revenues that demands for moreborrowing from the markets, and thedebt burden has reached .̀ 2,34,581 crorein 2011, as per RBI. The debt on Uttar Pra-desh alone constitutes 12.9% of the out-standing liabilities of all state govern-ments and the debt-to-GDP ratio hasreached 45.8 in 2011. The high debt leavesthe government no option but cutting ex-penditure, decreasing subsidies and rais-ing taxes in the economy, which also incr-eases inflation and slows real growthrate. These fiscal irregularities are resp-onsible for slower growth of the state thatis just 5.5% annually in the last five yearsagainst overall India growth rate of 7.3%.
Mizoram and Sikkim have very highdebt-to-GDP ratio of 98.1 and 82.2, respec-tively, and are on the verge of touchingthe level of debt-to-GDP of Ireland (101.6)and Belgium (103.1) in the EU, which isnot appreciable for financial stability.The debt-to-GDP ratio of above 60 is con-sidered dangerous both for developingand emerging economies. Such a highdebt increases the risk of financial andeconomic turmoil and EU has put themandatory condition of debt-to-GDP lessthan 60 for any nation to become the part
of the European Central Bank and EU." Robust GDP growth in states makesdebt sustainable: Orissa experienced tre-mendous growth rate of nearly 10.02% inthe past five years, enabling the state tobring the debt-to-GDP ratio from nearly60% in 2005-06 to its half in 2010 with thedeclining rate of above 12% annually(graph 1). The higher growth rate genera-tes more economic activity that eventual-ly increases the revenue receipts of thegovernment from which it is able to repaythe interest and principal amount of thedebt. Thus, the strategy for states shouldbe to achieve higher growth rate. " Higher interest payment share in reve-nues of state governments raises fear of fi-
nancial crises: The total outstanding lia-bilities of West Bengal are nearly .̀ 2 lakhcrorein 2011, as per RBI, for which inter-est payments accounts for nearly 60% ofgovernment revenues, which means thatafter paying interest on debt, West Ben-gal will face a huge cash crunch. The in-terest payment share in revenue receiptsof West Bengal has grown by 7.76% annu-ally while the GDP has grown at the rateof just 6.02% for 2006-11. Fear of financialcrisis, thus, faces West Bengal (graph 2).
High interest payments make the finan-cial system unstable, represent poor fina-ncial health, restrict public expenditureand investments in economic activitiesand puts the state on a slower growth
track. We need more fiscal reforms andproper credit rating for states to assesstheir repaying capacity. The rating sho-uld consider government debt, fiscal defi-cit, gross savings, demand, economicgrowth of all primary, secondary and ter-tiary sectors, and previous debt historyto assess the condition and avoid the sit-uation of excessive debt.
The states need to follow different strat-egies to tackle their financial conditionto achieve higher growth and reduce debtburden. On the basis of debt and growthto be followed, states can be classified in-to four categories (see graph) and suggesteconomic strategy they need to follow.(The author is with Institute for Competitiveness)
Escape From Certain DebtFor states, different levels of debt and growth call for different strategies for long-term sustainability
Investment Strategy (Highgrowth, low-debt states)Need to invest in developingmore advanced factorconditions such as humancapital, physical communicationand administrative support togenerate better economicoutput and become self-sustainable over thecoming years.
Andhra Pradesh (AN), Bihar (BH),Chhattisgarh (CH), Delhi (DL),Gujarat (GJ), Haryana (HR),Jharkhand JH), Kerala (KE), Orissa (OR) and Rajasthan (RJ)
Industrial Development Strategy(Low growth, high-debt states)Need to bring a revolution in theirdevelopment by identifying anddeveloping the industrial clustersthat have the potential ofgenerating more economic valueand employment. Investment bythe government has to be moreresponsible and effective.
Himachal Pradesh (HP), Jammu &Kashmir (JK), Manipur (MN),Mizoram (MZ), Nagaland (NA),Punjab (PB), Sikkim (SK), Tamil Nadu(TN), Tripura (TR), Uttar Pradesh(UP) and West Bengal (WB)
InfrastructureDevelopment Strategy(High growth, high-debt states)Need to developadvance infrastructurefor industries such astourism to increaserevenues that help inrepaying debt astourism is the maindriving factor for theirregional economicgrowth.
Arunachal Pradesh (AP)and Uttaranchal (UK)
Restructuring Strategy (Lowgrowth, low-debt states)Need to invest and givemore loans to the industrialsector for their expansion,which increase theeconomic output and help inlashing the growth. Thesestates need to restructuretheir systems and makethem more effective inpolicy implementation.
Assam (AS), Goa (GO),Karnataka (KA), MadhyaPradesh (MP), Maharashtra(MH) and Meghalaya (ME)
Debt and Growth: The Road Ahead for States
GDP growth rate (CAGR)
Inte
rest
pa
ym
en
t/R
ev
en
ue
s re
ceip
ts g
row
th r
ate
(C
AG
R)
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
-10
2 4 6 8 10 12 14
BH
CHOR
DL
GJ
JH
ME
AS
HP
MP
UPGO
TNWB
PB
RJKA
MH
SK
AP
NA
MZ
MNTR
JK
KE
UK
AN
HR
De
bt-
to-G
DP
gro
wth
ra
te (
CA
GR
)
GDP growth rate (CAGR)
15
10
5
0
-5
-10
-15
2 4 6 8 10 12 14
BH
CH
OR
HR
DL
GJ
PB
APSK
NA
JK MZ
MPTR
MN
AS
WB
TN
MEKAKA
ANJH
RJ
MH
UP
HP
GO
UK
KE
C KRISHNA KUMAR
On May 10, 2010, the UN General Assemb-ly proclaimed 2011-20 as the Decade of Ac-tion for Road Safety. The resolution ackn-owledges nine international regional mi-nisterial declarations/expert group rec-ommendations and recognises the Glob-al Status Report on Road Safety: Time forAction publication by the WHO. The datacontained in this report is alarming andcalls for urgent remedial measures.
Death and injuries on the road do not,unfortunately, ignite the shock and reac-tion that one jet crash causes. They aretreated as lifeless statistics. But the num-bers are staggering. Over 1.2 million peo-ple die each year on the world’s roads, and20-50 million suffer non-fatal injuries.And over 90% of the world’s fatalities onthe roads occur in low-income and mid-dle-income countries, which have only48% of the world’s vehicles. Almost halfof those who die in road traffic crashesare pedestrians, cyclists or users of mo-
torised two wheelers — collectivelyknown as vulnerable road users — andthis proportion is higher in poorer econo-mies of the world. The cost of road trafficinjuries is $518 billion each year.
Indian official statistics lack credibilityas there is no organised method of collec-tion and reporting of data. The number ofpersons killed from road accidents is1,25,660 for 2009, as per the ministry ofroad transport and highways’ report. It isbelieved that the yet-to-be-confirmed fig-ure for 2010 is 1,60,000. This jump may notbe due to actual rise but also may be re-flecting improved data management. TheWHO report does a statistical correctionto compensate for weak vital registrationsystems — completeness less than 85% orwith more than 30% of deaths undefined.The modelled data avoids definition-re-lated bias while calculating death rates.The actual number of deaths reported byIndia for 2006 was 1,05,725, but the model-led number came to 1,96,445 with a rangeof 1,55,270 to 2,66,999.
In fact, Delhiites need to worry. Delhiroads consistently kill more people: 22%of all deaths reported for 23 large citiesand towns. As per official figures for 2009,the national capital witnessed 2,325deaths on the roads, followed by Bengalu-ru (742), Mumbai (628) and Chennai (618).Few urban centres have recorded reduc-tion in accidents and deaths. Nobody oth-er than the steep inverse relationship ofvehicular speeds to severeness of the in-jury can claim the credit for this.
Predictions are road injuries will rankthird among the leading causes of globaldiseases by 2020. It is time we had enoughbite in the promotion for road safety. TheUN report on Road Traffic Injury Preven-tion came up with six recommendations." To identify a lead government agencyto guide the nation’s road safety effort.This agency needs to coordinate depart-ments such as roads, transport, health aswell as committed NGOs and traffic po-lice. It should rope in celebrities, intelli-gentsia and political champions.
"Set up an institutional arrangement togather, collate and publish credible dataon road traffic injury."Prepare a national road safety strategyand plan of action, and set goal and driveambitious goals for lower traffic injuries.India is among the three from this regionwho have not progressed in this regard."Allocate financial and human resourc-es to address the problem. Proactive stepscan attract resources from UN/WHO." Implement specific identified actions,such as helmets for two-wheeler riders,that can bring down casualties. Forgiv-ing road designs at black spots and manysuch techno-managerial actions and pub-lic education are vital." Support the development of nationalcapacity and international cooperation.
A safe road traffic system is one that ac-commodates and compensates for hu-man vulnerability and fallibility. Roadtraffic crashes are predictable and, there-fore, preventable.(The author is a transport consultant)
Road Fatalities: 2 Lakh and Counting
DHEERAJ SHARMA
Statements of corporate values andethics have been popular for decades.Organisations also have increasinglyasked employees to sign ethics state-ments to confirm their agreementwith core values. Recent well-publicis-ed corporate malfeasance has drawnattention to whether these tools are ef-fective or/and are true reflections oforganisation’s principles and values.
Particularly, the last decade has wit-nessed media frenzy surrounding un-ethical practices of several compani-es: Starbucks’ handling of coffee pro-ducers in Ethiopia, Nike’s handling ofchild labour-related issues in its facto-ries in Asia, Satyam’s multi-billion-rupee scam and Reliance Communi-cations’ alleged involvement in 2Gscam have been widely publicised andcriticised. Yet, Starbucks, Nike, Saty-am and Reliance continue to have hi-ghly-motivated and committed work-force, putting a question mark on thedirect linkage between a company’sethical values and performance out-comes of its workforce.
Furthermore, in the last few years,unscrupulous activities of many or-ganisations contributed to economicdisaster with employees continuing to‘go along’ with organisational objec-tives without blowing any whistle.
A study using employee data from amultinational corporation finds thatperceptual distortion attributable toorganisational fairness colours em-ployee perception of the ethical prob-lems in their firms. In other words, if acompany is procedurally fair to an em-ployee; ethical problems in the compa-
ny do not impact an employee’s perfor-mance outcomes. Consistency theori-es provide the explanation of how em-ployees may be committed and perfo-rm well, notwithstanding the incon-sistency between the company’s ethi-cal values (CEVs) and their own valu-es. Thus, having employees with dist-orted perceptions of organisation’sactivities and ‘going along’ becausethey are being treated fairly is a realpossibility because of an individual’sdesire to maintain cognitive consist-ency. In other words, commitment andperformance of ethical employeesmay stay at high levels, notwithstand-ing corporate ethical transgressionsinconsistent with individual employ-ee’s ethics. Particularly in the case ofa low CEV firm, nefarious corporatemanipulation of employees’ commit-ment and performance can be done byusing procedural fairness to concealunethical practices. So, organisation-al fairness may blind those inside theorganisation to ethical lapses and em-ployees may not be willing to blowwhistles on corporate malfeasance.
The presence of perceptual distor-tion in an employee means that orga-nisations need to objectively takestock of themselves or, potentially,and even more efficaciously, have ob-
jective outsiders or other parties eval-uate CEVs for them. Sharma and hiscolleagues recommend that managersperiodically conduct a research con-cerning employees’ perception of theorganisation’s ethical values and itsinternal policies. Managerial re-search findings may reveal the natureof employees’ selectivity. Corrective
actions such as com-municating policiesand values to the em-ployees in case theywere not aware ofsuch policies, makingsuch policies availa-ble to interested em-ployees, and respon-ding to the concernsand questions relatedto these policies willresult in reducing theperceptual distortion.
To illustrate the point, consider em-ployees promotion and compensationas two major contributing factors tothe perception of fairness in a majori-ty of organisations. If there are sub-stantial changes in the organisation’spolicies with regard to its promotionand salary, such changes must be com-municated appropriately to the em-ployees. Five distinct steps can be
identified in the pursuit of a success-ful internal communication.
The first step is to identify generalobjective of the change in salary andposition, or promotion. In other wor-ds, salary increments and promotionsneed to be objectively explained to theemployees. Arbitrary promotions andsalary increments may be a way tomask corporate malfeasance. In thesecond step, the management mayconduct a survey among employees inorder to determine their receptivitytoward the proposed change. A cost-and-benefit assessment is the thirdstep that can be completed to determi-ne whether the advantage from mark-eting a proposed changes in the firm’spolicies affecting a particular groupsof employees is worth the benefit re-ceived. If a decision is made to marketthe proposed change to employees, thefourth step is the creation of a docu-ment outlining the promotion and sal-ary policy of the organisation. The do-cument needs to be effectively commu-nicated to employees using a variety ofmethods such as group discussions,persuasive personal contacts, favour-able publicity and reminder promo-tion activities. The fifth and final stepis to ascertain whether the marketingactivity attained its objectives.
The organisation is willing to engagein the aforementioned steps, then, andonly then, will there be an appropriateunderstanding of how corporate ethi-cal practices affect employee perform-ance outcome. Further, an organisa-tion will be cognisant of the negativeinfluence of corporate malfeasanceon employee motivation, when the dis-torting effect of organisational fair-ness is parcelled.Adapted from Dheeraj Sharma, ShaheenBorna and Jim Stearns (2009), An In-vestigation of the Effects of Corporate Eth-ical Values on Employee Commitment andPerformance: Examining the ModeratingRole of Perceived Fairness, Journal ofBusiness Ethics 89(2): 25-260(The author is with IIM-Ahmedabad)
Covering Corporate MisconductSatisfied staff is lesslikely to see an unethicalmove by employer inbad light — and report it
Organisationalfairness mayblind thoseinside theorganisationto ethicallapses andemployeesmay not bewilling toblow whistles
ARINDAM
The Crossword 4352
Dilbert by S Adams
New researchdistinguishesbetweenfinancialintegrationsthat enhanceeconomicgrowth andthose that aredestabilising
Fiscal Deficit versus GDP
Andhra Pradesh Arunachal Pradesh
Assam
Bihar
Chhattisgarh
Delhi
Goa
Gujarat
Haryana
Himachal
Jammu & Kashmir
Jharkhand
Karnataka
Kerala
Madhya Pradesh
Maharashtra
Manipur
Meghalaya
Mizoram Nagaland
Orissa
Punjab
Rajasthan
Sikkim
Tamil Nadu
Tripura Uttar Pradesh
Uttaranchal
West Bengal
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
16
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 Fiscal deficit/ Revenues in % terms
age 57.28 Index All India Average of
23.93%
GSDP growth rate (CAGR) of 7.15%
Strong posi0on Stable growth
GSD
P Growth ra
tes (CA
GR 2006-‐10)
Urban Popula0on versus Urban Popula0on Growth rates
Andhra Pradesh Arunachal Pradesh
Assam
Bihar
Chhalsgarh
Delhi
Goa Gujarat
Haryana
Himachal Pradesh
Jammu & Kashmir Jharkhand Karnataka
Kerala
Madhya Pradesh Maharashtra
Manipur
Meghalaya Mizoram
Nagaland
Orissa Punjab Rajasthan
Sikkim
Tamil Nadu
Tripura
Unar Pradesh
Unarakhand
West Bengal
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
0 10000 20000 30000 40000 50000 60000
Popula1on in Urban areas as per census (provisional Data) in Thousands
Thousands
Growth ra
te (C
AGR 2001-‐2011)
All India Average 3.35% CAGR
All India
All India Average of 20950320 people/
state
Rural and Urban Popula0on in India
0
2,00,00,000
4,00,00,000
6,00,00,000
8,00,00,000
10,00,00,000
12,00,00,000
14,00,00,000
16,00,00,000
Rural
Urban
Urban
Rural
Rural, Urban and Total Popula0on
Andhra Pradesh
Arunachal Pradesh
Assam Bihar
Chhalsgarh
Delhi
Goa
Gujarat
Haryana
Himachal Pradesh
Jammu & Kashmir Jharkhand
Karnataka
Kerala
Madhya Pradesh
Maharashtra
Manipur
Meghalaya
Mizoram
Nagaland
Orissa
Punjab
Rajasthan
Sikkim
Tamil Nadu
Tripura
Unar Pradesh
Unarakhand
West Bengal
-‐20
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
-‐20 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 Urban
Pop
ula1
on as a
percentage of to
tal Pop
ula1
on
Rural Popula1on as a percentage of total Popula1on
All India Average 32.98%
All
India All India Average
67.02%
India’s Urbaniza0on Trends in Past
Source: McKinsey Report.
India’s Urbaniza0on Trends in Future
Source: McKinsey Report.
Urban India’s Contribu0on to Na0onal Income in Future
Source: McKinsey Report.
