India. Craig Jeffrey
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Название: India

Автор: Craig Jeffrey

Издательство: John Wiley & Sons Limited

Жанр: Зарубежная публицистика

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isbn: 9781509539727

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СКАЧАТЬ last, India attained more or less ‘superfast’ growth for about five years from 2003–04. The cumulative effects of the economic reforms were reflected in the rise of corporate savings and investment in this time, and in marked improvement in productivity. Yet, according to the analysis by Kar and Sen, broadly supported by Joshi, this period of exceptionally high growth saw the establishment of more closed deals, involving particularly companies operating in high rent sectors – and it was the political backlash against this, later in the period in office of the second Congress-headed United Progressive Alliance government, that soured the investment climate. It also became clear, subsequently, that the banking system had encouraged excessive credit growth in the boom years, a lot of it involving crony-capitalist deals. The weight of Non-Performing Assets held by banks became a constraint on growth, and as corporate savings and investment declined, so economic growth faltered. Indications of recovery after 2014 were disputed at the time, and prime minister Modi’s later claims that India’s economy had grown faster during his tenure than at any other time were called into question because of doubts about the validity of new official statistics.

      Worries about the economy played very little part in the general election of 2019, however, as prime minister Modi succeeded in focusing attention on matters of national security and of nationalism. Big business seems generally to have given him and his party the benefit of the doubt, while looking – as reported in the financial press (Kazmin 2019b) – for urgent action regarding access to land and capital, and labour market flexibility. These hopes were certainly not realized in the first months after the election, when, as we noted earlier, evidence of the slowing of GDP growth was published (Kazmin 2019c). The sharp fall in the sales of cars was seen as ‘the most alarming symptom of broader economic slowdown’ (Parkin 2019a). Then the first budget of the new government, put before parliament in July 2019, promised to increase tax revenues and imposed a tax surcharge on the ‘super-rich’, measures that were seen as threatening by business people – though the government shortly afterwards sought to allay business fears by cutting corporate tax rates to their lowest levels in the history of independent India. The publication of data for April–June 2019 showed the slowest rate of growth of the economy for six years, highlighting ‘the depth of malaise that has gripped a country that not long ago reveled in its status as the world’s fastest growing economy’ (Kazmin 2019d; see also Kazmin 2019e), and the growth rate dipped even lower, to 4.5 per cent in the third quarter (The Hindu, 29 November 2019). The short- and medium-term prospects for the Indian economy did not appear to be at all positive.

       3.1 Introduction: Economic Growth and ‘Development’

      Economic growth is not synonymous with ‘development’ – if, by the latter, we understand the improvement of well-being throughout society. We follow the great Indian economist, Amartya Sen, in believing that development should be understood as being about expanding the real freedoms of people to lead lives that they have reason to value (Sen 1999). This means, in Sen’s terms, thinking about development in terms of ‘capabilities’ – people’s abilities to do things, and to live lives that they value – rather than in terms of ‘commodities’. This does not mean that commodities – both goods and services – are of no account at all. Clearly not, for if people have insufficient means to secure adequate nutrition, clothing, shelter and the services that they need in order to lead a worthwhile life, then the objectives of development cannot be achieved. Material poverty matters hugely, and economic growth – which involves expanding the supply of commodities – does matter. A critical question, however, is that of whether, or how far, growth serves to reduce material poverty, and to increase opportunities for people to realize the end of leading lives that they have reason to value. In this chapter we are concerned with the question of how well India is doing in regard to these objectives. We are especially concerned with the extent to which continuing low levels of education and health – human capital, in economists’ language – have limited opportunities for a majority of India’s people.

      Recognizing the importance of these questions, Governments of India have made commitments to the goal of ‘inclusive growth’. This was the theme of India’s Eleventh Five Year Plan, for the period 2007–12, and the title of the first main volume of the Plan document. It was said that:

      The central vision of the Eleventh Plan is to build on our strengths to trigger a development process which ensures broad-based improvement in the quality of life of the people, especially the poor, SCs/STs, other backward castes (OBCs), minorities and women’ (Planning Commission 2008: 2)

      The list of those whose quality of life is to be improved, according to this statement – and a comparable one in the Twelfth Five Year Plan, which repeated the objective of bringing about inclusive growth (Planning Commission 2013: vi) – is a long one, accounting for all but a fairly small minority of the population of the country. According to the Census of 2011, the Scheduled Castes (SCs) accounted for 16.6 per cent of the population, and the Scheduled Tribes (STs) for a further 8.6 per cent. Add to this quarter of the population the numbers of those officially designated as members of the ‘Other Backward Classes’ (OBCs – according to the official definition, ‘backward classes’, not ‘castes’), who are estimated to make up around 40 per cent of the population (according to National Sample Survey estimates, reported in Times of India, 1 September 2007), and we have two-thirds of the population of India. To this should be added, in the light of accumulating evidence about their disadvantage in many spheres of life, most of the Muslims (the most significant ‘minority’) who made up 14.2 per cent of the population in 2011. Even if we take no separate account of women, the Plan document clearly refers to a large majority of the people in the country.