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Some implications of new, high-growth development trajectories

Some implications of new, high-growth development trajectories. Contrasting India and China. Similarities between India and China. High and sustained rates of growth of aggregate and per capita national income For longer in China than India, but growth accelerating in India recently

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Some implications of new, high-growth development trajectories

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  1. Some implications of new, high-growth development trajectories Contrasting India and China

  2. Similarities between India and China • High and sustained rates of growth of aggregate and per capita national income • For longer in China than India, but growth accelerating in India recently • Occurs in the context of integration through trade, investment and financial liberalization • Increased presence in the global economy

  3. China and India’s contribution to global growth

  4. India and China Relative to the World (%)

  5. Importance of exports

  6. Difference in the Structure of Exports

  7. Related to differences in structure of growth • Of the cumulative increase in GDP between 1991 and 2005, while 53 per cent was accounted for by industry in the case of China (with 40 per cent from services), as much as 62 per cent was accounted for by services in the Indian case (with 27 per cent from manufacturing). • Manufacturing growth strong in China accounting for 37 per cent of the increment in GDP in this period, whereas the comparable figure for India was just 16 per cent.

  8. Implications of patterns of growth • Fall-out of growth led by manufacturing in China in terms of demand for non-manufacturing sectors, viz. agriculture, mining and services likely to be significant, if not strong • This is likely to impact on demand and growth within and outside China • This would not be as true of India’s services-led growth, which is likely to impact only on the demand for manufactures and other services

  9. Trends in the sources of imports (%age distribution)

  10. The evidence • A sharp shift away from imports from developed to developing countries starting in the mid-1980s in the case of China • This is true in the case of India too, though the shift is less pronounce partly because of a lower dependence on developed countries in 1980.

  11. China’s Developing Country Imports(as % of world imports)

  12. In the second half of the 1980s, the sharp shift in the sources of Chinese imports was in favour of developing Asia • Subsequently, the increases have been distributed to other part of the developing world

  13. India’s Developing Country Imports(as % of world imports)

  14. In India’s case the pattern is more complicated, partly because of the incompleteness of the data. • Oil played an extremely important role in shaping the sources of imports. • Asia’s role as a source of imports has been increasing rapidly, servicing India’s manufactured import requirements. • Areas other than Asia, especially Africa, seem to be dropping out, but there is a data problem here.

  15. Cumulative post-1990 growth of imports from Africa in dollar terms

  16. Cumulative post-1990s Growth of Imports from Latin America

  17. Possible explanations • Post liberalization patterns of growth may be reducing the elasticity of demand for staples with respect to GDP growth. • Growth based on manufacturing in China needs more access to raw materials, whereas growth based on services in India may generate more demand for oil and final manufactures.

  18. An illustration from India • Accelerating non-agricultural growth in India has been accompanied by an agrarian crisis, involving, inter alia, slow agricultural growth. • In the 1990s, per capita agricultural output grew at only 0.4 per cent per year and agricultural income grew at only 0.7 per cent per year. • Suggests that agriculture is no more a constraint on non-agricultural growth.

  19. Changes in the neo-liberal 1990s • Change in the pattern of demand and production, involving a reduction in the direct agricultural-input dependence of the non agricultural sector. • Sastry et. al. : “In 1968-69 one unit of rise in industrial output was likely to enhance demand from agriculture by 0.247 units, which was reduced to 0.087 by 1993-94. On the other hand, in 1968-69, one unit rise in industry was to cause 0.237 units demand from the services sector, which increased to 0.457 units in 1993-94.”

  20. Role of services growth • Reduction in agricultural input dependence of the non-agricultural sector would be greater once we take account of the growing share of services in non-agricultural GDP. • While services accounted for 43 and 48 per cent respectively of the increment of GDP at current prices in the 1970s and 1980s, the figure rose to 58 per cent and 62 per cent respectively during the 1990s and the years 2000-01 to 2004-05.

  21. Employment vs output growth

  22. Possible difference with China • Dependence on modern manufacturing may be limiting the elasticity of employment with respect to output growth in China as well, with attendant implications for staples. • But demand for primary raw materials including agricultural raw material and metals would be increasing.