Urbaniza1on
Ins0tute for Compe00veness, India 33 19 DECEMBER 2011 45 BUSINESSWORLD19 DECEMBER 2011 44 BUSINESSWORLD
Delhi
Mumbai
Bangalore
Pune
Chennai
Gurgaon
Kolkata
Hyderabad
Ahmedabad
Jaipur
Noida
Surat
Nagpur
Kochi
Chandigarh
Vadodara
Thiruvananthapuram
Nashik
Rajkot
Indore
Kozhikode
Coimbatore
Lucknow
Mysore
Goa
Visakhapatnam
Kanpur
Bhopal
Madurai
Ludhiana
Vijayawada
Agra
Patna
Allahabad
Bhubaneswar
Amritsar
Meerut
Varanasi
Puducherry
Guwahati
Asansol
Jammu
Shimla
Dehradun
Srinagar
Jabalpur
Ranchi
Faridabad
Jamshedpur
Dhanbad
123456789
1011121314151617181920212223242526272829303132333435363738394041424344454647484950
For methodology, see page 43 Source: Institute For Competitiveness
72.8861.7460.6160.4565.9359.9265.4167.2862.1557.9158.2257.8054.7358.1861.1457.4955.8556.0656.2760.0653.7556.3856.2859.8156.6354.8756.4157.4155.3352.9354.3054.4255.9554.4256.9552.3754.4254.8053.2653.6352.0156.4753.6556.4753.3851.9955.1655.6057.0454.34
59.7460.7359.7058.9459.8257.9564.7955.8260.8857.6358.2957.5558.5656.0257.5257.4455.5557.6555.0059.3655.6156.4155.3957.9557.2353.9356.9258.3555.8255.8052.9855.3956.9255.3957.7654.8855.3956.0256.8657.4757.1356.9757.5156.9757.0753.6657.2855.0057.2456.89
92.5963.2461.9862.7275.0962.8866.3584.4564.0758.3458.1258.1848.9861.4166.5657.5756.3053.6858.1861.1350.9656.3457.6162.6255.7256.2855.6456.0154.5948.6156.2852.9754.4952.9755.7248.6152.9752.9747.8647.8644.3355.7247.8655.7247.8649.4851.9856.5056.7350.52
1689311425151316361471730282710422526122134241832474137293820483935464449234322455033311940
RANK2011
13482
13567
101712
916112429383214331528361841202725223926474635434523503449371931404448304221
RANK2010
CITY INSTITUTIONAL INFRASTRUCTURE
RANK
1289546141620319713331715251827101130314039283412213632454224222926233844463541473750434849
RANK SCOREINSTITU-TIONAL
SUPPORT
SUPPLIERSOPHISTI-
CATION
INDIA’S MOST COMPETITIVE CITIES 2011
84.4479.7462.5562.4366.1370.0764.2260.2058.9756.9171.5157.7862.6260.2453.6258.3159.0954.8557.7854.4661.8061.5553.8753.7451.8151.8754.3252.9160.8756.3452.1253.6950.3351.0055.5055.8854.0754.6155.6352.0250.6150.1552.5351.7349.9852.0949.7950.7649.8449.82
76.9787.2163.7757.1169.7478.9170.9357.6755.4954.6979.1953.2358.6658.7552.8954.1855.8256.2953.3156.4462.7961.5351.6652.6053.9853.2252.3454.5360.6553.9153.7251.0951.6952.4652.0253.1252.1152.8951.8855.7151.9752.4853.0452.6252.1453.1551.5651.8151.6051.60
91.9272.2861.3367.7662.5361.2257.5062.7362.4659.1263.8362.3366.5761.7354.3562.4362.3753.4162.2552.4860.8161.5756.0754.8849.6450.5256.2951.2961.0958.7750.5256.2948.9749.5358.9858.6456.0256.3359.3748.3249.2547.8152.0350.8447.8251.0348.0249.7148.0848.03
COMPETITION
SCOREBUSINESSINCENTIVES
INTENSITY& DIVERSITY
OF FIRMS
12341223161965
498102412172171534264313352720314236221418119
47253032445029394833404537384641
RANK
83.0178.4972.0071.4058.6356.7757.2657.0563.7664.8550.5062.8159.1756.6255.6357.2557.0063.4157.8252.8755.8651.4258.3952.6955.8357.0254.9051.6452.6256.9957.9257.1459.1059.3451.1456.0755.1453.6651.3750.1155.5252.0651.0753.0351.7151.3152.5352.3851.1951.69
65.0365.7767.9461.4960.7367.4958.7160.0059.4859.0153.9561.5258.8759.6167.7955.5159.2657.8659.0152.5558.8448.9557.3951.3166.8154.2650.4654.1852.1758.8254.3153.9450.9748.2452.1661.1654.7350.1057.8455.6255.8557.1158.3458.7857.6652.0051.5057.9052.4051.75
101.0091.2076.0681.3256.5346.0455.8154.0968.0370.6847.0564.1059.4853.6343.4658.9854.7468.9656.6353.1852.8953.9059.4054.0744.8559.7859.3449.0953.0855.1561.5260.3467.2370.4450.1350.9955.5557.2244.9144.6055.2047.0143.8047.2845.7650.6153.5646.8649.9951.62
DEMAND CONDITIONS
SCOREINCOMEDISTRI-BUTION
BASICDEMO-
GRAPHICS
59.9963.5362.7654.2556.2069.5157.9366.5154.7758.7478.5251.1555.9953.8561.3849.7556.0550.7751.3362.6254.4154.0959.7057.6056.1852.2958.7365.9550.9951.4954.3954.1657.6648.6053.9251.4752.3050.1962.1172.2749.3364.1954.4355.9759.5660.7457.5957.6854.3849.18
ADMINIS-TRATIVE
71.2568.1964.0468.5164.3561.3263.2960.5663.1352.5357.9860.5059.5661.6160.9457.6661.5653.0660.0259.2961.4863.3857.1956.2558.5153.3556.0552.8158.9755.4553.8658.5143.4959.3950.2253.0753.7955.7756.6547.0053.5548.6347.7754.9748.6250.9849.9152.2349.7549.88
HUMANCAPACITY
62.9770.6459.9964.2167.4562.6359.6164.8657.8152.2357.3457.9258.9164.5165.6458.2861.5651.9058.3354.1664.7660.9347.8158.5363.0559.8649.6056.5760.9351.9461.7748.7547.3547.7454.4949.8950.2649.0858.5057.8552.6456.7963.6953.8361.3256.7649.1152.3550.1549.91
INNOVATION
72.1970.2863.4960.8962.4864.2362.9663.8358.3557.6860.7856.2957.5457.9761.2456.8357.4153.1156.3960.9355.8458.3255.4256.8456.9256.7756.2259.6454.7154.6655.5554.5152.9652.4455.8653.2952.7453.0855.4958.3054.8455.5956.7653.4556.3655.0550.7548.9049.7448.79
SCORE
1251073641317112718168
221942259
301434212023281237383239444629414543331536312440263547494850
RANK
73.4372.1967.5361.8658.6368.6566.2861.3654.6465.3758.1053.8763.9147.8561.6859.2044.0750.1156.8769.1446.4557.9055.5255.9552.8554.3161.1565.2350.9155.1755.3056.2654.3152.9865.7853.8053.3254.8547.6353.4059.2852.2061.0352.5252.2063.6149.0560.0245.9243.52
95.4563.7764.4662.0362.3757.9464.0262.5558.1857.2156.5757.5550.0561.5756.8958.9560.6154.8555.9357.0959.2060.1051.5460.8661.1958.7756.4458.0758.0554.9056.4056.1557.9255.3751.0355.4155.6955.0957.3158.3757.1357.5257.3852.1360.3050.3646.9716.8252.2851.74
70.0383.3862.1554.5065.9065.2966.6467.1661.5660.0256.1756.7356.8358.4560.9057.1260.5957.9855.8863.2748.7553.5260.7851.8349.7462.0655.3759.2248.4359.0451.5753.2157.0250.5659.7256.1351.0953.5250.7360.8957.1154.2156.2351.2556.1447.8551.8754.3045.9748.50
INFRASTRUCTURE
COMMUNI-CATION
PHYSICALFINANCIAL
78.0272.9365.2864.2762.7562.3061.9961.7660.8659.7259.3358.8558.4858.0658.0157.3857.3157.1457.0757.0456.6256.5156.1755.5755.5155.4855.4855.4555.4455.3555.3255.1254.8754.6254.5954.4654.0653.9153.8453.6553.6353.6253.5953.5853.0952.7251.9751.6651.6650.97
OVERALLCOMPETI-TIVENESS
SCORE
Ins0tute for Compe00veness, India 34
2 Liveability Index 2011
enhancingprosperityenhancingprosperityenhancingprosperityenhancingprosperityenhancingprosperityenhancingprosperityenhancingprosperityenhancingprosperityenhancingprosperityenhancingprosperityenhancingprosperityenhancingprosperity
1.1 Urbanization: A case in point !e present time has made cities more important than ever before. Today, the world is converging towards an urbanized zenith and we are experiencing this metamorphosis. Urbanization is a characteristic of both the developed and the developing world. With more than half of the global population living in urban areas and projected to grow to two-thirds (6 billion people) by 2050 (United Nations), the future of the world is indeed an urbanized global nation.
However, sprawling urbanization (characterized by an economic growth of large cities clouded by social problems of poverty, unemployment, environmental degradation and poor health facilities) is increasingly becoming the signature feature of developing countries. It is being feared that the developing continents of Asia and Africa (expected to be 54 percent urban by 2025), might convert into urban examples of overcrowding and underachievement rather than global centers of growth and opportunity.
1.2 De!ning LiveabilityLiveability refers to an urban system that contributes to the physical, social, mental and personal development of all its inhabitants. It is about delightful and desirable urban spaces that o"er and re#ect cultural and sacred enrichment. Key principles that give substance to this theme are equity, dignity, accessibility, conviviality, participation and empowerment.
A liveable city is one that directly bene$ts the people who live and work in it along with those who visit it. It refers to the environmental and social quality of an area, which includes local environment conditions, presence of quality education and health institutions, infrastructure, spending power administered by its consumers, safety of the population and recreational avenues.
Likewise, businesses are on a persistent lookout for locations that complement the production process. To cite one case, an area with regular supply of power and well-connected roads provides a favorable environment for a commercial activity.
1. Understanding Liveability
At this stage it is mandatory to draw a couple of distinctions between a few intertwining terminologies. First, it is important to understand that liveability is not the same as quality of life or quality of living enjoyed by the residents of a place. !e quality of life is a subjective notion and limited concept that weighs the extent to which the ‘desires’ of people are met. !ese desires may not be the same across sections of society and thus are sensitive to individual choices.
On the other hand, liveability traverses an extra mile to include every member in the society and is de$ned as the creation of that utopian environment in which all the people achieve a high standard of living by having access to the basic human needs along with city infrastructure and a safe living environment. Although, inclusive of the ‘desires’ of the citizens, it gives more weightage to human needs than human wants.
Second important di"erence is between the de$nitions of Development and Liveability. While, development is a measure of the economic prosperity of a region, liveability is an instrument measuring the welfare pulse of the people and the region. At the same time, it has to be borne in mind that urbanization, although a signi$cant component is not an absolute parameter for gauging the degree of liveability of a city.
Natural Built/
Planned Enviroment
Demographic Pillar
EducationPillar
SafetyPillar
Housing OptionPillar
Economic Enviroment
Pillar
Socio-Cultural Political
Enviroment Pillar
Health and Medical
StandardsPillar
Overall Liveability
Index
The Livability Index
Andhra Pradesh
Arunachal Pradesh
Assam
Bihar
Chalsgarh
Delhi
Goa
Gujarat
Haryana
Himachal Pradesh
Jammu & Kashmir
Jharkhand
Karnataka
Kerala
Madhya Pradesh
Maharashtra
Manipur
Meghalaya
Mizoram
Nagaland
Orissa
Punjab Rajasthan Sikkim
Tamil Nadu
Tripura Unar Pradesh
Unarakhand
West Bengal
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
16
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 Literacy rates in percentage terms
All India Average 7.14%
All India
All India Average 77.12%
Literacy Rates versus GDP GDP
growth ra
te (C
AGR 2006-‐2010)
Literacy Rates versus Popula0on
Andhra Pradesh
Arunachal Pradesh
Assam
Bihar
Chalsgarh
Goa
Gujarat
Haryana
Himachal Pradesh Jammu and Kashmir
Jharkhand
Karnataka
Kerela
Madhya Pradesh
Maharashtra
Manipur Meghalaya Mizoram Nagaland
Delhi
Orissa
Punjab
Rajasthan
Sikkim
Tamil Nadu
Tripura
Unar Pradesh
Unarakhand
West Bengal
0
50000000
100000000
150000000
200000000
250000000
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
Literacy rates in Percentage terms
Popu
la1o
n
All India Average 67232968 People/state
All India
All India Average Literacy level of
77.12%
POLICYTHE ECONOMIC TIMES ON SATURDAY MUMBAI 27 NOVEMBER 2010 *
SAWANT SINGH, SRIRAM RAMACHANDRAN &GAURAV SINGHI
ON MARCH 31, 2010, FOR THE FIRST TIME,the department of industrial policy andpromotion (DIPP) in the ministry of
commerce and industry put out a Consolidated FDIPolicy: Circular 1 of 2010 overriding the entire heapof press notes, circulars and clarifications issuedearlier in connection with foreign direct investment(FDI). The DIPP’s efforts in preparing Circular 1,which became effective from April 1, 2010, earnedplaudits from the industry at first, but on a closerlook, left India Inc and foreign investors high anddry, especially on issues relating to upfrontdetermination of price for capital instruments andnon-inclusion of partly-paid shares and warrantswithin the definition of ‘capital’.
To its credit, however, the DIPP has issued Consol-idated FDI Policy: Circular 2 of 2010 within sixmonths of Circular 1 and lived up to its promise byclarifying issues that had ruffled feathers in the FDIspace. We highlight a few key clarifications made inCircular 2.Death to warrants and life again: Circular 1 created animpression that there was a complete embargo on is-suance of warrants and partly-paid capitalinstruments to non-residents even if the ForeignInvestment Promotion Board (FIPB) approved it. Onthe contrary, as a matter of practice, the FIPB wasconsidering such proposals and granting approvalsafter factoring in the time limit for conversion of thewarrants and quantum of upfront consideration.
The DIPP clarified the matter in a note to thedefinition of ‘capital’ in Circular 2 by stating thatinstruments other than equity shares and fully, com-pulsorily and mandatorily convertible preferenceshares and debentures may be issued after obtainingprior government approval. This change will ensurethat, on one hand, there is some elbow room for ma-ture foreign financial investors to structure theirinvestments and, on the other, domesticundertakings need not hand over a pie of theirbusiness at a price that could potentially be higher ata future point.Soothing NBFCs: Circular 2 also partly settles the dustover downstream investment by foreign owned andcontrolled (FOCC) non-banking financial
companies (NBFCs). Reading the relevantprovisions of Circular 1 (reiterating what had beenstated in press note 4 issued in February, 2009) ledone to conclude that 100% wholly ownedsubsidiaries of the FOCC NBFCs must also meet theminimum capitalisation requirements of NBFCs.This would have made it commercially difficult forFOCC NBFCs to set up and operate differentsubsidiaries for separate activities like stock broking,housing finance etc. Much to the relief of 100%FOCC NBFCs, however, Circular 2 has explicitlystated that they will not be required to meetminimum capitalisation requirements. Speaking ofdownstream investments, there were concerns afterthe release of Circular 1 that downstreaminvestment by a FOCC could be done only through
funds from abroad and not by leveraging funds fromIndia. Fortunately, Circular 2 has stated with wellclarified that investment by internal accruals ispermitted as long as other conditions laid down inthe policy on downstream investments are fulfilled.Breather to retailers too: Since FDI in multi brand retailis prohibited, players in this market have often beenin the news for the wrong reasons, trying to use thewholesale cash-and-carry route, where100% FDI ispermitted, as a backdoor to enter the multi brand re-tail sector. In Circular 1, the government had comedown heavily on FDI in multi brand retail sectorstructure — where the ownership structure of theretail entity and the wholesale entity were keptdistinct but within the same groupcompanies/promoters and exclusive arrangementswere made between the two companies to realisecommercial value — by stating that only 25% of thetotal turnover could be traded by the wholesale enti-ty amongst the same group companies and for‘internal use’ only. However, after much cajoling,the government has provided a breather to theinfamous indirect structures by getting rid of the‘internal use’ rule.Conclusion: The DIPP deserves a pat on its back for itsexemplary efforts, some of which we have discussedabove. In recent months, the DIPP has published afew discussion papers on opening up prohibited sec-tors such as multi-brand retail and defence to FDI. Apaper has also been put up for discussion on issue ofshares for consideration other than cash, so farpermitted in certain cases such as conversion ofexternal commercial borrowings or royaltypayments). There are, nevertheless, otherambiguities in the FDI policy requiring the DIPP’s at-tention — the important ones being upfrontdetermination of price of capital instruments at thetime of issuance and treatment of FOCC Indian com-panies as non-resident entities, given the guidingprinciple in the FDI policy that downstreaminvestment by FOCC Indian companies are requiredto follow the same norms as a direct foreigninvestment. These issues have been the bones ofcontention in boardrooms and we can only hopethat they can grab the DIPP’s attention at the earliest.
(S Singh is partner, G Singhi is senior associate and SRamachandran is associate at Phoenix Legal)
9
NDIA is at the centre of the population-versus-growth debate. With the world’s second-largestpopulation at 1.2 billion, the country must fo-cus on turning this population into a benefitrather than a disadvantage. This month, welook at how states in India can use their popu-lation size and growth rate to improve theircompetitiveness.
TRADITIONAL economic thinking seespopulation as a drag on a nation’s eco-nomic growth. However, with the worldlooking towards India as a growing andvibrant market, her ‘demographic advan-tage’ is often touted as her biggest asset.
According to the theory of demograph-ic dividend, the rate of economic growthincreases due to a rising share of workingage people in a population. For India,falling fertility rates are resulting in a larg-
er chunk of working-age people, who cancontribute to the GDP and generate high-er output per capita.
In fact, the International Labour Orga-nization (ILO) has stated that India willaccount for the highest working age pop-ulation in the next 10 years, in a report re-leased recently. In the document preparedfor the G-20 Summit held earlier thismonth in Seoul, the ILO says that the G-20 nations will see their working age pop-ulation between 15 and 64 years increaseby 212 million in the period 2010-2020.Over 64% of this increase will occur in In-dia alone!
This month’s IFCIndia State DevelopmentBarometer takes a sharp look at what pop-ulation really means to the economicgrowth of India’s states and analyses howstates can use their demographic situationto improve their competitiveness, andhence, enhance their prosperity.
Rising stars among statesIt is widely accepted that growth among In-dian states is skewed, with some prosper-ous states bearing the burden of growth,while several other lag in terms of GDPgrowth and development parameters.
The average decadal GDP growth figuresshow that unexpected states such as Biharand Orissa, historically notorious for poorgrowth, have exhibited a sustained GDPgrowth rate. Bihar, specifically, is notablefor exhibiting a remarkable decadal growthrate of 10.83% while contributing on amodest population base. Bihar accountsfor 8.1% to the country’s population, asseen in the accompanying graph.
Meanwhile, states such as Maharash-tra, Goa, Punjab and Tamil Nadu, that areknown for their higher levels of industrial-isation, human development or agricul-tural prosperity seem to have slowed interms of GDP growth over the past decade.
