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Home  » Business » Why the elephant is dancing

Why the elephant is dancing

By P Chidambaram
Last updated on: May 04, 2006 17:32 IST
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Finance Minister P Chidambaram had everyone captivated when he said that it is not because of India's beauty queens that the world was taking notice of India.

Speaking at the 'Advantage India' session during the 39th annual meeting of board of governors of the Asian Development Bank in Hyderabad on Thursday, he went on explain why there was sudden interest in India.

Following is the entire text of the finance minister's speech:

On 15 August, 1947, our first Prime Minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, the architect of modern India, spoke of India's 'tryst with destiny.' Today, it is a matter of pride for us that his dream of an India which would take its place amongst global leaders is coming true.

India is now among the fastest growing economies in the world, and that gives us great satisfaction and also places greater responsibility on the government of the day. What makes our development story different is the fact that our reforms are embedded in a strong democratic polity, are equitable and inclusive.

Our growth has been largely fuelled by domestic savings. However, we also accept that FDI would play a very important role in not only stepping up the investment rate but in also enabling transfer of technologies and the globalisation of Indian firms. I know that some concerns are voiced about our FDI policy. Our FDI policy, like any other policy, is an evolving policy.

I am happy to note that the foreign investors who are already doing business in India have had a satisfactory business experience in this country. According to a recent BCG study, the average return on capital employed for MNCs was 19 per cent. One half of the MNCs earned higher returns in India than their global average.

I understand that all the European and American banks operating in India are more profitable here than their global average. Samsung, LG and Hyundai have each built $1 billion businesses in India.

Investor confidence in India is all time high today. A T Kearney in 'The FDI Confidence Index 2005' has ranked India as the 2nd most attractive investment destination. 'World Investment Report, 2005' has ranked India as the 2nd most attractive investment destination among Transnational Corporations.

What has made the world sit up and suddenly take notice of India? It cannot be India's beauty queens, fashion shows or our cuisine. What has made the elephant dance? I'd like to spend the next few minutes flagging some of the factors, starting with growth performance.

Sustainable GDP growth

India's GDP growth over a decade after the economic reforms, from 1992-93 to 2000-01, averaged 6.3%. If that was unprecedented, look at what has happened in the last three years, the growth has been in the range of 7-8 per cent. In a global context, India's growth performance of the last decade and a half ranks among the top six in the world growth league -- along with China, Korea, Thailand, Singapore and Vietnam. In PPP (purchasing power parity) terms, the growth puts us among the top four in the world.

Remarkably, this growth has been achieved despite severe shocks, which could have crippled a less resilient economy.

What makes the Indian economy resilient and robust?

Higher earnings and savings

We are getting early indications that the country has managed to break away from the 2-4 per cent per capita growth average of the past. Goldman Sachs has estimated that the number of people with incomes over $3,000 could increase by nearly 14 times in the next decade. By 2025, according to one estimate, there could be more than 200 million new people earning incomes above $15,000.

Household savings have moved on to a higher growth trajectory -- in the late 1990s, savings of Indian households were pegged at 17 per cent of GDP -- but by the beginning of 2006 they were in excess of 29 per cent. I am convinced that by next year, we would have caught up with the savings rate in the ASEAN region.

Integration with global economy

Before economic reforms kicked in, India's exports accounted for less than 6 per cent of GDP. By the beginning of 2006, they accounted for more than 13 per cent. In a decade, India's goods and service exports have gone up by nearly eight times from $25 billion in 1991 to nearly $200 billion in early 2006.

External stability

Among emerging economies, India appears to be the most financially solvent. India's short-term debt to total external debt ratio is in single digits, close to only 5 per cent, far more conservative than other emerging countries, including China, Russia, Brazil and Thailand.

While outlining India's remarkable growth performance in recent years, I must make special mention of the service and manufacturing sectors -- since they've acted as the primary engines of this growth.

India's ongoing services boom

According to Dr Jeffrey Sachs, India is meeting almost 70 per cent of the world BPO market requirements. In software and services, India is already a leader in the low- and medium-technology area, and I am confident will have a growing presence in high-end technology consulting within the next two years. The 25-30% annual growth in services exports will continue in the next 6 years -- and that will take the 'invisible' exports to about $150 billion by the end of the decade.

Take, for example, the costs of doing clinical research in India. It is 40-60 per cent lower than in developed countries. Since clinical trials comprises around 70 per cent of total costs of a new drug, using India could bring down the average cost of $800 million for a new drug by around $200-250 million.

Let me turn to manufacturing.

Till a couple of years ago, our manufacturing sector contributed less than 20 per cent of GDP. Now, however, the industrial sector contributes 25 per cent of GDP.

The second and much bigger wave of manufacturing off-shoring is yet to come. The first wave consisted mostly of labour intensive items. The second wave, just beginning, could reach $1.6 trillion annually, will consist of skill intensive manufacturing. This will work to India's advantage.

More than any other country in Asia with the possible exception of Korea and Japan, the Indian engineering eco-system has helped homegrown Indian companies make a mark on the global stage. We now have among the world's largest manufacturers of motorcycles, automobile parts, forgings, commercial vehicles, optical storage devices and many other products.

Infrastructure

Needless to say, we are all well aware that shortage of infrastructure has been our problem for a number of decades. But we've started to put our house in order. Reforms cut across various sub-sectors of infrastructure including, roads, airports, ports, power and urban utilities. In the rural areas, a major programme for developing rural infrastructure known as Bharat Nirman has been launched.

It has taken India fourteen years to evolve from a poor and perhaps forgotten country to a thriving and increasingly noticed emerging economy. I am confident that it would take us much shorter than 14 years to join the league of developed nations.

Thank you.

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