  23. China’s consumption of Industrial Materials and Oil

  24. Impact on commodity prices • One major impact of the China boom has been a degree of buoyancy in commodity prices. While other factors have played a role, but for China’s presence, commodity prices may not have reflected the buoyancy they have. • Over the last five years there are signs of a reversal (however temporary) of the long term trend in global commodity prices. By the beginning of this decade commodity prices had fallen relative to consumer prices (as measured by the US Consumer Price Index) for over five decades. But from around 2002, commodity prices have been on the rise. • While exporters of oil have been important beneficiaries, the index of non-fuel commodity prices has also been rising.

  25. Obvious importance of non-fuel commodities • Non-fuel commodities have a higher share in world trade (about 14 percent during 2000–04) than fuel commodities (7 percent). • Many developing countries are highly dependent on non-fuel commodities as a source of export earnings—36 countries have a ratio of non-fuel commodity exports to GDP of over 10 percent, and in 92 countries the ratio is over 5 percent. Indeed, in many low-income countries (including in Africa), a large share of export receipts is generated by just a few commodities.

  26. Role of manufacturing based growth • These trends are a result of the fact that China’s high rate of GDP growth has been (unlike in the case of India) driven by increases in industrial production. • The rate of growth of industrial production in China rose from a high 10.5 per cent during 1993-2000 to 16.2 per cent during 2002-05. • This industrial dynamism has meant that China today accounts for 8 per cent of global industrial value added when estimated at current exchange rates and 25 per cent when valued in PPP terms. • It has also meant that China is today he largest consumer of several metals, accounting for about a quarter of the total world demand for aluminum, copper and steel

  27. Africa a major beneficiary • The major beneficiary of these trends in commodity demand and prices is Africa, in which China’s presence has expanded substantially. African exports to China started accelerating around 2000, and have since risen at an annual growth rate of more than 50 per cent. By 2004, African exports to China touched $11.4 billion, reflecting a more-than-threefold increase since 2000. By 2004 China accounted for 6 per cent of total African exports to the world.

  28. Africa’s trade with India and China

  29. Africa’s exports to India and China

  30. Implications for Terms of Trade • One consequence of the rise in the volume and unit value of commodity exports from Africa, are signs of the reversal (for the present) of the long-term deterioration of net barter terms of trade faced by developing countries dependent on primary products for their export revenues that go to finance imports of manufactured products. • With competition in manufactures export trade (influenced by China) moderating price increases in manufactured goods, and China’s demand driving up commodity prices, developing countries as a group and Africa in particular that are still substantially dependent on the exports of primary products, have experienced an improvement in their terms of trade.

  31. ToT and Purchasing Power of Exports (2000=100)

  32. ToT and Purchasing Power of Exports (2000=100)

  33. ToT and Purchasing Power of Exports (2000=100)

  34. ToT and Purchasing Power of Exports (2000=100)

  35. Net Impact on Africa • The net result of all this is that the China boom has helped a continent like Africa. • Real GDP growth in Africa rose from an average annual rate of 4.2 per cent during 2001-2004 from 3.3 per cent during 1997-2000. Sub-Saharan Africa gained even more with its real GDP growth rate touching 5.4 per cent in 2004, which was an eight-year high. • The African Economic Outlook 2005 (AfDB/OECD 2005), among others, attributes this improvement substantially to the rise in commodity prices. • Further China’s interest in the region’s natural resources has resulted in huge flows of aid and foreign investment from China to Africa, bolstering the regions infrastructure and putting much needed investment into the natural resources sector.

  36. Is this a challenge to the old Imperialism • It is inasmuch as it gives other developing countries a space to negotiate the process of development • But does it imply a loosening of developed country dependence for India and China • That view often buttressed by the idea that India and China are exploiting the benefits of the new knowledge economy.

  37. What is the new economy? • Improvement in the quality of human and other forms of ‘intangible” capital rendered possible by the knowledge revolution a crucial determinant of productivity differentials across sectors and nations. • Transmission of these intangibles from the pure knowledge domain to commodities must be mediated by labour of different kinds which must acquire the necessary intangibles • Requires investment geared to the production and dissemination of knowledge (i.e., in training, education, R&D, information and coordination).

  38. Role of Knowledge 1

  39. Role of Knowledge 2

  40. Trends in services production

  41. India an exporter of knowledge-intensive services • IT and ITeS Exports from India: • IT services exports estimated at around $23 billion in 2005-06 by RBI • During the period 1990-91 to 2004-05, exports have been growing at 47.5 per cent per annum or doubling every 21 months.

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