Size does matterA large size of population appears to be aburden on the economy of states such asUttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, West Bengaland Madhya Pradesh. These states arealso usually characterised by low percapita income and higher disparities.Large population size is a major factor,
among several others, that is draggingdown the economic growth of relativelyaffluent states like Maharashtra, Kar-nataka and Tamil Nadu. Yet, a few statessuch as Bihar, Andhra Pradesh and Gu-jarat with large populations are exhibit-ing high GDP growth.
No burden on economic growthSixteen states in India have a GDP growthhigher than the national average. Ofthese, ten states show a populationgrowth rate higher than the national av-erage, while six other states have a popu-lation growth rate lower than the nation-al average.
Population growth, considered a bur-den to economic growth, seems to havelittle correlation with GDP growth (corre-lation = 0.24). Large states such as Bihar,for instance, have showed sustained GDPgrowth over the decade along with asteadily rising population, whereas statessuch as Punjab and Manipur with slowerpopulation increase are showing GDPgrowth rates that are lower than the na-tional average.
Population, a double-edged swordClearly, population is a double-edgedsword. On one hand, the data shows thatthere is no clear correlation betweengrowth in population and GDP. Yet, accord-ing to the demographic dividend theory, alarge working age population is an asset.
In order to be able to catapult theirgrowth rates, states need to look closelyat their competitiveness, which in turnis linked to their level of productivity.Improved competitiveness leads to im-proved incomes and better quality of lifeacross the board. When viewed fromthis standpoint, states will be able to de-velop strategies on how best to utilisetheir workforce — small or large, grow-ing slow or growing fast — to maximiseproductivity.Group 1: States with lower populationgrowth rates and high GDP growth rates,such as Kerala, Andhra Pradesh and Oris-sa need to look closely at the training lev-els of their workforce and create strategyto move towards high value sectors andindustries that need a more skilled work-
force, which are also correspondingly farmore productive.Group 2: States with healthy GDP andpopulation growth rates, such as Chandi-garh, Delhi, Haryana and Bihar must fo-cus on sectors where they are inherentlycompetitive because of the presence ofnatural resources or traditional skills andknowledge. These states should find waysto turn the availability of a large work-force in their favour by offering suitableeducation policies and opportunities. Set-ting the right priorities is critical to en-hance competitiveness for this band of In-dian states.Group 3: A number of states such as Kar-nataka, West Bengal, Rajasthan, TamilNadu and Mizoram are performing onlyslightly below India’s average GDPgrowth rate. These states can quickly cat-apult themselves into Group 2 with a fo-cused effort on productivity.Group 4: A roadmap for enhancing com-petitiveness is critical for poorly perform-ing states. Among these, states such as Ut-tar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh withlarge and growing populations must con-trol the rate of population growththrough effective healthcare and out-reach efforts, as arresting populationgrowth takes time. They also need to har-ness their large growing workforce effec-tively and focus on promoting economicactivities that can employ and utilise alarge labour workforce, like certain typesof manufacturing.
Vision for the futureA look at the relationship between thepopulation and GDP growth serves tohighlight how states in various stages ofgrowth — both economic and demo-graphic — can harness their position inthe best possible manner. This is best doneby first ascertaining a state’s inherentcompetitive edge — these could be re-sources, sectors, human potential, etc —and then designing and implementingpolicy around this to achieve highly pro-ductive and efficient clusters that provideemployment, contribute to growing theGDP and bring prosperity as well.
Institute For Competitiveness
POST the crisis, the one common thread thatlinks advanced economies across the world,with perhaps the exception of the ever-prudentGermans, is the phenomenal increase in publicdebt, i.e., debt raised by governments strappedfor funds and desperate to kickstart the econo-my with stimulus packages.
Based on IMF forecasts, Eswar Prasad at Cor-nell University calculates that the level of aggre-
gate net government debt in the world will more than double from $23trillion — 44% of world GDP — in 2007 to $48 trillion — 65% of GDP— in 2015. Advanced economies account for much of this increase.
Prasad estimates the ratio of aggregate debt-to-aggregate GDP for ad-vanced economies will rise from 48% in 2007 to 71% in 2010, and fur-ther to 85% in 2015. In contrast, emerging markets (EMs) fare muchbetter. The corresponding ratios for the EM group are 30%, 30% and26% respectively. In 2007, EMs accounted for 24% of world nominalgross domestic product (GDP), in US dollars terms, and 17% of worlddebt. By 2015, they are expected to produce 35% of world output butaccount for just 14% of world debt. Thus, even as EMs increase theirshare in world GDP, their share in world debt is expected to come down.To put that more graphically, EMs will power their growth from inter-nal rather than borrowed resources.
This has two major consequences for EMs — both positive. One,they will be able to use more and more of their revenue for productivepurposes rather than for servicing debt, whether by way of interest costor repayment. Two, the distressing issue of inter-generational equitywhere succeeding generations end up paying for the profligacy of ear-lier generations will be resolved far more satisfactorily in EMs than inadvanced economies. Add to this the fact that EMs have a lower de-pendency ratio — read: larger share of population in the younger agegroup — and clearly, they are on a stronger wicket.
This is graphically brought home when the rise in debt is comparedwith the rise in GDP. EMs accounted for 10% of the rise in global debtlevels from 2007 to 2010, and could account for 13% of the rise from2010 to 2015. In contrast, their contributions to global GDP growthover these two periods are expected to be 70% and 54%, respectively.Average debt per capita in advanced economies was $19,400 in 2007,rose to $29,100 in 2010, according to the paper, and will go up to$41,000 in 2015. By 2015, the burden of debt for US citizens will rise to$48,000 per person. The debt burden for Japanese citizens will hit$75,900, the highest in the world. In contrast, China’s debt burden willbe just $1,200 in 2015. India’s, however, will be far higher at $2,013.
Among advanced economies, average debt per working-age personwill more than double from $31,700 in 2007 to $68,500 in 2015. Japantops the league tables by this measure while the US moves into secondposition by 2015 with debt per working-age person of $134,500 and$79,200, respectively.
Diehard optimists point to periods when public debt ballooned butfears of Doomsday proved ill-founded as a reason not to get perturbedabout the sharp rise in debt. But they could be living in cloud cuckooland! Borrowing like there is no tomorrow has serious — and unhappy— consequences for both their own as well as global financial stability.
The analysis paints a sobering picture of worsening public debt dyna-mics and a sharply-rising debt burden in advanced economies. It warnsthe worst is, perhaps, yet to come. First, these countries are experienc-ing little population growth. Second, they are facing rapidly aging pop-ulations. Third, their economies are likely to register slow growth, es-pecially relative to the EMs. Fourth, entitlement spending on health-care and pension could rise sharply due to unfavourable demographics.
The prescription: advanced economies had better get their fiscal acttogether once the recovery is better entrenched. It will take strong po-litical will to tackle near-term deficits and then to control the growth inentitlement spending. In the absence of decisive action, ballooningpublic debt in these economies could become a major threat to domes-tic and global financial stability.
http://www.brookings.edu/articles/2010/1101_government_debt_prasadMythili Bhusnurmath
Sins ofindulgence
The DIPP has clarified manycontentious issues regarding FDI,but ambiguity remains on subjectssuch as determination of pricing ofcapital instruments at issuance
THE EXPLOSION OF PUBLIC DEBT HASSERIOUS LONG-TERM REPERCUSSIONS
ANIMISHA
POLICIES THAT MAKE PRODUCTIVE USE OF AVAILABLE RESOURCES ARE CRITICAL
ARINDAM
I
INDIA
Source: IMF Fiscal Monitor, May 2010; IMF WEO, April 2010;ILO Economically-Active Population Estimates and Projections, 2009
DEBT BURDEN
Gross debt to GDP (%)Gross debt(US dollars in billions)Gross debt percapita (US dollars)Gross debt perworking-ageperson (US dollars)
79.01,080
888
1,638
77.81,164
945
1,728
70.31,400
1,092
1,954
2009 2010 2011 2014 201580.8999
833
1,548
67.31,471
1,132
2,013
ChandigarhDelhiUttarakhandHaryanaGujaratBiharChhattisgarhSikkimNagalandHimachal Pradesh
5.05
3.11
1.59
1.98
1.64
1.86
1.76
1.58
4.89
1.59
Populationgrowth ratesare HIGHERthan nationalaverage
Populationgrowth ratesare LOWERthan nationalaverage
GDP(India avg 7.99)State
Populationgrowth rate
(India avg 1.55)
13.1211.8611.8
11.6910.8
10.839.789.6
9.548.88
Andhra PradeshOrissaMeghalayaTripuraArunachal PradeshKerala
0.99
1.07
1.39
0.99
1.27
0.77
9.529.378.058.4
8.799.55
PEOPLE POWER
States contributing to India’s GDP growth(GDP growth higher than national average)
Population size vs GDP growth rate
Comparison of state population growth and GDP growth
0 500 1000Population size in lakhs
1500 2000 2500
14121086420
CH
GOTRMG
MZ
HP
JHPJ
MPAS
ANMNJK
PD
DLHRUK
SK CG KRORAR
NL
TN
APBR
KA RJWB
MH
UP
DL: DelhiCH: ChandigarhKR: KeralaTR: TripuraMG: MeghalayaPD: PuducherryKA: KarnatakaWB: West Bengal
AS: AssamNL: NagalandUK: UttarakhandHR: HaryanaGJ: GujaratCG: ChattisgarhSK: SikkimJH: Jharkhand
TN: Tamil NaduBR: BiharRJ: RajasthanGO: GoaMZ: MizoramPJ: PunjabMN: ManipurOR: Orissa
UP: Uttar PradeshAP: Andhra PradeshAR: Arunachal PradeshHP: Himachal PradeshJK: Jammu & KashmirMP: Madhya PradeshAN: Andaman & Nicobar IslandsMH: Maharashtra
0 1 2Population growth (%)
3 4 5
14121086420
AP
TR KR
WB
AS
TN
KR ORAR
MGMH
RJGO
AN
PD
JHPJJK
UPMN
MP
SK CGHP
GJ BR
UK HR DL CH
NL
GJ
MZ
JAYEETA
States can harness theirpopulation to grow
FDI policy needs some more weeding DILBERT by S Adams
POLICYTHE ECONOMIC TIMES ON SATURDAY MUMBAI 27 NOVEMBER 2010 *
SAWANT SINGH, SRIRAM RAMACHANDRAN &GAURAV SINGHI
ON MARCH 31, 2010, FOR THE FIRST TIME,the department of industrial policy andpromotion (DIPP) in the ministry of
commerce and industry put out a Consolidated FDIPolicy: Circular 1 of 2010 overriding the entire heapof press notes, circulars and clarifications issuedearlier in connection with foreign direct investment(FDI). The DIPP’s efforts in preparing Circular 1,which became effective from April 1, 2010, earnedplaudits from the industry at first, but on a closerlook, left India Inc and foreign investors high anddry, especially on issues relating to upfrontdetermination of price for capital instruments andnon-inclusion of partly-paid shares and warrantswithin the definition of ‘capital’.
To its credit, however, the DIPP has issued Consol-idated FDI Policy: Circular 2 of 2010 within sixmonths of Circular 1 and lived up to its promise byclarifying issues that had ruffled feathers in the FDIspace. We highlight a few key clarifications made inCircular 2.Death to warrants and life again: Circular 1 created animpression that there was a complete embargo on is-suance of warrants and partly-paid capitalinstruments to non-residents even if the ForeignInvestment Promotion Board (FIPB) approved it. Onthe contrary, as a matter of practice, the FIPB wasconsidering such proposals and granting approvalsafter factoring in the time limit for conversion of thewarrants and quantum of upfront consideration.
The DIPP clarified the matter in a note to thedefinition of ‘capital’ in Circular 2 by stating thatinstruments other than equity shares and fully, com-pulsorily and mandatorily convertible preferenceshares and debentures may be issued after obtainingprior government approval. This change will ensurethat, on one hand, there is some elbow room for ma-ture foreign financial investors to structure theirinvestments and, on the other, domesticundertakings need not hand over a pie of theirbusiness at a price that could potentially be higher ata future point.Soothing NBFCs: Circular 2 also partly settles the dustover downstream investment by foreign owned andcontrolled (FOCC) non-banking financial
companies (NBFCs). Reading the relevantprovisions of Circular 1 (reiterating what had beenstated in press note 4 issued in February, 2009) ledone to conclude that 100% wholly ownedsubsidiaries of the FOCC NBFCs must also meet theminimum capitalisation requirements of NBFCs.This would have made it commercially difficult forFOCC NBFCs to set up and operate differentsubsidiaries for separate activities like stock broking,housing finance etc. Much to the relief of 100%FOCC NBFCs, however, Circular 2 has explicitlystated that they will not be required to meetminimum capitalisation requirements. Speaking ofdownstream investments, there were concerns afterthe release of Circular 1 that downstreaminvestment by a FOCC could be done only through
funds from abroad and not by leveraging funds fromIndia. Fortunately, Circular 2 has stated with wellclarified that investment by internal accruals ispermitted as long as other conditions laid down inthe policy on downstream investments are fulfilled.Breather to retailers too: Since FDI in multi brand retailis prohibited, players in this market have often beenin the news for the wrong reasons, trying to use thewholesale cash-and-carry route, where100% FDI ispermitted, as a backdoor to enter the multi brand re-tail sector. In Circular 1, the government had comedown heavily on FDI in multi brand retail sectorstructure — where the ownership structure of theretail entity and the wholesale entity were keptdistinct but within the same groupcompanies/promoters and exclusive arrangementswere made between the two companies to realisecommercial value — by stating that only 25% of thetotal turnover could be traded by the wholesale enti-ty amongst the same group companies and for‘internal use’ only. However, after much cajoling,the government has provided a breather to theinfamous indirect structures by getting rid of the‘internal use’ rule.Conclusion: The DIPP deserves a pat on its back for itsexemplary efforts, some of which we have discussedabove. In recent months, the DIPP has published afew discussion papers on opening up prohibited sec-tors such as multi-brand retail and defence to FDI. Apaper has also been put up for discussion on issue ofshares for consideration other than cash, so farpermitted in certain cases such as conversion ofexternal commercial borrowings or royaltypayments). There are, nevertheless, otherambiguities in the FDI policy requiring the DIPP’s at-tention — the important ones being upfrontdetermination of price of capital instruments at thetime of issuance and treatment of FOCC Indian com-panies as non-resident entities, given the guidingprinciple in the FDI policy that downstreaminvestment by FOCC Indian companies are requiredto follow the same norms as a direct foreigninvestment. These issues have been the bones ofcontention in boardrooms and we can only hopethat they can grab the DIPP’s attention at the earliest.
(S Singh is partner, G Singhi is senior associate and SRamachandran is associate at Phoenix Legal)
9
NDIA is at the centre of the population-versus-growth debate. With the world’s second-largestpopulation at 1.2 billion, the country must fo-cus on turning this population into a benefitrather than a disadvantage. This month, welook at how states in India can use their popu-lation size and growth rate to improve theircompetitiveness.
TRADITIONAL economic thinking seespopulation as a drag on a nation’s eco-nomic growth. However, with the worldlooking towards India as a growing andvibrant market, her ‘demographic advan-tage’ is often touted as her biggest asset.
According to the theory of demograph-ic dividend, the rate of economic growthincreases due to a rising share of workingage people in a population. For India,falling fertility rates are resulting in a larg-
er chunk of working-age people, who cancontribute to the GDP and generate high-er output per capita.
In fact, the International Labour Orga-nization (ILO) has stated that India willaccount for the highest working age pop-ulation in the next 10 years, in a report re-leased recently. In the document preparedfor the G-20 Summit held earlier thismonth in Seoul, the ILO says that the G-20 nations will see their working age pop-ulation between 15 and 64 years increaseby 212 million in the period 2010-2020.Over 64% of this increase will occur in In-dia alone!
This month’s IFCIndia State DevelopmentBarometer takes a sharp look at what pop-ulation really means to the economicgrowth of India’s states and analyses howstates can use their demographic situationto improve their competitiveness, andhence, enhance their prosperity.
Rising stars among statesIt is widely accepted that growth among In-dian states is skewed, with some prosper-ous states bearing the burden of growth,while several other lag in terms of GDPgrowth and development parameters.
The average decadal GDP growth figuresshow that unexpected states such as Biharand Orissa, historically notorious for poorgrowth, have exhibited a sustained GDPgrowth rate. Bihar, specifically, is notablefor exhibiting a remarkable decadal growthrate of 10.83% while contributing on amodest population base. Bihar accountsfor 8.1% to the country’s population, asseen in the accompanying graph.
Meanwhile, states such as Maharash-tra, Goa, Punjab and Tamil Nadu, that areknown for their higher levels of industrial-isation, human development or agricul-tural prosperity seem to have slowed interms of GDP growth over the past decade.
Size does matterA large size of population appears to be aburden on the economy of states such asUttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, West Bengaland Madhya Pradesh. These states arealso usually characterised by low percapita income and higher disparities.Large population size is a major factor,
among several others, that is draggingdown the economic growth of relativelyaffluent states like Maharashtra, Kar-nataka and Tamil Nadu. Yet, a few statessuch as Bihar, Andhra Pradesh and Gu-jarat with large populations are exhibit-ing high GDP growth.
No burden on economic growthSixteen states in India have a GDP growthhigher than the national average. Ofthese, ten states show a populationgrowth rate higher than the national av-erage, while six other states have a popu-lation growth rate lower than the nation-al average.
Population growth, considered a bur-den to economic growth, seems to havelittle correlation with GDP growth (corre-lation = 0.24). Large states such as Bihar,for instance, have showed sustained GDPgrowth over the decade along with asteadily rising population, whereas statessuch as Punjab and Manipur with slowerpopulation increase are showing GDPgrowth rates that are lower than the na-tional average.
Population, a double-edged swordClearly, population is a double-edgedsword. On one hand, the data shows thatthere is no clear correlation betweengrowth in population and GDP. Yet, accord-ing to the demographic dividend theory, alarge working age population is an asset.
