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India: Out of the woods, a long way from safe

New Delhi is no longer in panic mode. After a few really dicey months this summer when the rupee was sinking and the government was implementing measure after ineffective measure to hold the line, an uneasy calm has been restored in India. The currency is 10 per cent above its September lows and stocks are 15 per cent higher.

New Delhi is no longer in panic mode. After a few really dicey months this summer when the rupee was sinking and the government was implementing measure after ineffective measure to hold the line, an uneasy calm has been restored in India. The currency is 10 per cent above its September lows and stocks are 15 per cent higher.

In Mumbai, Mr Raghuram Rajan, the new Central Bank Governor, rode in like some Bollywood hero on a white steed. He raised interest rates and came up with a wheeze to attract investments from non-resident Indians, netting a cool US$34 billion (S$43 billion) in a few months.

Arguably almost as important as anything Mr Rajan was up to, the United States Federal Reserve stopped its unhelpful talk about early tapering of its asset purchases.

The fear had been that, if US rates began rising, hot money might rush for the exit from India, precipitating a new phase of crisis.

That danger has receded, though it could conceivably return when the Fed does eventually begin to taper. Yet, even as things stand, India’s economy looks decidedly shabby.

True, the current-account deficit has narrowed, but the budget deficit remains as wide as the Ganges. Consumer inflation is in double digits, a matter of grim import for the many Indians living in poverty.

Growth in gross domestic product has dropped below 5 per cent for four straight quarters, a dismally low number for a poor economy supposedly in its take-off phase. The starry-eyed optimism of just a few years ago when Indians talked excitedly about growing faster than China is as though from another era.

FAST GROWTH OR SOCIAL JUSTICE? NEITHER

Before the economic picture became quite so bleak, a lively debate had developed about the sort of growth to which India should aspire. The schism was personified in the views of Mr Amartya Sen, a Nobel Economics Laureate, and Mr Jagdish Bhagwati, a Professor of Economics at Columbia University in New York.

To oversimplify, Professor Sen argued that India’s high growth rates were meaningless unless they brought measurable benefits to poor Indians. That meant better access to health, education, nutrition and gender equality — all measures where India has scored badly, even compared, for example, with much poorer Bangladesh. If social indicators did not improve, asked Prof Sen, what then was growth for?

Prof Bhagwati, who recently co-authored a book called Why Growth Matters, argued conversely that rapid growth was a precondition for poverty alleviation. Only by expanding the economic pie, would India have enough resources to pay for the things Prof Sen wants.

In some ways, the differences between the two economists, though expressed with the intensity of a feud, are ones of emphasis and sequencing.

Prof Sen would not dispute the need for growth and Prof Bhagwati would not object to the idea of improving the living conditions of as many people as possible.

India, however, has neither fast growth nor social justice. That makes Prof Sen and Prof Bhagwati like captains of a ship arguing whether to turn to port or starboard. As they carry on their dispute, the sad fact is that the steering wheel is broken.

SHAKIER BASIS OF GROWTH

Of course, growth may pick up from its current uninspiring levels. Finance Minister Palaniappan Chidambaram predicts it will rise to 6 per cent in the next fiscal year, 7 per cent in fiscal 2015 and 8 per cent thereafter. Most private economists forecast a point lower in each case.

Even if things do improve, though, India’s economic model looks shakier than before.

Not only has it failed to turn GDP into social justice, the basis of growth itself looks less certain.

India has not turned itself into a serious manufacturing centre. Investment has stalled. Several would-be foreign projects, including a US$12 billion steel plant that was to have been built by South Korea’s POSCO, have rumbled on fruitlessly for years.

The state has no legitimacy, neither to convince affected communities that such developments are in their interest nor even to bulldoze them through over their objections. That leaves everything in limbo.

The biggest beneficiaries of the status quo are the crony capitalists who have been permitted to extract rent to no one’s obvious interest but their own. Writer Pankaj Mishra argues in The New York Review of Books that high economic growth has only served to “empower an insular, selfish and anti-democratic elite in an unequal society”. Now India does not even have high growth to boast about.

This is the backdrop against which next year’s general election will be fought. No wonder even liberal Indians, who would normally be horrified at the thought, are turning reluctantly to the idea of Mr Narendra Modi, a divisive Hindu nationalist, as a possible saviour. Some are hoping — often against their better judgment — that Mr Modi can replicate at a national level the sort of growth rates he has achieved in Gujarat state, where he is Chief Minister.

“Stab me a thousand times, but ‘Modi’,” was how one educated Indian put it dramatically when asked who she wanted as the country’s next Prime Minister.

It is not exactly a ringing endorsement. It does reflect, though, the sense of gloom that is now pervasive.

The Financial Times Limited

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

David Pilling is the Financial Times’ Asia Editor.

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