In order to be able to catapult theirgrowth rates, states need to look closelyat their competitiveness, which in turnis linked to their level of productivity.Improved competitiveness leads to im-proved incomes and better quality of lifeacross the board. When viewed fromthis standpoint, states will be able to de-velop strategies on how best to utilisetheir workforce — small or large, grow-ing slow or growing fast — to maximiseproductivity.Group 1: States with lower populationgrowth rates and high GDP growth rates,such as Kerala, Andhra Pradesh and Oris-sa need to look closely at the training lev-els of their workforce and create strategyto move towards high value sectors andindustries that need a more skilled work-
force, which are also correspondingly farmore productive.Group 2: States with healthy GDP andpopulation growth rates, such as Chandi-garh, Delhi, Haryana and Bihar must fo-cus on sectors where they are inherentlycompetitive because of the presence ofnatural resources or traditional skills andknowledge. These states should find waysto turn the availability of a large work-force in their favour by offering suitableeducation policies and opportunities. Set-ting the right priorities is critical to en-hance competitiveness for this band of In-dian states.Group 3: A number of states such as Kar-nataka, West Bengal, Rajasthan, TamilNadu and Mizoram are performing onlyslightly below India’s average GDPgrowth rate. These states can quickly cat-apult themselves into Group 2 with a fo-cused effort on productivity.Group 4: A roadmap for enhancing com-petitiveness is critical for poorly perform-ing states. Among these, states such as Ut-tar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh withlarge and growing populations must con-trol the rate of population growththrough effective healthcare and out-reach efforts, as arresting populationgrowth takes time. They also need to har-ness their large growing workforce effec-tively and focus on promoting economicactivities that can employ and utilise alarge labour workforce, like certain typesof manufacturing.
Vision for the futureA look at the relationship between thepopulation and GDP growth serves tohighlight how states in various stages ofgrowth — both economic and demo-graphic — can harness their position inthe best possible manner. This is best doneby first ascertaining a state’s inherentcompetitive edge — these could be re-sources, sectors, human potential, etc —and then designing and implementingpolicy around this to achieve highly pro-ductive and efficient clusters that provideemployment, contribute to growing theGDP and bring prosperity as well.
Institute For Competitiveness
POST the crisis, the one common thread thatlinks advanced economies across the world,with perhaps the exception of the ever-prudentGermans, is the phenomenal increase in publicdebt, i.e., debt raised by governments strappedfor funds and desperate to kickstart the econo-my with stimulus packages.
Based on IMF forecasts, Eswar Prasad at Cor-nell University calculates that the level of aggre-
gate net government debt in the world will more than double from $23trillion — 44% of world GDP — in 2007 to $48 trillion — 65% of GDP— in 2015. Advanced economies account for much of this increase.
Prasad estimates the ratio of aggregate debt-to-aggregate GDP for ad-vanced economies will rise from 48% in 2007 to 71% in 2010, and fur-ther to 85% in 2015. In contrast, emerging markets (EMs) fare muchbetter. The corresponding ratios for the EM group are 30%, 30% and26% respectively. In 2007, EMs accounted for 24% of world nominalgross domestic product (GDP), in US dollars terms, and 17% of worlddebt. By 2015, they are expected to produce 35% of world output butaccount for just 14% of world debt. Thus, even as EMs increase theirshare in world GDP, their share in world debt is expected to come down.To put that more graphically, EMs will power their growth from inter-nal rather than borrowed resources.
This has two major consequences for EMs — both positive. One,they will be able to use more and more of their revenue for productivepurposes rather than for servicing debt, whether by way of interest costor repayment. Two, the distressing issue of inter-generational equitywhere succeeding generations end up paying for the profligacy of ear-lier generations will be resolved far more satisfactorily in EMs than inadvanced economies. Add to this the fact that EMs have a lower de-pendency ratio — read: larger share of population in the younger agegroup — and clearly, they are on a stronger wicket.
This is graphically brought home when the rise in debt is comparedwith the rise in GDP. EMs accounted for 10% of the rise in global debtlevels from 2007 to 2010, and could account for 13% of the rise from2010 to 2015. In contrast, their contributions to global GDP growthover these two periods are expected to be 70% and 54%, respectively.Average debt per capita in advanced economies was $19,400 in 2007,rose to $29,100 in 2010, according to the paper, and will go up to$41,000 in 2015. By 2015, the burden of debt for US citizens will rise to$48,000 per person. The debt burden for Japanese citizens will hit$75,900, the highest in the world. In contrast, China’s debt burden willbe just $1,200 in 2015. India’s, however, will be far higher at $2,013.
Among advanced economies, average debt per working-age personwill more than double from $31,700 in 2007 to $68,500 in 2015. Japantops the league tables by this measure while the US moves into secondposition by 2015 with debt per working-age person of $134,500 and$79,200, respectively.
Diehard optimists point to periods when public debt ballooned butfears of Doomsday proved ill-founded as a reason not to get perturbedabout the sharp rise in debt. But they could be living in cloud cuckooland! Borrowing like there is no tomorrow has serious — and unhappy— consequences for both their own as well as global financial stability.
The analysis paints a sobering picture of worsening public debt dyna-mics and a sharply-rising debt burden in advanced economies. It warnsthe worst is, perhaps, yet to come. First, these countries are experienc-ing little population growth. Second, they are facing rapidly aging pop-ulations. Third, their economies are likely to register slow growth, es-pecially relative to the EMs. Fourth, entitlement spending on health-care and pension could rise sharply due to unfavourable demographics.
The prescription: advanced economies had better get their fiscal acttogether once the recovery is better entrenched. It will take strong po-litical will to tackle near-term deficits and then to control the growth inentitlement spending. In the absence of decisive action, ballooningpublic debt in these economies could become a major threat to domes-tic and global financial stability.
http://www.brookings.edu/articles/2010/1101_government_debt_prasadMythili Bhusnurmath
Sins ofindulgence
The DIPP has clarified manycontentious issues regarding FDI,but ambiguity remains on subjectssuch as determination of pricing ofcapital instruments at issuance
THE EXPLOSION OF PUBLIC DEBT HASSERIOUS LONG-TERM REPERCUSSIONS
ANIMISHA
POLICIES THAT MAKE PRODUCTIVE USE OF AVAILABLE RESOURCES ARE CRITICAL
ARINDAM
I
INDIA
Source: IMF Fiscal Monitor, May 2010; IMF WEO, April 2010;ILO Economically-Active Population Estimates and Projections, 2009
DEBT BURDEN
Gross debt to GDP (%)Gross debt(US dollars in billions)Gross debt percapita (US dollars)Gross debt perworking-ageperson (US dollars)
79.01,080
888
1,638
77.81,164
945
1,728
70.31,400
1,092
1,954
2009 2010 2011 2014 201580.8999
833
1,548
67.31,471
1,132
2,013
ChandigarhDelhiUttarakhandHaryanaGujaratBiharChhattisgarhSikkimNagalandHimachal Pradesh
5.05
3.11
1.59
1.98
1.64
1.86
1.76
1.58
4.89
1.59
Populationgrowth ratesare HIGHERthan nationalaverage
Populationgrowth ratesare LOWERthan nationalaverage
GDP(India avg 7.99)State
Populationgrowth rate
(India avg 1.55)
13.1211.8611.8
11.6910.8
10.839.789.6
9.548.88
Andhra PradeshOrissaMeghalayaTripuraArunachal PradeshKerala
0.99
1.07
1.39
0.99
1.27
0.77
9.529.378.058.4
8.799.55
PEOPLE POWER
States contributing to India’s GDP growth(GDP growth higher than national average)
Population size vs GDP growth rate
Comparison of state population growth and GDP growth
0 500 1000Population size in lakhs
1500 2000 2500
14121086420
CH
GOTRMG
MZ
HP
JHPJ
MPAS
ANMNJK
PD
DLHRUK
SK CG KRORAR
NL
TN
APBR
KA RJWB
MH
UP
DL: DelhiCH: ChandigarhKR: KeralaTR: TripuraMG: MeghalayaPD: PuducherryKA: KarnatakaWB: West Bengal
AS: AssamNL: NagalandUK: UttarakhandHR: HaryanaGJ: GujaratCG: ChattisgarhSK: SikkimJH: Jharkhand
TN: Tamil NaduBR: BiharRJ: RajasthanGO: GoaMZ: MizoramPJ: PunjabMN: ManipurOR: Orissa
UP: Uttar PradeshAP: Andhra PradeshAR: Arunachal PradeshHP: Himachal PradeshJK: Jammu & KashmirMP: Madhya PradeshAN: Andaman & Nicobar IslandsMH: Maharashtra
0 1 2Population growth (%)
3 4 5
14121086420
AP
TR KR
WB
AS
TN
KR ORAR
MGMH
RJGO
AN
PD
JHPJJK
UPMN
MP
SK CGHP
GJ BR
UK HR DL CH
NL
GJ
MZ
JAYEETA
States can harness theirpopulation to grow
FDI policy needs some more weeding DILBERT by S Adams
POLICYTHE ECONOMIC TIMES ON SATURDAY MUMBAI 27 NOVEMBER 2010 *
SAWANT SINGH, SRIRAM RAMACHANDRAN &GAURAV SINGHI
ON MARCH 31, 2010, FOR THE FIRST TIME,the department of industrial policy andpromotion (DIPP) in the ministry of
commerce and industry put out a Consolidated FDIPolicy: Circular 1 of 2010 overriding the entire heapof press notes, circulars and clarifications issuedearlier in connection with foreign direct investment(FDI). The DIPP’s efforts in preparing Circular 1,which became effective from April 1, 2010, earnedplaudits from the industry at first, but on a closerlook, left India Inc and foreign investors high anddry, especially on issues relating to upfrontdetermination of price for capital instruments andnon-inclusion of partly-paid shares and warrantswithin the definition of ‘capital’.
To its credit, however, the DIPP has issued Consol-idated FDI Policy: Circular 2 of 2010 within sixmonths of Circular 1 and lived up to its promise byclarifying issues that had ruffled feathers in the FDIspace. We highlight a few key clarifications made inCircular 2.Death to warrants and life again: Circular 1 created animpression that there was a complete embargo on is-suance of warrants and partly-paid capitalinstruments to non-residents even if the ForeignInvestment Promotion Board (FIPB) approved it. Onthe contrary, as a matter of practice, the FIPB wasconsidering such proposals and granting approvalsafter factoring in the time limit for conversion of thewarrants and quantum of upfront consideration.
The DIPP clarified the matter in a note to thedefinition of ‘capital’ in Circular 2 by stating thatinstruments other than equity shares and fully, com-pulsorily and mandatorily convertible preferenceshares and debentures may be issued after obtainingprior government approval. This change will ensurethat, on one hand, there is some elbow room for ma-ture foreign financial investors to structure theirinvestments and, on the other, domesticundertakings need not hand over a pie of theirbusiness at a price that could potentially be higher ata future point.Soothing NBFCs: Circular 2 also partly settles the dustover downstream investment by foreign owned andcontrolled (FOCC) non-banking financial
companies (NBFCs). Reading the relevantprovisions of Circular 1 (reiterating what had beenstated in press note 4 issued in February, 2009) ledone to conclude that 100% wholly ownedsubsidiaries of the FOCC NBFCs must also meet theminimum capitalisation requirements of NBFCs.This would have made it commercially difficult forFOCC NBFCs to set up and operate differentsubsidiaries for separate activities like stock broking,housing finance etc. Much to the relief of 100%FOCC NBFCs, however, Circular 2 has explicitlystated that they will not be required to meetminimum capitalisation requirements. Speaking ofdownstream investments, there were concerns afterthe release of Circular 1 that downstreaminvestment by a FOCC could be done only through
funds from abroad and not by leveraging funds fromIndia. Fortunately, Circular 2 has stated with wellclarified that investment by internal accruals ispermitted as long as other conditions laid down inthe policy on downstream investments are fulfilled.Breather to retailers too: Since FDI in multi brand retailis prohibited, players in this market have often beenin the news for the wrong reasons, trying to use thewholesale cash-and-carry route, where100% FDI ispermitted, as a backdoor to enter the multi brand re-tail sector. In Circular 1, the government had comedown heavily on FDI in multi brand retail sectorstructure — where the ownership structure of theretail entity and the wholesale entity were keptdistinct but within the same groupcompanies/promoters and exclusive arrangementswere made between the two companies to realisecommercial value — by stating that only 25% of thetotal turnover could be traded by the wholesale enti-ty amongst the same group companies and for‘internal use’ only. However, after much cajoling,the government has provided a breather to theinfamous indirect structures by getting rid of the‘internal use’ rule.Conclusion: The DIPP deserves a pat on its back for itsexemplary efforts, some of which we have discussedabove. In recent months, the DIPP has published afew discussion papers on opening up prohibited sec-tors such as multi-brand retail and defence to FDI. Apaper has also been put up for discussion on issue ofshares for consideration other than cash, so farpermitted in certain cases such as conversion ofexternal commercial borrowings or royaltypayments). There are, nevertheless, otherambiguities in the FDI policy requiring the DIPP’s at-tention — the important ones being upfrontdetermination of price of capital instruments at thetime of issuance and treatment of FOCC Indian com-panies as non-resident entities, given the guidingprinciple in the FDI policy that downstreaminvestment by FOCC Indian companies are requiredto follow the same norms as a direct foreigninvestment. These issues have been the bones ofcontention in boardrooms and we can only hopethat they can grab the DIPP’s attention at the earliest.
(S Singh is partner, G Singhi is senior associate and SRamachandran is associate at Phoenix Legal)
9
NDIA is at the centre of the population-versus-growth debate. With the world’s second-largestpopulation at 1.2 billion, the country must fo-cus on turning this population into a benefitrather than a disadvantage. This month, welook at how states in India can use their popu-lation size and growth rate to improve theircompetitiveness.
TRADITIONAL economic thinking seespopulation as a drag on a nation’s eco-nomic growth. However, with the worldlooking towards India as a growing andvibrant market, her ‘demographic advan-tage’ is often touted as her biggest asset.
According to the theory of demograph-ic dividend, the rate of economic growthincreases due to a rising share of workingage people in a population. For India,falling fertility rates are resulting in a larg-
er chunk of working-age people, who cancontribute to the GDP and generate high-er output per capita.
In fact, the International Labour Orga-nization (ILO) has stated that India willaccount for the highest working age pop-ulation in the next 10 years, in a report re-leased recently. In the document preparedfor the G-20 Summit held earlier thismonth in Seoul, the ILO says that the G-20 nations will see their working age pop-ulation between 15 and 64 years increaseby 212 million in the period 2010-2020.Over 64% of this increase will occur in In-dia alone!
This month’s IFCIndia State DevelopmentBarometer takes a sharp look at what pop-ulation really means to the economicgrowth of India’s states and analyses howstates can use their demographic situationto improve their competitiveness, andhence, enhance their prosperity.
Rising stars among statesIt is widely accepted that growth among In-dian states is skewed, with some prosper-ous states bearing the burden of growth,while several other lag in terms of GDPgrowth and development parameters.
The average decadal GDP growth figuresshow that unexpected states such as Biharand Orissa, historically notorious for poorgrowth, have exhibited a sustained GDPgrowth rate. Bihar, specifically, is notablefor exhibiting a remarkable decadal growthrate of 10.83% while contributing on amodest population base. Bihar accountsfor 8.1% to the country’s population, asseen in the accompanying graph.
Meanwhile, states such as Maharash-tra, Goa, Punjab and Tamil Nadu, that areknown for their higher levels of industrial-isation, human development or agricul-tural prosperity seem to have slowed interms of GDP growth over the past decade.
Size does matterA large size of population appears to be aburden on the economy of states such asUttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, West Bengaland Madhya Pradesh. These states arealso usually characterised by low percapita income and higher disparities.Large population size is a major factor,
among several others, that is draggingdown the economic growth of relativelyaffluent states like Maharashtra, Kar-nataka and Tamil Nadu. Yet, a few statessuch as Bihar, Andhra Pradesh and Gu-jarat with large populations are exhibit-ing high GDP growth.
No burden on economic growthSixteen states in India have a GDP growthhigher than the national average. Ofthese, ten states show a populationgrowth rate higher than the national av-erage, while six other states have a popu-lation growth rate lower than the nation-al average.
Population growth, considered a bur-den to economic growth, seems to havelittle correlation with GDP growth (corre-lation = 0.24). Large states such as Bihar,for instance, have showed sustained GDPgrowth over the decade along with asteadily rising population, whereas statessuch as Punjab and Manipur with slowerpopulation increase are showing GDPgrowth rates that are lower than the na-tional average.
Population, a double-edged swordClearly, population is a double-edgedsword. On one hand, the data shows thatthere is no clear correlation betweengrowth in population and GDP. Yet, accord-ing to the demographic dividend theory, alarge working age population is an asset.
In order to be able to catapult theirgrowth rates, states need to look closelyat their competitiveness, which in turnis linked to their level of productivity.Improved competitiveness leads to im-proved incomes and better quality of lifeacross the board. When viewed fromthis standpoint, states will be able to de-velop strategies on how best to utilisetheir workforce — small or large, grow-ing slow or growing fast — to maximiseproductivity.Group 1: States with lower populationgrowth rates and high GDP growth rates,such as Kerala, Andhra Pradesh and Oris-sa need to look closely at the training lev-els of their workforce and create strategyto move towards high value sectors andindustries that need a more skilled work-
force, which are also correspondingly farmore productive.Group 2: States with healthy GDP andpopulation growth rates, such as Chandi-garh, Delhi, Haryana and Bihar must fo-cus on sectors where they are inherentlycompetitive because of the presence ofnatural resources or traditional skills andknowledge. These states should find waysto turn the availability of a large work-force in their favour by offering suitableeducation policies and opportunities. Set-ting the right priorities is critical to en-hance competitiveness for this band of In-dian states.Group 3: A number of states such as Kar-nataka, West Bengal, Rajasthan, TamilNadu and Mizoram are performing onlyslightly below India’s average GDPgrowth rate. These states can quickly cat-apult themselves into Group 2 with a fo-cused effort on productivity.Group 4: A roadmap for enhancing com-petitiveness is critical for poorly perform-ing states. Among these, states such as Ut-tar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh withlarge and growing populations must con-trol the rate of population growththrough effective healthcare and out-reach efforts, as arresting populationgrowth takes time. They also need to har-ness their large growing workforce effec-tively and focus on promoting economicactivities that can employ and utilise alarge labour workforce, like certain typesof manufacturing.
Vision for the futureA look at the relationship between thepopulation and GDP growth serves tohighlight how states in various stages ofgrowth — both economic and demo-graphic — can harness their position inthe best possible manner. This is best doneby first ascertaining a state’s inherentcompetitive edge — these could be re-sources, sectors, human potential, etc —and then designing and implementingpolicy around this to achieve highly pro-ductive and efficient clusters that provideemployment, contribute to growing theGDP and bring prosperity as well.
Institute For Competitiveness
POST the crisis, the one common thread thatlinks advanced economies across the world,with perhaps the exception of the ever-prudentGermans, is the phenomenal increase in publicdebt, i.e., debt raised by governments strappedfor funds and desperate to kickstart the econo-my with stimulus packages.
Based on IMF forecasts, Eswar Prasad at Cor-nell University calculates that the level of aggre-
gate net government debt in the world will more than double from $23trillion — 44% of world GDP — in 2007 to $48 trillion — 65% of GDP— in 2015. Advanced economies account for much of this increase.
Prasad estimates the ratio of aggregate debt-to-aggregate GDP for ad-vanced economies will rise from 48% in 2007 to 71% in 2010, and fur-ther to 85% in 2015. In contrast, emerging markets (EMs) fare muchbetter. The corresponding ratios for the EM group are 30%, 30% and26% respectively. In 2007, EMs accounted for 24% of world nominalgross domestic product (GDP), in US dollars terms, and 17% of worlddebt. By 2015, they are expected to produce 35% of world output butaccount for just 14% of world debt. Thus, even as EMs increase theirshare in world GDP, their share in world debt is expected to come down.To put that more graphically, EMs will power their growth from inter-nal rather than borrowed resources.
This has two major consequences for EMs — both positive. One,they will be able to use more and more of their revenue for productivepurposes rather than for servicing debt, whether by way of interest costor repayment. Two, the distressing issue of inter-generational equitywhere succeeding generations end up paying for the profligacy of ear-lier generations will be resolved far more satisfactorily in EMs than inadvanced economies. Add to this the fact that EMs have a lower de-pendency ratio — read: larger share of population in the younger agegroup — and clearly, they are on a stronger wicket.
This is graphically brought home when the rise in debt is comparedwith the rise in GDP. EMs accounted for 10% of the rise in global debtlevels from 2007 to 2010, and could account for 13% of the rise from2010 to 2015. In contrast, their contributions to global GDP growthover these two periods are expected to be 70% and 54%, respectively.Average debt per capita in advanced economies was $19,400 in 2007,rose to $29,100 in 2010, according to the paper, and will go up to$41,000 in 2015. By 2015, the burden of debt for US citizens will rise to$48,000 per person. The debt burden for Japanese citizens will hit$75,900, the highest in the world. In contrast, China’s debt burden willbe just $1,200 in 2015. India’s, however, will be far higher at $2,013.
Among advanced economies, average debt per working-age personwill more than double from $31,700 in 2007 to $68,500 in 2015. Japantops the league tables by this measure while the US moves into secondposition by 2015 with debt per working-age person of $134,500 and$79,200, respectively.
Diehard optimists point to periods when public debt ballooned butfears of Doomsday proved ill-founded as a reason not to get perturbedabout the sharp rise in debt. But they could be living in cloud cuckooland! Borrowing like there is no tomorrow has serious — and unhappy— consequences for both their own as well as global financial stability.
The analysis paints a sobering picture of worsening public debt dyna-mics and a sharply-rising debt burden in advanced economies. It warnsthe worst is, perhaps, yet to come. First, these countries are experienc-ing little population growth. Second, they are facing rapidly aging pop-ulations. Third, their economies are likely to register slow growth, es-pecially relative to the EMs. Fourth, entitlement spending on health-care and pension could rise sharply due to unfavourable demographics.
The prescription: advanced economies had better get their fiscal acttogether once the recovery is better entrenched. It will take strong po-litical will to tackle near-term deficits and then to control the growth inentitlement spending. In the absence of decisive action, ballooningpublic debt in these economies could become a major threat to domes-tic and global financial stability.
http://www.brookings.edu/articles/2010/1101_government_debt_prasadMythili Bhusnurmath
Sins ofindulgence
The DIPP has clarified manycontentious issues regarding FDI,but ambiguity remains on subjectssuch as determination of pricing ofcapital instruments at issuance
THE EXPLOSION OF PUBLIC DEBT HASSERIOUS LONG-TERM REPERCUSSIONS
ANIMISHA
POLICIES THAT MAKE PRODUCTIVE USE OF AVAILABLE RESOURCES ARE CRITICAL
ARINDAM
I
INDIA
Source: IMF Fiscal Monitor, May 2010; IMF WEO, April 2010;ILO Economically-Active Population Estimates and Projections, 2009
DEBT BURDEN
Gross debt to GDP (%)Gross debt(US dollars in billions)Gross debt percapita (US dollars)Gross debt perworking-ageperson (US dollars)
79.01,080
888
1,638
77.81,164
945
1,728
70.31,400
1,092
1,954
2009 2010 2011 2014 201580.8999
833
1,548
67.31,471
1,132
2,013
ChandigarhDelhiUttarakhandHaryanaGujaratBiharChhattisgarhSikkimNagalandHimachal Pradesh
5.05
3.11
1.59
1.98
1.64
1.86
1.76
1.58
4.89
1.59
Populationgrowth ratesare HIGHERthan nationalaverage
Populationgrowth ratesare LOWERthan nationalaverage
GDP(India avg 7.99)State
Populationgrowth rate
(India avg 1.55)
13.1211.8611.8
11.6910.8
10.839.789.6
9.548.88
Andhra PradeshOrissaMeghalayaTripuraArunachal PradeshKerala
0.99
1.07
1.39
0.99
1.27
0.77
9.529.378.058.4
8.799.55
PEOPLE POWER
States contributing to India’s GDP growth(GDP growth higher than national average)
Population size vs GDP growth rate
Comparison of state population growth and GDP growth
0 500 1000Population size in lakhs
1500 2000 2500
14121086420
CH
GOTRMG
MZ
HP
JHPJ
MPAS
ANMNJK
PD
DLHRUK
SK CG KRORAR
NL
TN
APBR
KA RJWB
MH
UP
DL: DelhiCH: ChandigarhKR: KeralaTR: TripuraMG: MeghalayaPD: PuducherryKA: KarnatakaWB: West Bengal
AS: AssamNL: NagalandUK: UttarakhandHR: HaryanaGJ: GujaratCG: ChattisgarhSK: SikkimJH: Jharkhand
TN: Tamil NaduBR: BiharRJ: RajasthanGO: GoaMZ: MizoramPJ: PunjabMN: ManipurOR: Orissa
UP: Uttar PradeshAP: Andhra PradeshAR: Arunachal PradeshHP: Himachal PradeshJK: Jammu & KashmirMP: Madhya PradeshAN: Andaman & Nicobar IslandsMH: Maharashtra
0 1 2Population growth (%)
3 4 5
14121086420
AP
TR KR
WB
AS
TN
KR ORAR
MGMH
RJGO
AN
PD
JHPJJK
UPMN
MP
SK CGHP
GJ BR
UK HR DL CH
NL
GJ
MZ
JAYEETA
States can harness theirpopulation to grow
FDI policy needs some more weeding DILBERT by S Adams
Ins0tute for Compe00veness, India 38
HOW INDIAN STATES PRIORITISE EDUCATION
Small states: Surging ahead; need focus Large states: Daunted, need to leverage infrastructure Higher secondary enrolment vs GDP
^ Per lakh population (in ‘000) inhigher secondary
Source: Institute for Competitiveness * %
# State govt revenue expenditure in ` ‘000 crper lakh population in education, sports, arts & culture
UttarakhandHimachal P MeghalayaTripuraHaryanaGoa Delhi Kerala
GDPgrowthState
Femaleliteracy*
11.808.888.058.40
11.697.81
11.869.55
59.6367.4259.6164.9155.7375.3774.7187.72
331141
128
No ofuniversities
Expenditure oneducation#
18.72
27.61
7.31
17.56
13.63
28.29
20.81
16.27
GDPgrowth
Femaleliteracy*
7.037.85
7.497.76
10.839.524.705.80
64.4367.03
59.6156.8733.1250.4350.2942.22
Expenditure oneducation#
13.85
24.50
14.00
14.65
7.63
12.70
16.91
6.53
Two performersTamil NM’rashtraMost daunted by educationWBKarnatakaBiharAndhra PMadhya PUttar Pradesh
Enrolment^7.62
5.71
3.17
3.51
3.57
3.82
4.01
3.35
No ofuniversities
2227
141617201929
Enrolment^
4.53
4.38
2.90
3.62
1.05
1.84
3.16
0.32Higher secondary enrolment per lakh population (‘000)
14
12
10
8
6
4
2
00 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Uttarakhand
Himachal PradeshM’rashtraGoaTripura
Tamil NaduManipur
MadhyaPradesh
J&K
PunjabAssam
Jharkhand
UttarPradesh
WBMizoram
K’takaRajMeg
AP KeralaSikkim
Ch’garhOrissaAndhra
Nagaland
Bihar GujaratHaryana Delhi
THE real estate sector is extremely capital-inten-sive and its growth, to a large extent, dependson the availability of low-cost funds. Tradition-
ally, Indian developers funded projects from domes-tic sources such as friends and family, customeradvances, bank loans and so on. However, globalisa-tion has opened the floodgates for the inflow offunds from foreign sources. Sources of foreigncapital include foreign institutional investors (FIIs),foreign direct investment (FDI), private equity andreal estate funds.
The trends seen since 2005, when the real estatesector was opened up to foreign investment, indicatethat FDI could be a significant source of funds for thereal estate sector. Current FDI regulations for the sec-tor stipulate certain conditions, such as minimumarea to be developed, minimum capitalisationrequirements, lock-in and so on, that have been putin place from the perspective of preventingspeculation in the sector. Such conditions, however,pose challenges for FDI inflows into various projects,where given the nature of projects, it may not bepossible to comply with such conditions. According-ly, regulators may consider providing adequate flexi-bility in the policy framework to increase the flow ofFDI into such projects. We have highlighted some as-pects regulators should consider.
The FDI regulations currently in force allow anentity to receive FDI in construction developmentonly if the minimum built-up area of the project is50,000 square metres. Such a condition can proveunrealistic for some developers, especially those inmetro (tier-I) cities where large parcels of land aredifficult to acquire and prices are exorbitant. Butgiven the high cost of construction, projects in suchcities need foreign funds. Further, it is also unlikelythat an affordable housing project would requiremore than 50,000 square metres of development.Thus, to effectively promote affordable housingprojects, especially in tier-I cities, the minimumarea requirement for such projects in the FDI policyneed to be lowered.
Work on many projects by Indian developerscame to a grinding halt for want of funds andcustomer demand amid the global financial crisis of2008-09. The global economy is now recovering andthe work on many of these incomplete projects havepicked up. Foreign funds and investors, too, have be-
gun to show increased interest in these brownfieldprojects. Unfortunately, we have not been able tocapitalise on this opportunity as investors are notclear whether FDI is be permitted in brownfield proj-ects. Having said that, I reiterate the famous words offormer American President Thomas Jefferson: “Theprice of freedom is eternal vigilance.” Thegovernment can consider imposing certainrestrictions and allow FDI inflows into brownfieldprojects subject to specified conditions.
Further, there is no denying that real estate is acomplex sector and for any project to take-off, clear-ances are needed from multiple governmentagencies. And so, coordination between jointventure partners becomes extremely essential forsuccessful completion of projects. Many real estateprojects have failed to take-off due to the delay in ob-taining statutory clearances and conversion of landusage. In some instances, projects have failed due toconflict between joint venture partners. Therefore, itis necessary that the FDI policy for investing in realestate should provide investors exit options. The cur-rent FDI regulations provide for a three-year lock-infor each tranche of foreign investment, and earlyexit needs government approval. The process can besimplified by defining specific cases where a foreignpartner can be allowed to exit a project early withoutnecessarily seeking approval.
Recently, the government allowed development ofprojects with mixed use — development of hotel alongwith a housing/commercial complex, etc. Herein lies asource of potential conflict in interpreting regulations.The FDI policy for investment in hotels and hospitals isfar less stringent than the one for housing projects. Incase of such mixed use projects, where the majority ofbuilt-up area goes towards development of hotel orhospital, there is lack of clarity which provisions of theFDI policy would apply to the project — those for hotelsand hospital or those for housing projects. Adequateclarity under the policy, specifying applicability of regu-lations in case of mixed-use project, would be welcome.Regulators may consider providing adequate checkssuch as the nature of project licence, percentage of areaallocable for development of hotels, hospitals, etc toprevent any misuse of such relaxation.
Real estate is a key growth driver for the Indianeconomy and the industry has significantbackward and forward linkages with theeconomy. Adequate relaxation in current FDI pol-icy could foster significant opportunities forgrowth and investment in the sector. The govern-ment’s concerns about keeping a strict vigil oninflow of funds into the real estate sector is wellappreciated, but it should consider certainrelaxations to provide a fillip to FDI in the realestate sector. Adequate checks and balances canprevent misuse of these relaxations.
(Views are personal)
POLICY
DILBERT by S ADAMS
9
THE global marketplace and indeedthe world economy is changing rap-idly and these changes are impactingthe way we do business, earn a livingand grow within India as well. About
51% of India’s population is less than 25 yearsold. While this gives India a large demographicadvantage, states in India need to focus on edu-cation to ensure that an educated and appropri-ately trained/skilled workforce is ready to tapthe opportunities of the time. However, in-creased government spending on educationsince 2007 notwithstanding, 142 million chil-dren in India are denied primary and secondaryeducation and a third of the nation’s populationcannot read. Clearly, with the Indian economygrowing rapidly, fuelled by the rise of knowl-edge-intensive and hi-tech sectors like ICT, au-tomotives, pharmaceuticals and others, statesmust ensure quality education to enable Indiansreap the benefits of economic growth.
In order to understand which states in Indiaare prioritising education, we considered fourindicators — higher secondary school enrol-ment, government revenue expenditure on ed-ucation, number of universities and women’sliteracy rates. These indicators serve as goodpointers to the condition of education in a stateand impact on economic growth.
Small states target education as the recipefor growth; need more focus The hill states of Uttarakhand and HimachalPradesh will benefit from high per capita schoolenrolment figures, which are much higher thanthe national average of approximately 3,230 stu-dents per lakh people, even as their GDP growthrates are above the national average. Meghalaya,Tripura, Haryana, Goa and Delhi are other stateswith healthy GDP growth as well as school enrol-ment figures. These, except for Haryana, are alsoamong the top 10 states in terms of per capita rev-enue on education, arts and culture. This indicatesthat education is a clear priority in these states.
Women’s literacy is another dimension andthe one widely seen to have a big impact oneconomic growth. Many small states fare wellin this regard. Kerala clearly stands out withexemplary female literacy rate (87.72%). Thestate also shows healthy school enrolmentfigures, good government expenditure andadequate infrastructure.
The fact that these states are small — both ingeographical area and population — requires
them to pay attention to the quality of their hu-man resources if they have to attract investmentand successfully harness their natural endow-ments. For instance, both Uttarakhand and Hi-machal Pradesh have focused on creating indus-trial zones. The success of these industrial zonesdepends on the availability of employable talentlocally, besides power, cost of land, logistics andgovernment incentives.
From a competitiveness perspective, thesestates would need to align skills imparted bythe institutions in the state with the skills to berequired by the industry in the future. States,therefore, need to make a realistic projectionof labour that would be required by the in-dustries the state is promoting as well as bythose industries that already exist, and thenfocus on developing institutions that can trainpeople who can be placed in these industries.This is the key to enable people to avail of theopportunities within their home state, insteadof being forced to migrate to other states ormetros for employment.
Large states daunted by task of educatingmasses despite adequate infrastructureTamil Nadu and Maharashtra are the only twolarge states with good higher enrolment figures forhigher secondary school. Other large states such asWest Bengal and Karnataka, that have healthyGDP growth, and even Bihar and AndhraPradesh, that have substantially higher GDPgrowth than the national average, show poor percapita higher secondary school enrolment. Mad-hya Pradesh scores low on both counts. Largestates, with the exception of Tamil Nadu, Maha-rashtra and West Bengal, are also at the bottom ofthe list when it comes to female literacy.
Educating a large population is a challenge forbig states. If we look at the figures for govern-ment expenditure, this is evident. Large statesdo not figure among the top 10 spenders perlakh population. Yet, West Bengal spends moreon education, arts and culture than Tamil Naduand Maharashtra that show good enrolment fig-ures. Madhya Pradesh and Uttar Pradesh spendthe least per capita on education.
Ironically, these large states have the best infra-structure in the country. Uttar Pradesh has thelargest number of universities (29), followed byMaharashtra (27), Tamil Nadu (22), AndhraPradesh (20), Madhya Pradesh (19), Bihar (17),Karnataka (16) and West Bengal (14). However,the quality of education imparted by these institu-tions is a matter of concern. States such as MadhyaPradesh and Uttar Pradesh are neither able to ad-equately fund their educational institutions, norretain quality faculty. Inadequate employmentopportunities for graduates further strengthen thecycle of out-migration, leaving such states bereft oftheir knowledge workers and lowering the moti-vation for profit-making corporations to invest inthese locations. This has, however, been changingin specific cities where centres of learning, corpo-rate will and attractive location factors are fuellingclusters of industry in specific verticals. Bangalorein Karnataka has emerged as a hub for the IT in-dustry and so has Hyderabad in Andhra Pradesh.Uttar Pradesh has world-class institutions like theIndian Institute of Technology at Kanpur, IndianInstitute of Management at Lucknow and the Ba-naras Hindu University at Varanasi, but has beenunable to develop industries around these to har-ness the resident knowledge from these placesand employ the graduates. The standards of state-level universities that attract local students mustalso be simultaneously raised while local employ-ment opportunities are created.
Low-performing states need urgent inter-vention to progressSome of the small and mid-sized states that donot fare so well need specific intervention.Chhattisgarh, Orissa, Gujarat and Nagalandhave poor higher secondary school enrolmentsdespite moderate and high GDP growth. Jhark-hand, Punjab and Assam have low GDP growthrates and low school enrolment. Other than Na-galand, Punjab and Gujarat, these are also thestates with low female literacy.
Rajasthan is on the cusp of both GDP growthand school enrolment. However, Rajasthan hassurprisingly high government expenditure oneducation, showing that the state has prioritisededucation and is determined to cross over into abetter performer in the next decade. States suchas Chhattisgarh and Jharkand, which do nothave a single university yet, need to urgentlycreate the right infrastructure to raise their hu-man capacity and attract investment.
Long-term benefits on the horizonStates need to focus on the benefits that educa-tion provides in the long term. A literate popula-tion results in controlled population growthrates over time. High-quality workforce will al-low states to boost economic growth by focusingon more sophisticated and value-added indus-tries and services instead of merely continuingto invite investment in basic manufacturing andservice activities.
The increased productivity that a trainedworkforce can deliver results in enhanced pros-perity and better distribution of wealth, whichare the ultimate goals of governments and pri-vate sector corporations alike.
Institute for Competitiveness
WHENwritten in Chinese, the word “crisis” iscomposed of two characters — one representsdanger, and the other represents opportunity,noted the young president who inspired awhole generation. That was then, in the hal-cyon days of the 1960s. Fast-forward to thehere and now, and a panoply of working pa-pers and books on the financial crisis of 2007-09 has since been authored by westerners,
and which generally call for revamped regulation and broadermacroeconomic oversight. The regional bias is understandable: thecrisis was home-grown in the US thanks to dodgy, mortgage-backed financial products.
But the crisis did precipitate a global recession, and there have beenfew Asian perspectives on the developments. Until now. A new book,which contains a bouquet of policy-relevant essays by a leading ana-lyst affiliated with a prominent think-tank in Penang, Malaysia, seeksto address the challenges for Asia. The study is categorical that inboosting domestic consumption as an alternative to exports-ledgrowth, Asian economies should not follow the ‘Anglo-Saxon mod-el of pumping up domestic consumption through debt creation’. Itadds that Malaysia’s Gini coefficient, a measure of income inequality,at 49, is higher than that in the US. Also, 60% of the former’s house-holds earn only about $900 per month. And without increased in-comes and improved income and wealth distribution, merely ‘pump-ing up consumption through debt creation could take it down thesame path as the US,’ it is opined.
The study, which has a forward by Dr Y V Reddy, former RBI gov-ernor, who mentions that it is lucidly written, easy to read and simpleto understand. Next, that it captures current history, context and theway forward. Further, that it elaborates upon financial theory and ‘fo-cuses on policies and institutions rather than abstract thinking or an-ecdotes’. Also, that it offers an emerging market insight, while pre-senting in detail the debates on the subject in the western, particular-ly Anglo-Saxon, world. Dr Reddy has called for supplementing theanalysis in the text with more discussion on economic integration be-tween Japan, China, Southeast Asia and South Asia, in particular In-dia. In sum, the expert view is that the study has several original ele-ments explaining recent developments in financial markets and theattendant policy measures.
For example, there’s much reference in the study to the efficientmarket hypothesis (the idea that asset prices always and everywhere re-flect true value), which it is noted, governed public policies in generaland the stance of key central bankers and regulators in particular. Thehypothesis is seen as the primary cause of the crisis. In the run-up to thecrisis, prominent market participants asserted that ‘interfering withmarket-determined pricing of risks would be a serious policy mistake’.Yet, ‘these same people’, the study mentions, ironically pleaded andprobably lobbied for massive government intervention in the form offiscal stimulus packages, within months of asserting very much to thecontrary, once the crisis struck and there was a virtual credit freeze.
By 2009, the world had pumped in $12 trillion of stimulus pro-grammes to boost growth, and several mature economies in Europehave since opted for budgetary austerity measures and fiscal belt-tight-ening. So, things remain in a state of flux. For a big picture snap-shot,the study dwells at length on the ‘three contested terrains’. It avers thatthe financial crisis should be seen as a contest for hegemony in three ar-eas. At one level, what’s underlined is the continued political and eco-nomic dominance of the international monetary system by the US. Inparallel, there’s the attempt for continued dominance of the financialsector over the real economy. And in tandem, a contest for continua-tion of intellectual dominance by neoliberals and market enthusiasts.
The paper mentions that as the dollar remains the dominant inter-national currency, seigniorage, the ability to print money to pay yourliabilities, confers on the US the ability, in effect, to borrow and repaywithout limits, which is hugely distortionary. The emergence of co-anchor currencies would take time, it is opined. Going forward, poli-cymakers need to draw the right lessons from the great crisis and im-plement meaningful financial sector reforms, both nationally and forcross-border transactions, and not simply tinker with the system, con-cludes the study on a hopeful note.
(Nowhere to Hide, Chapter 6 The Three Contested Terrains, by MichaelLim Mah-Hui, Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, 2010)
Jaideep Mishra
Adequate relaxation in the currentforeign investment policy couldfoster significant opportunities forgrowth and investment in the real estate sector
Real estate sector needs FDI fillip
DEMOGRAPHIC ADVANTAGE
Focus on higher education to leverage
Financialcrisis & Asiandilemmas
States need to improvethe efficiency of
spending on educationand the quality of
teaching at schoolsand universities
AJIT KRISHNANTax Partner, Ernst & Young
ARINDAM
THE ECONOMIC TIMES ON SATURDAY NEW DELHI 25 DECEMBER 2010
HOW INDIAN STATES PRIORITISE EDUCATION
Small states: Surging ahead; need focus Large states: Daunted, need to leverage infrastructure Higher secondary enrolment vs GDP
^ Per lakh population (in ‘000) inhigher secondary
Source: Institute for Competitiveness * %
# State govt revenue expenditure in ` ‘000 crper lakh population in education, sports, arts & culture
UttarakhandHimachal P MeghalayaTripuraHaryanaGoa Delhi Kerala
GDPgrowthState
Femaleliteracy*
11.808.888.058.40
11.697.81
11.869.55
59.6367.4259.6164.9155.7375.3774.7187.72
331141
128
No ofuniversities
Expenditure oneducation#
18.72
27.61
7.31
17.56
13.63
28.29
20.81
16.27
GDPgrowth
Femaleliteracy*
7.037.85
7.497.76
10.839.524.705.80
64.4367.03
59.6156.8733.1250.4350.2942.22
Expenditure oneducation#
13.85
24.50
14.00
14.65
7.63
12.70
16.91
6.53
Two performersTamil NM’rashtraMost daunted by educationWBKarnatakaBiharAndhra PMadhya PUttar Pradesh
Enrolment^7.62
5.71
3.17
3.51
3.57
3.82
4.01
3.35
No ofuniversities
2227
141617201929
Enrolment^
4.53
4.38
2.90
3.62
1.05
1.84
3.16
0.32Higher secondary enrolment per lakh population (‘000)
14
12
10
8
6
4
2
00 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Uttarakhand
Himachal PradeshM’rashtraGoaTripura
Tamil NaduManipur
MadhyaPradesh
J&K
PunjabAssam
Jharkhand
UttarPradesh
WBMizoram
K’takaRajMeg
AP KeralaSikkim
Ch’garhOrissaAndhra
Nagaland
Bihar GujaratHaryana Delhi
THE real estate sector is extremely capital-inten-sive and its growth, to a large extent, dependson the availability of low-cost funds. Tradition-
ally, Indian developers funded projects from domes-tic sources such as friends and family, customeradvances, bank loans and so on. However, globalisa-tion has opened the floodgates for the inflow offunds from foreign sources. Sources of foreigncapital include foreign institutional investors (FIIs),foreign direct investment (FDI), private equity andreal estate funds.
The trends seen since 2005, when the real estatesector was opened up to foreign investment, indicatethat FDI could be a significant source of funds for thereal estate sector. Current FDI regulations for the sec-tor stipulate certain conditions, such as minimumarea to be developed, minimum capitalisationrequirements, lock-in and so on, that have been putin place from the perspective of preventingspeculation in the sector. Such conditions, however,pose challenges for FDI inflows into various projects,where given the nature of projects, it may not bepossible to comply with such conditions. According-ly, regulators may consider providing adequate flexi-bility in the policy framework to increase the flow ofFDI into such projects. We have highlighted some as-pects regulators should consider.
The FDI regulations currently in force allow anentity to receive FDI in construction developmentonly if the minimum built-up area of the project is50,000 square metres. Such a condition can proveunrealistic for some developers, especially those inmetro (tier-I) cities where large parcels of land aredifficult to acquire and prices are exorbitant. Butgiven the high cost of construction, projects in suchcities need foreign funds. Further, it is also unlikelythat an affordable housing project would requiremore than 50,000 square metres of development.Thus, to effectively promote affordable housingprojects, especially in tier-I cities, the minimumarea requirement for such projects in the FDI policyneed to be lowered.
Work on many projects by Indian developerscame to a grinding halt for want of funds andcustomer demand amid the global financial crisis of2008-09. The global economy is now recovering andthe work on many of these incomplete projects havepicked up. Foreign funds and investors, too, have be-
gun to show increased interest in these brownfieldprojects. Unfortunately, we have not been able tocapitalise on this opportunity as investors are notclear whether FDI is be permitted in brownfield proj-ects. Having said that, I reiterate the famous words offormer American President Thomas Jefferson: “Theprice of freedom is eternal vigilance.” Thegovernment can consider imposing certainrestrictions and allow FDI inflows into brownfieldprojects subject to specified conditions.
Further, there is no denying that real estate is acomplex sector and for any project to take-off, clear-ances are needed from multiple governmentagencies. And so, coordination between jointventure partners becomes extremely essential forsuccessful completion of projects. Many real estateprojects have failed to take-off due to the delay in ob-taining statutory clearances and conversion of landusage. In some instances, projects have failed due toconflict between joint venture partners. Therefore, itis necessary that the FDI policy for investing in realestate should provide investors exit options. The cur-rent FDI regulations provide for a three-year lock-infor each tranche of foreign investment, and earlyexit needs government approval. The process can besimplified by defining specific cases where a foreignpartner can be allowed to exit a project early withoutnecessarily seeking approval.
Recently, the government allowed development ofprojects with mixed use — development of hotel alongwith a housing/commercial complex, etc. Herein lies asource of potential conflict in interpreting regulations.The FDI policy for investment in hotels and hospitals isfar less stringent than the one for housing projects. Incase of such mixed use projects, where the majority ofbuilt-up area goes towards development of hotel orhospital, there is lack of clarity which provisions of theFDI policy would apply to the project — those for hotelsand hospital or those for housing projects. Adequateclarity under the policy, specifying applicability of regu-lations in case of mixed-use project, would be welcome.Regulators may consider providing adequate checkssuch as the nature of project licence, percentage of areaallocable for development of hotels, hospitals, etc toprevent any misuse of such relaxation.
Real estate is a key growth driver for the Indianeconomy and the industry has significantbackward and forward linkages with theeconomy. Adequate relaxation in current FDI pol-icy could foster significant opportunities forgrowth and investment in the sector. The govern-ment’s concerns about keeping a strict vigil oninflow of funds into the real estate sector is wellappreciated, but it should consider certainrelaxations to provide a fillip to FDI in the realestate sector. Adequate checks and balances canprevent misuse of these relaxations.
(Views are personal)
POLICY
DILBERT by S ADAMS
9
THE global marketplace and indeedthe world economy is changing rap-idly and these changes are impactingthe way we do business, earn a livingand grow within India as well. About
51% of India’s population is less than 25 yearsold. While this gives India a large demographicadvantage, states in India need to focus on edu-cation to ensure that an educated and appropri-ately trained/skilled workforce is ready to tapthe opportunities of the time. However, in-creased government spending on educationsince 2007 notwithstanding, 142 million chil-dren in India are denied primary and secondaryeducation and a third of the nation’s populationcannot read. Clearly, with the Indian economygrowing rapidly, fuelled by the rise of knowl-edge-intensive and hi-tech sectors like ICT, au-tomotives, pharmaceuticals and others, statesmust ensure quality education to enable Indiansreap the benefits of economic growth.
In order to understand which states in Indiaare prioritising education, we considered fourindicators — higher secondary school enrol-ment, government revenue expenditure on ed-ucation, number of universities and women’sliteracy rates. These indicators serve as goodpointers to the condition of education in a stateand impact on economic growth.
Small states target education as the recipefor growth; need more focus The hill states of Uttarakhand and HimachalPradesh will benefit from high per capita schoolenrolment figures, which are much higher thanthe national average of approximately 3,230 stu-dents per lakh people, even as their GDP growthrates are above the national average. Meghalaya,Tripura, Haryana, Goa and Delhi are other stateswith healthy GDP growth as well as school enrol-ment figures. These, except for Haryana, are alsoamong the top 10 states in terms of per capita rev-enue on education, arts and culture. This indicatesthat education is a clear priority in these states.
Women’s literacy is another dimension andthe one widely seen to have a big impact oneconomic growth. Many small states fare wellin this regard. Kerala clearly stands out withexemplary female literacy rate (87.72%). Thestate also shows healthy school enrolmentfigures, good government expenditure andadequate infrastructure.
The fact that these states are small — both ingeographical area and population — requires
them to pay attention to the quality of their hu-man resources if they have to attract investmentand successfully harness their natural endow-ments. For instance, both Uttarakhand and Hi-machal Pradesh have focused on creating indus-trial zones. The success of these industrial zonesdepends on the availability of employable talentlocally, besides power, cost of land, logistics andgovernment incentives.
From a competitiveness perspective, thesestates would need to align skills imparted bythe institutions in the state with the skills to berequired by the industry in the future. States,therefore, need to make a realistic projectionof labour that would be required by the in-dustries the state is promoting as well as bythose industries that already exist, and thenfocus on developing institutions that can trainpeople who can be placed in these industries.This is the key to enable people to avail of theopportunities within their home state, insteadof being forced to migrate to other states ormetros for employment.
Large states daunted by task of educatingmasses despite adequate infrastructureTamil Nadu and Maharashtra are the only twolarge states with good higher enrolment figures forhigher secondary school. Other large states such asWest Bengal and Karnataka, that have healthyGDP growth, and even Bihar and AndhraPradesh, that have substantially higher GDPgrowth than the national average, show poor percapita higher secondary school enrolment. Mad-hya Pradesh scores low on both counts. Largestates, with the exception of Tamil Nadu, Maha-rashtra and West Bengal, are also at the bottom ofthe list when it comes to female literacy.
Educating a large population is a challenge forbig states. If we look at the figures for govern-ment expenditure, this is evident. Large statesdo not figure among the top 10 spenders perlakh population. Yet, West Bengal spends moreon education, arts and culture than Tamil Naduand Maharashtra that show good enrolment fig-ures. Madhya Pradesh and Uttar Pradesh spendthe least per capita on education.
Ironically, these large states have the best infra-structure in the country. Uttar Pradesh has thelargest number of universities (29), followed byMaharashtra (27), Tamil Nadu (22), AndhraPradesh (20), Madhya Pradesh (19), Bihar (17),Karnataka (16) and West Bengal (14). However,the quality of education imparted by these institu-tions is a matter of concern. States such as MadhyaPradesh and Uttar Pradesh are neither able to ad-equately fund their educational institutions, norretain quality faculty. Inadequate employmentopportunities for graduates further strengthen thecycle of out-migration, leaving such states bereft oftheir knowledge workers and lowering the moti-vation for profit-making corporations to invest inthese locations. This has, however, been changingin specific cities where centres of learning, corpo-rate will and attractive location factors are fuellingclusters of industry in specific verticals. Bangalorein Karnataka has emerged as a hub for the IT in-dustry and so has Hyderabad in Andhra Pradesh.Uttar Pradesh has world-class institutions like theIndian Institute of Technology at Kanpur, IndianInstitute of Management at Lucknow and the Ba-naras Hindu University at Varanasi, but has beenunable to develop industries around these to har-ness the resident knowledge from these placesand employ the graduates. The standards of state-level universities that attract local students mustalso be simultaneously raised while local employ-ment opportunities are created.
Low-performing states need urgent inter-vention to progressSome of the small and mid-sized states that donot fare so well need specific intervention.Chhattisgarh, Orissa, Gujarat and Nagalandhave poor higher secondary school enrolmentsdespite moderate and high GDP growth. Jhark-hand, Punjab and Assam have low GDP growthrates and low school enrolment. Other than Na-galand, Punjab and Gujarat, these are also thestates with low female literacy.
Rajasthan is on the cusp of both GDP growthand school enrolment. However, Rajasthan hassurprisingly high government expenditure oneducation, showing that the state has prioritisededucation and is determined to cross over into abetter performer in the next decade. States suchas Chhattisgarh and Jharkand, which do nothave a single university yet, need to urgentlycreate the right infrastructure to raise their hu-man capacity and attract investment.
Long-term benefits on the horizonStates need to focus on the benefits that educa-tion provides in the long term. A literate popula-tion results in controlled population growthrates over time. High-quality workforce will al-low states to boost economic growth by focusingon more sophisticated and value-added indus-tries and services instead of merely continuingto invite investment in basic manufacturing andservice activities.
The increased productivity that a trainedworkforce can deliver results in enhanced pros-perity and better distribution of wealth, whichare the ultimate goals of governments and pri-vate sector corporations alike.
Institute for Competitiveness
WHENwritten in Chinese, the word “crisis” iscomposed of two characters — one representsdanger, and the other represents opportunity,noted the young president who inspired awhole generation. That was then, in the hal-cyon days of the 1960s. Fast-forward to thehere and now, and a panoply of working pa-pers and books on the financial crisis of 2007-09 has since been authored by westerners,
and which generally call for revamped regulation and broadermacroeconomic oversight. The regional bias is understandable: thecrisis was home-grown in the US thanks to dodgy, mortgage-backed financial products.
But the crisis did precipitate a global recession, and there have beenfew Asian perspectives on the developments. Until now. A new book,which contains a bouquet of policy-relevant essays by a leading ana-lyst affiliated with a prominent think-tank in Penang, Malaysia, seeksto address the challenges for Asia. The study is categorical that inboosting domestic consumption as an alternative to exports-ledgrowth, Asian economies should not follow the ‘Anglo-Saxon mod-el of pumping up domestic consumption through debt creation’. Itadds that Malaysia’s Gini coefficient, a measure of income inequality,at 49, is higher than that in the US. Also, 60% of the former’s house-holds earn only about $900 per month. And without increased in-comes and improved income and wealth distribution, merely ‘pump-ing up consumption through debt creation could take it down thesame path as the US,’ it is opined.
The study, which has a forward by Dr Y V Reddy, former RBI gov-ernor, who mentions that it is lucidly written, easy to read and simpleto understand. Next, that it captures current history, context and theway forward. Further, that it elaborates upon financial theory and ‘fo-cuses on policies and institutions rather than abstract thinking or an-ecdotes’. Also, that it offers an emerging market insight, while pre-senting in detail the debates on the subject in the western, particular-ly Anglo-Saxon, world. Dr Reddy has called for supplementing theanalysis in the text with more discussion on economic integration be-tween Japan, China, Southeast Asia and South Asia, in particular In-dia. In sum, the expert view is that the study has several original ele-ments explaining recent developments in financial markets and theattendant policy measures.
For example, there’s much reference in the study to the efficientmarket hypothesis (the idea that asset prices always and everywhere re-flect true value), which it is noted, governed public policies in generaland the stance of key central bankers and regulators in particular. Thehypothesis is seen as the primary cause of the crisis. In the run-up to thecrisis, prominent market participants asserted that ‘interfering withmarket-determined pricing of risks would be a serious policy mistake’.Yet, ‘these same people’, the study mentions, ironically pleaded andprobably lobbied for massive government intervention in the form offiscal stimulus packages, within months of asserting very much to thecontrary, once the crisis struck and there was a virtual credit freeze.
By 2009, the world had pumped in $12 trillion of stimulus pro-grammes to boost growth, and several mature economies in Europehave since opted for budgetary austerity measures and fiscal belt-tight-ening. So, things remain in a state of flux. For a big picture snap-shot,the study dwells at length on the ‘three contested terrains’. It avers thatthe financial crisis should be seen as a contest for hegemony in three ar-eas. At one level, what’s underlined is the continued political and eco-nomic dominance of the international monetary system by the US. Inparallel, there’s the attempt for continued dominance of the financialsector over the real economy. And in tandem, a contest for continua-tion of intellectual dominance by neoliberals and market enthusiasts.
The paper mentions that as the dollar remains the dominant inter-national currency, seigniorage, the ability to print money to pay yourliabilities, confers on the US the ability, in effect, to borrow and repaywithout limits, which is hugely distortionary. The emergence of co-anchor currencies would take time, it is opined. Going forward, poli-cymakers need to draw the right lessons from the great crisis and im-plement meaningful financial sector reforms, both nationally and forcross-border transactions, and not simply tinker with the system, con-cludes the study on a hopeful note.
(Nowhere to Hide, Chapter 6 The Three Contested Terrains, by MichaelLim Mah-Hui, Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, 2010)
Jaideep Mishra
Adequate relaxation in the currentforeign investment policy couldfoster significant opportunities forgrowth and investment in the real estate sector
Real estate sector needs FDI fillip
DEMOGRAPHIC ADVANTAGE
Focus on higher education to leverage
Financialcrisis & Asiandilemmas
States need to improvethe efficiency of
spending on educationand the quality of
teaching at schoolsand universities
AJIT KRISHNANTax Partner, Ernst & Young
ARINDAM
THE ECONOMIC TIMES ON SATURDAY NEW DELHI 25 DECEMBER 2010
Ins0tute for Compe00veness, India 40
HOW INDIAN STATES PRIORITISE EDUCATION
Small states: Surging ahead; need focus Large states: Daunted, need to leverage infrastructure Higher secondary enrolment vs GDP
^ Per lakh population (in ‘000) inhigher secondary
Source: Institute for Competitiveness * %
# State govt revenue expenditure in ` ‘000 crper lakh population in education, sports, arts & culture
UttarakhandHimachal P MeghalayaTripuraHaryanaGoa Delhi Kerala
GDPgrowthState
Femaleliteracy*
11.808.888.058.40
11.697.81
11.869.55
59.6367.4259.6164.9155.7375.3774.7187.72
331141
128
No ofuniversities
Expenditure oneducation#
18.72
27.61
7.31
17.56
13.63
28.29
20.81
16.27
GDPgrowth
Femaleliteracy*
7.037.85
7.497.76
10.839.524.705.80
64.4367.03
59.6156.8733.1250.4350.2942.22
Expenditure oneducation#
13.85
24.50
14.00
14.65
7.63
12.70
16.91
6.53
Two performersTamil NM’rashtraMost daunted by educationWBKarnatakaBiharAndhra PMadhya PUttar Pradesh
Enrolment^7.62
5.71
3.17
3.51
3.57
3.82
4.01
3.35
No ofuniversities
2227
141617201929
Enrolment^
4.53
4.38
2.90
3.62
1.05
1.84
3.16
0.32Higher secondary enrolment per lakh population (‘000)
14
12
10
8
6
4
2
00 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Uttarakhand
Himachal PradeshM’rashtraGoaTripura
Tamil NaduManipur
MadhyaPradesh
J&K
PunjabAssam
Jharkhand
UttarPradesh
WBMizoram
K’takaRajMeg
AP KeralaSikkim
Ch’garhOrissaAndhra
Nagaland
Bihar GujaratHaryana Delhi
THE real estate sector is extremely capital-inten-sive and its growth, to a large extent, dependson the availability of low-cost funds. Tradition-
ally, Indian developers funded projects from domes-tic sources such as friends and family, customeradvances, bank loans and so on. However, globalisa-tion has opened the floodgates for the inflow offunds from foreign sources. Sources of foreigncapital include foreign institutional investors (FIIs),foreign direct investment (FDI), private equity andreal estate funds.
The trends seen since 2005, when the real estatesector was opened up to foreign investment, indicatethat FDI could be a significant source of funds for thereal estate sector. Current FDI regulations for the sec-tor stipulate certain conditions, such as minimumarea to be developed, minimum capitalisationrequirements, lock-in and so on, that have been putin place from the perspective of preventingspeculation in the sector. Such conditions, however,pose challenges for FDI inflows into various projects,where given the nature of projects, it may not bepossible to comply with such conditions. According-ly, regulators may consider providing adequate flexi-bility in the policy framework to increase the flow ofFDI into such projects. We have highlighted some as-pects regulators should consider.
The FDI regulations currently in force allow anentity to receive FDI in construction developmentonly if the minimum built-up area of the project is50,000 square metres. Such a condition can proveunrealistic for some developers, especially those inmetro (tier-I) cities where large parcels of land aredifficult to acquire and prices are exorbitant. Butgiven the high cost of construction, projects in suchcities need foreign funds. Further, it is also unlikelythat an affordable housing project would requiremore than 50,000 square metres of development.Thus, to effectively promote affordable housingprojects, especially in tier-I cities, the minimumarea requirement for such projects in the FDI policyneed to be lowered.
Work on many projects by Indian developerscame to a grinding halt for want of funds andcustomer demand amid the global financial crisis of2008-09. The global economy is now recovering andthe work on many of these incomplete projects havepicked up. Foreign funds and investors, too, have be-
gun to show increased interest in these brownfieldprojects. Unfortunately, we have not been able tocapitalise on this opportunity as investors are notclear whether FDI is be permitted in brownfield proj-ects. Having said that, I reiterate the famous words offormer American President Thomas Jefferson: “Theprice of freedom is eternal vigilance.” Thegovernment can consider imposing certainrestrictions and allow FDI inflows into brownfieldprojects subject to specified conditions.
Further, there is no denying that real estate is acomplex sector and for any project to take-off, clear-ances are needed from multiple governmentagencies. And so, coordination between jointventure partners becomes extremely essential forsuccessful completion of projects. Many real estateprojects have failed to take-off due to the delay in ob-taining statutory clearances and conversion of landusage. In some instances, projects have failed due toconflict between joint venture partners. Therefore, itis necessary that the FDI policy for investing in realestate should provide investors exit options. The cur-rent FDI regulations provide for a three-year lock-infor each tranche of foreign investment, and earlyexit needs government approval. The process can besimplified by defining specific cases where a foreignpartner can be allowed to exit a project early withoutnecessarily seeking approval.
Recently, the government allowed development ofprojects with mixed use — development of hotel alongwith a housing/commercial complex, etc. Herein lies asource of potential conflict in interpreting regulations.The FDI policy for investment in hotels and hospitals isfar less stringent than the one for housing projects. Incase of such mixed use projects, where the majority ofbuilt-up area goes towards development of hotel orhospital, there is lack of clarity which provisions of theFDI policy would apply to the project — those for hotelsand hospital or those for housing projects. Adequateclarity under the policy, specifying applicability of regu-lations in case of mixed-use project, would be welcome.Regulators may consider providing adequate checkssuch as the nature of project licence, percentage of areaallocable for development of hotels, hospitals, etc toprevent any misuse of such relaxation.
Real estate is a key growth driver for the Indianeconomy and the industry has significantbackward and forward linkages with theeconomy. Adequate relaxation in current FDI pol-icy could foster significant opportunities forgrowth and investment in the sector. The govern-ment’s concerns about keeping a strict vigil oninflow of funds into the real estate sector is wellappreciated, but it should consider certainrelaxations to provide a fillip to FDI in the realestate sector. Adequate checks and balances canprevent misuse of these relaxations.
(Views are personal)
POLICY
DILBERT by S ADAMS
9
THE global marketplace and indeedthe world economy is changing rap-idly and these changes are impactingthe way we do business, earn a livingand grow within India as well. About
51% of India’s population is less than 25 yearsold. While this gives India a large demographicadvantage, states in India need to focus on edu-cation to ensure that an educated and appropri-ately trained/skilled workforce is ready to tapthe opportunities of the time. However, in-creased government spending on educationsince 2007 notwithstanding, 142 million chil-dren in India are denied primary and secondaryeducation and a third of the nation’s populationcannot read. Clearly, with the Indian economygrowing rapidly, fuelled by the rise of knowl-edge-intensive and hi-tech sectors like ICT, au-tomotives, pharmaceuticals and others, statesmust ensure quality education to enable Indiansreap the benefits of economic growth.
In order to understand which states in Indiaare prioritising education, we considered fourindicators — higher secondary school enrol-ment, government revenue expenditure on ed-ucation, number of universities and women’sliteracy rates. These indicators serve as goodpointers to the condition of education in a stateand impact on economic growth.
Small states target education as the recipefor growth; need more focus The hill states of Uttarakhand and HimachalPradesh will benefit from high per capita schoolenrolment figures, which are much higher thanthe national average of approximately 3,230 stu-dents per lakh people, even as their GDP growthrates are above the national average. Meghalaya,Tripura, Haryana, Goa and Delhi are other stateswith healthy GDP growth as well as school enrol-ment figures. These, except for Haryana, are alsoamong the top 10 states in terms of per capita rev-enue on education, arts and culture. This indicatesthat education is a clear priority in these states.
Women’s literacy is another dimension andthe one widely seen to have a big impact oneconomic growth. Many small states fare wellin this regard. Kerala clearly stands out withexemplary female literacy rate (87.72%). Thestate also shows healthy school enrolmentfigures, good government expenditure andadequate infrastructure.
The fact that these states are small — both ingeographical area and population — requires
them to pay attention to the quality of their hu-man resources if they have to attract investmentand successfully harness their natural endow-ments. For instance, both Uttarakhand and Hi-machal Pradesh have focused on creating indus-trial zones. The success of these industrial zonesdepends on the availability of employable talentlocally, besides power, cost of land, logistics andgovernment incentives.
From a competitiveness perspective, thesestates would need to align skills imparted bythe institutions in the state with the skills to berequired by the industry in the future. States,therefore, need to make a realistic projectionof labour that would be required by the in-dustries the state is promoting as well as bythose industries that already exist, and thenfocus on developing institutions that can trainpeople who can be placed in these industries.This is the key to enable people to avail of theopportunities within their home state, insteadof being forced to migrate to other states ormetros for employment.
Large states daunted by task of educatingmasses despite adequate infrastructureTamil Nadu and Maharashtra are the only twolarge states with good higher enrolment figures forhigher secondary school. Other large states such asWest Bengal and Karnataka, that have healthyGDP growth, and even Bihar and AndhraPradesh, that have substantially higher GDPgrowth than the national average, show poor percapita higher secondary school enrolment. Mad-hya Pradesh scores low on both counts. Largestates, with the exception of Tamil Nadu, Maha-rashtra and West Bengal, are also at the bottom ofthe list when it comes to female literacy.
Educating a large population is a challenge forbig states. If we look at the figures for govern-ment expenditure, this is evident. Large statesdo not figure among the top 10 spenders perlakh population. Yet, West Bengal spends moreon education, arts and culture than Tamil Naduand Maharashtra that show good enrolment fig-ures. Madhya Pradesh and Uttar Pradesh spendthe least per capita on education.
Ironically, these large states have the best infra-structure in the country. Uttar Pradesh has thelargest number of universities (29), followed byMaharashtra (27), Tamil Nadu (22), AndhraPradesh (20), Madhya Pradesh (19), Bihar (17),Karnataka (16) and West Bengal (14). However,the quality of education imparted by these institu-tions is a matter of concern. States such as MadhyaPradesh and Uttar Pradesh are neither able to ad-equately fund their educational institutions, norretain quality faculty. Inadequate employmentopportunities for graduates further strengthen thecycle of out-migration, leaving such states bereft oftheir knowledge workers and lowering the moti-vation for profit-making corporations to invest inthese locations. This has, however, been changingin specific cities where centres of learning, corpo-rate will and attractive location factors are fuellingclusters of industry in specific verticals. Bangalorein Karnataka has emerged as a hub for the IT in-dustry and so has Hyderabad in Andhra Pradesh.Uttar Pradesh has world-class institutions like theIndian Institute of Technology at Kanpur, IndianInstitute of Management at Lucknow and the Ba-naras Hindu University at Varanasi, but has beenunable to develop industries around these to har-ness the resident knowledge from these placesand employ the graduates. The standards of state-level universities that attract local students mustalso be simultaneously raised while local employ-ment opportunities are created.
Low-performing states need urgent inter-vention to progressSome of the small and mid-sized states that donot fare so well need specific intervention.Chhattisgarh, Orissa, Gujarat and Nagalandhave poor higher secondary school enrolmentsdespite moderate and high GDP growth. Jhark-hand, Punjab and Assam have low GDP growthrates and low school enrolment. Other than Na-galand, Punjab and Gujarat, these are also thestates with low female literacy.
Rajasthan is on the cusp of both GDP growthand school enrolment. However, Rajasthan hassurprisingly high government expenditure oneducation, showing that the state has prioritisededucation and is determined to cross over into abetter performer in the next decade. States suchas Chhattisgarh and Jharkand, which do nothave a single university yet, need to urgentlycreate the right infrastructure to raise their hu-man capacity and attract investment.
Long-term benefits on the horizonStates need to focus on the benefits that educa-tion provides in the long term. A literate popula-tion results in controlled population growthrates over time. High-quality workforce will al-low states to boost economic growth by focusingon more sophisticated and value-added indus-tries and services instead of merely continuingto invite investment in basic manufacturing andservice activities.
The increased productivity that a trainedworkforce can deliver results in enhanced pros-perity and better distribution of wealth, whichare the ultimate goals of governments and pri-vate sector corporations alike.
Institute for Competitiveness
WHENwritten in Chinese, the word “crisis” iscomposed of two characters — one representsdanger, and the other represents opportunity,noted the young president who inspired awhole generation. That was then, in the hal-cyon days of the 1960s. Fast-forward to thehere and now, and a panoply of working pa-pers and books on the financial crisis of 2007-09 has since been authored by westerners,
and which generally call for revamped regulation and broadermacroeconomic oversight. The regional bias is understandable: thecrisis was home-grown in the US thanks to dodgy, mortgage-backed financial products.
But the crisis did precipitate a global recession, and there have beenfew Asian perspectives on the developments. Until now. A new book,which contains a bouquet of policy-relevant essays by a leading ana-lyst affiliated with a prominent think-tank in Penang, Malaysia, seeksto address the challenges for Asia. The study is categorical that inboosting domestic consumption as an alternative to exports-ledgrowth, Asian economies should not follow the ‘Anglo-Saxon mod-el of pumping up domestic consumption through debt creation’. Itadds that Malaysia’s Gini coefficient, a measure of income inequality,at 49, is higher than that in the US. Also, 60% of the former’s house-holds earn only about $900 per month. And without increased in-comes and improved income and wealth distribution, merely ‘pump-ing up consumption through debt creation could take it down thesame path as the US,’ it is opined.
The study, which has a forward by Dr Y V Reddy, former RBI gov-ernor, who mentions that it is lucidly written, easy to read and simpleto understand. Next, that it captures current history, context and theway forward. Further, that it elaborates upon financial theory and ‘fo-cuses on policies and institutions rather than abstract thinking or an-ecdotes’. Also, that it offers an emerging market insight, while pre-senting in detail the debates on the subject in the western, particular-ly Anglo-Saxon, world. Dr Reddy has called for supplementing theanalysis in the text with more discussion on economic integration be-tween Japan, China, Southeast Asia and South Asia, in particular In-dia. In sum, the expert view is that the study has several original ele-ments explaining recent developments in financial markets and theattendant policy measures.
For example, there’s much reference in the study to the efficientmarket hypothesis (the idea that asset prices always and everywhere re-flect true value), which it is noted, governed public policies in generaland the stance of key central bankers and regulators in particular. Thehypothesis is seen as the primary cause of the crisis. In the run-up to thecrisis, prominent market participants asserted that ‘interfering withmarket-determined pricing of risks would be a serious policy mistake’.Yet, ‘these same people’, the study mentions, ironically pleaded andprobably lobbied for massive government intervention in the form offiscal stimulus packages, within months of asserting very much to thecontrary, once the crisis struck and there was a virtual credit freeze.
By 2009, the world had pumped in $12 trillion of stimulus pro-grammes to boost growth, and several mature economies in Europehave since opted for budgetary austerity measures and fiscal belt-tight-ening. So, things remain in a state of flux. For a big picture snap-shot,the study dwells at length on the ‘three contested terrains’. It avers thatthe financial crisis should be seen as a contest for hegemony in three ar-eas. At one level, what’s underlined is the continued political and eco-nomic dominance of the international monetary system by the US. Inparallel, there’s the attempt for continued dominance of the financialsector over the real economy. And in tandem, a contest for continua-tion of intellectual dominance by neoliberals and market enthusiasts.
The paper mentions that as the dollar remains the dominant inter-national currency, seigniorage, the ability to print money to pay yourliabilities, confers on the US the ability, in effect, to borrow and repaywithout limits, which is hugely distortionary. The emergence of co-anchor currencies would take time, it is opined. Going forward, poli-cymakers need to draw the right lessons from the great crisis and im-plement meaningful financial sector reforms, both nationally and forcross-border transactions, and not simply tinker with the system, con-cludes the study on a hopeful note.
(Nowhere to Hide, Chapter 6 The Three Contested Terrains, by MichaelLim Mah-Hui, Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, 2010)
Jaideep Mishra
Adequate relaxation in the currentforeign investment policy couldfoster significant opportunities forgrowth and investment in the real estate sector
Real estate sector needs FDI fillip
DEMOGRAPHIC ADVANTAGE
Focus on higher education to leverage
Financialcrisis & Asiandilemmas
States need to improvethe efficiency of
spending on educationand the quality of
teaching at schoolsand universities
AJIT KRISHNANTax Partner, Ernst & Young
ARINDAM
THE ECONOMIC TIMES ON SATURDAY NEW DELHI 25 DECEMBER 2010
Percentage of factories in opera0on versus total number of factories
Jammu & Kashmir
Himachal Pradesh
Punjab Haryana
Unar Pradesh Rajasthan
Delhi
Unarakhand
Bihar
Orissa
West Bengal
Assam
Meghalaya
Tripura Manipur
Nagaland
Jharkhand
Gujarat
Maharashtra
Goa
Madhya Pradesh
Chhalsgarh
Andhra Pradesh
Karnataka
Kerala
Tamil Nadu
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
16
0 5000 10000 15000 20000 25000
Percen
tage of factorie
s not in ope
ra1o
n
Total number of factories
All India Average of 4.1% factories not in opera0on/state average
All India
All India Average of 6198 Factories/state
Energy Usage Sta0s0cs
Andhra
Arunachal Assam
Bihar
Chalsgarh
Delhi
Goa
Gujarat
Haryana Himachal
Jammu & Kashmir
Jharkhand
Karnataka
Kerala Madhya Pradesh
Maharashtra
Manipur
Meghalya
Mizoram
Nagaland
Orissa
Punjab
Rajasthan Sikkim
Tamil Nadu
Tripura
Unar Pradesh
Unaranchal
West Bengal
0
200
400
600
800
1000
1200
1400
1600
1800
0.00% 5.00% 10.00% 15.00% 20.00% 25.00% 30.00%
Per C
apita
Ene
rgy Usage ( Units)
Energy Deficit
Average Per capita energy usage is 564 units.
Average Energy Deficit is 9.8%
Poverty and Rural Development
Andhra
Arunachal
Assam Bihar
Chalsgarh
Delhi
Goa
Gujarat
Haryana
Himachal
Jammu & Kashmir
Jharkhand
Karnataka
Kerala
Madhya Pradesh
Maharashtra
Manipur
Meghalya
Mizoram
Nagaland
Orissa
Punjab
Rajasthan
Sikkim
Tamil Nadu
Tripura
Unar Pradesh
Unaranchal
West Bengal
0.00
200.00
400.00
600.00
800.00
1000.00
1200.00
1400.00
0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50
Per C
apita
Reven
ue Expen
ditute on Ru
ral
Developm
ent
Poverty Ra1o – Number of people in the state of Poverty/100 People in 2004-‐05 in Rural areas
Average per capita rural expenditure is Rs 564
India’s poverty ra0o in rural is 28.3%
The Compe00veness Ranking Assessment
Ins0tute for Compe00veness, India 44
State Compe00veness Report 2011
© Institute for Competitiveness, India
Andhra Pradesh
Arunachal Pradesh
Assam
Bihar
Chhalsgarh
Delhi
Goa
Gujarat
Haryana
Himachal Pradesh
Jammu and Kashmir
Jharkhand
Karnataka
Kerala
Madhya Pradesh
Maharashtra
Manipur
Meghalaya Mizoram
Nagaland
Orissa
Punjab
Rajasthan
Sikkim
Tamil Nadu
Tripura
Unar Pradesh
Unarakhand West Bengal
0
20000
40000
60000
80000
100000
120000
140000
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80
Per cap
ita state gross d
omes1c produ
ct at con
stan
t price (Base=99-‐00)
Factor Condi1ons Index
All India Average 46,836 Rupees/ capita
All
India All India Average
56.33 Index Points
Factor Condi0ons
Strong posi0on
Sub Pillars of Factor Condi0ons-‐ Financial Condi0ons
Andhra Pradesh
Arunachal Pradesh
Assam
Bihar
Chhalsgarh
Delhi
Goa
Gujarat
Haryana
Himachal Pradesh
Jammu & Kashmir
Jharkhand
Karnataka Kerala
Madhya Pradesh
Maharashtra
Manipur
Meghalaya Mizoram
Nagaland
Orissa
Punjab
Rajasthan
Sikkim
Tamil Nadu
Tripura
Unar Pradesh
Unarakhand West Bengal
0
20000
40000
60000
80000
100000
120000
140000
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 Financial Ranking
All India Average 46,836 Rs/ capita
All India
All India Average 57.13 Index Points
Strong posi0on
Per cap
ita state gross d
omes1c produ
ct at con
stan
t pric
e
(Base=99-‐00)
Sub Pillars of Factor Condi0ons-‐ Physical Condi0ons
Andhra Pradesh
Arunachal Pradesh
Assam
Bihar
Chhalsgarh
Delhi
Goa
Gujarat
Haryana
Himachal Pradesh
Jammu & Kashmir
Jharkhand
Karnataka
Kerala
Madhya Pradesh
Maharashtra
Manipur Meghalaya Mizoram
Nagaland
Orissa
Punjab
Rajasthan
Sikkim
Tamil Nadu
Tripura
Unar Pradesh
Unarakhand
West Bengal
0
20000
40000
60000
80000
100000
120000
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80
Physical Infrastructure Index
Strong posi0on in Energy Infrastructure
All India Average 23458.24 Million KWh
All India
All India Average 57.14 Index Points
Energy Availability in M
illion KW
h
Sub Pillars of Factor Condi0ons -‐ Communica0on
Andhra Pradesh
Arunachal Pradesh
Assam
Delhi
Bihar
Chhalsgarh
Goa Gujarat
Haryana
Himachal Pradesh
Jammu & Kashmir
Jharkhand
Karnataka
Kerala
Madhya Pradesh
Maharashtra
Manipur Meghalaya Mizoram Nagaland
Orissa
Punjab
Rajasthan Sikkim
Tamil Nadu Tripura
Unar Pradesh
Unarakhand
West Bengal
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
0 20 40 60 80 100 120
Communica1on Index
All India Average 72.88 Million KWh
All India
All India Average 57.14 Index Points
Wire
less Pho
nes ( Per 100 Persons)
Andhra Pradesh
Arunachal Pradesh
Assam
Delhi
Bihar Chhalsgarh
Goa
Gujarat
Haryana
Himachal Pradesh
Jammu & Kashmir
Jharkhand
Karnataka
Kerala
Madhya Pradesh
Maharashtra
Manipur
Meghalaya
Mizoram Nagaland
Orissa
Punjab
Rajasthan
Sikkim
Tamil Nadu
Tripura
Unar Pradesh
Unarakhand
West Bengal
0
50000
100000
150000
200000
250000
0 10 20 30 40 50 60
Administra1ve Index
Sub Pillars of Factor Condi0ons -‐ Administra0ve
All India Average 72,807 cognizable crimes All
India All India Average
51. 75 Index Points
Total num
ber o
f cognizable crim
es
Sub Pillars of Factor Condi0ons-‐ Human Capacity
Andhra Pradesh
Himachal Pradesh
Meghalaya
Nagaland
Unar Pradesh
Gujarat
Arunachal Pradesh
Bihar
Kerala
Assam West Bengal
Unarakhand
Jharkhand Goa
Tripura
Delhi
Punjab
Manipur
Madhya Pradesh Orissa
Rajasthan
Jammu & Kashmir
Tamil Nadu
Mizoram
Haryana
Maharashtra
Sikkim
Karnataka
Chhalsgarh
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70
All India Average 19.1% Al
l India All India Average
57. 14 Index Points
Birth Ra
te
Human Capacity Index
Andhra Pradesh
Madhya Pradesh
Manipur Unarakhand
Punjab
Mizoram
Assam Karnataka
Bihar
Delhi
Orissa
Nagaland
Jharkhand
Meghalaya
Rajasthan Arunachal Pradesh
West Bengal
Kerala
Goa
Unar Pradesh
Tripura
Gujarat Sikkim
Chhalsgarh
Jammu & Kashmir
Haryana
Tamil Nadu
Himachal Pradesh Maharashtra
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90
Literacy ra
tes
Innova1on Index
All India Average of 77.12 %
All Ind
ia
Average
57.28 Inde
x Po
ints
All India Average 57.14 Index Points
Sub Pillars of Factor Condi0ons – Innova0on Ra0ng
Andhra Pradesh
Arunachal Pradesh
Assam
Bihar
Chhalsgarh
Delhi
Goa
Gujarat
Haryana
Himachal Pradesh
Jammu and Kashmir
Jharkhand
Karnataka
Kerala
Madhya Pradesh
Maharashtra
Manipur
Meghalaya Mizoram
Nagaland
Orissa
Punjab
Rajasthan
Sikkim
Tamil Nadu
Tripura
Unar Pradesh
Unarakhand
West Bengal
0
20000
40000
60000
80000
100000
120000
140000
0 20 40 60 80 100 120
Demand Condi1ons Index
All India Average 46,836 Rupees/ capita
All
India All India Average 57.14
Index Points
Demand Condi0ons
Strong posi0on
Per cap
ita state gross d
omes1c produ
ct at current Pric
es
Sub Pillars of Demand Condi0ons – Demography
Andhra Pradesh
Arunachal Pradesh
Assam
Delhi
Bihar
Chhalsgarh
Goa
Gujarat Haryana
Himachal Pradesh
Jammu & Kashmir
Jharkhand
Karnataka
Kerala
Madhya Pradesh
Maharashtra
Manipur
Meghalaya
Mizoram
Nagaland
Orissa Punjab
Rajasthan
Sikkim
Tamil Nadu Tripura
Unar Pradesh Unarakhand
West Bengal
-‐5
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70
Demographic Index
All Ind
ia
Average
57.28
Inde
x Po
ints
All India Average 57.14 Index Points
All India Average of 17.22%
Decada
l growth ra
te in % te
rms
Sub Pillars of Demand Condi0ons – Income and Consump0on
Andhra Pradesh
Arunachal Pradesh Assam
Delhi
Bihar
Chhalsgarh
Goa
Gujarat Haryana
Himachal Pradesh
Jammu & Kashmir Jharkhand
Karnataka
Kerala Madhya Pradesh
Maharashtra
Manipur
Meghalaya Mizoram
Nagaland
Orissa Punjab
Rajasthan
Sikkim Tamil Nadu
Tripura
Unar Pradesh
Unarakhand
West Bengal
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
0 20 40 60 80 100 120
Percen
tage of h
ouses o
wne
d
Income and Consump1on Index
Strong posi0on in housing Scenario
All India Average of 88.02%
All India Average 57.14 Index Points
Andhra Pradesh
Arunachal Pradesh
Assam
Bihar
Chhalsgarh
Delhi
Goa
Gujarat
Haryana
Himachal Pradesh
Jammu and Kashmir
Jharkhand
Karnataka
Kerala
Madhya Pradesh
Maharashtra
Manipur
Meghalaya Mizoram
Nagaland
Orissa
Punjab
Rajasthan
Sikkim
Tamil Nadu
Tripura
Unar Pradesh
Unarakhand West Bengal
0
20000
40000
60000
80000
100000
120000
140000
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70
Suppor1ng Condi1ons
All India Average 46,836 Rupees/ capita
All
India All India Average 57.14
Index Points
Suppor0ng Condi0ons
Strong posi0on
Per cap
ita state gross d
omes1c produ
ct at C
urrent Pric
es
Sub Pillars of Suppor0ng Condi0ons – Diversity of firms
Andhra Pradesh
Arunachal Pradesh
Assam Bihar Chhalsgarh
Delhi
Goa
Gujarat
Haryana
Himachal Pradesh Jammu and Kashmir
Jharkhand
Karnataka
Kerala
Madhya Pradesh
Maharashtra
Manipur Meghalaya Mizoram
Nagaland
Orissa
Punjab
Rajasthan
Sikkim
Tamil Nadu
Tripura
Unar Pradesh
Unarakhand
West Bengal
0
5000
10000
15000
20000
25000
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90
CI and Diversity of firms Index
All India Average of 6198 Enterprises
All
India
Averag
e 57.28
Inde
x Po
ints
All India Average 57.14 Index Points
Strong posi0on of Industry
Total N
umbe
r of E
nterprises
Sub Pillars of Suppor0ng Condi0ons – Business Incen0ves
Andhra Pradesh
Arunachal Pradesh Assam
Delhi Bihar
Chhalsgarh
Goa
Gujarat
Haryana
Himachal Pradesh Jammu & Kashmir Jharkhand
Karnataka
Kerala
Madhya Pradesh
Maharashtra
Manipur Meghalaya
Mizoram Nagaland
Orissa
Punjab Rajasthan
Sikkim
Tamil Nadu
Tripura
Unar Pradesh
Unarakhand
West Bengal
0
100000
200000
300000
400000
500000
600000
700000
800000
900000
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
All
India
Averag
e 57.28
Inde
x Po
ints
All India Average 57.14 Index Points
All India Average of 96878 Crores
Good Business Incen0ves to promote growth
Business Incen1ves Index
Outstan
ding Sched
uled
com
mercial ban
k cred
it in Rs. Crore
Andhra Pradesh
Arunachal Pradesh
Assam
Bihar
Chhalsgarh
Delhi
Goa
Gujarat
Haryana
Himachal Pradesh
Jammu and Kashmir
Jharkhand
Karnataka Kerala
Madhya Pradesh
Maharashtra
Manipur
Meghalaya Mizoram
Nagaland
Orissa
Punjab
Rajasthan
Sikkim
Tamil Nadu
Tripura
Unar Pradesh
Unarakhand
West Bengal
0
20000
40000
60000
80000
100000
120000
140000
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90
Per cap
ita state gross d
omes1c produ
ct at current
price
Strategic Context Index
All India Average 46,836 Rupees/ capita
All
India All India Average 57.14 Index Points
Strategic Context in Firms
Strong posi0on
Sub Pillars of Strategic Context – Supplier Sophis0ca0on
Andhra Pradesh
Arunachal Pradesh
Assam Delhi
Bihar
Chhalsgarh
Goa
Gujarat
Haryana
Himachal Pradesh Jammu & Kashmir
Jharkhand
Karnataka
Kerala
Madhya Pradesh
Maharashtra
Manipur Meghalaya Mizoram Nagaland
Orissa
Punjab
Rajasthan
Sikkim
Tamil Nadu
Tripura
Unar Pradesh
Unarakhand
West Bengal
0
200000
400000
600000
800000
1000000
1200000
1400000
1600000
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90
Total num
ber o
f Factory W
orkers
Supplier Sophis1ca1on Index
All India Average 57.14 Index Points
All India Average of 3,56,271 factory workers
Strong posi0on
Andhra Pradesh
Arunachal Pradesh Assam
Delhi
Bihar
Chhalsgarh
Goa
Gujarat
Haryana
Himachal Pradesh
Jammu & Kashmir
Jharkhand
Karnataka Kerala
Madhya Pradesh
Maharashtra
Manipur Meghalaya Mizoram
Nagaland
Orissa
Punjab
Rajasthan
Sikkim Tamil Nadu
Tripura
Unar Pradesh
Unarakhand
West Bengal
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70
Ins1tu1onal support Index
All
India
Avera
ge
57.28
Inde
x Po
int
s
All India Average 57.28 Index Points
All India Average 8.27 Years
Sub Pillars of Strategic Context-‐ Ins0tu0onal Support
Strong posi0on
Weak posi0on
Num
ber o
f years fo
r closing a business
Thank You
Ins1tute for Compe11veness (IFC), India is an independent, interna0onal ini0a0ve centred in India, dedicated to enlarging and dissemina0ng the body of research and knowledge on compe00on and strategy, pioneered over the last 25 years by Professor M.E. Porter of the Ins0tute for Strategy and Compe00veness, Harvard Business School (ISC, HBS), USA. IFC, India works in affilia0on with ISC, HBS, USA to offer academic & execu0ve courses, conduct indigenous research and provide advisory services to corporate and Government within the country. The ins0tute studies compe00on and its implica0ons for company strategy; the compe00veness of na0ons, regions & ci0es; suggests and provides solu0ons for social problems. IFC, India brings out India City Compe00veness Report, India State Compe00veness Report, India Economic Quarterly, Journal of Compe00veness and funds academic research in the area of strategy & compe00veness. To know more about the ins0tute write to us at [email protected].
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