Industrial Sector Updates – Industrial Policy, Ease of Doing Business, etc.

Middle income trap

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: Not much

Mains level: Paper 3- How India can avoid the middle income trap

The article suggests focusing on improving productivity and thereby the manufacturing sector to avoid the middle-income trap.

What is the middle-income trap and why it matters for India

  • This trap was first conceived by World Bank economists.
  • They found that of the 101 developing economies that could be classified as ‘middle income’ in 1960, only 13 managed to become rich nations by 2008. 
  • There is little consensus on why some countries succeed in making the transition to high-income status.
  • But a distinctive attribute of those that succeed in the transition to high income is productivity improvement.
  • India could use its demographic dividend to avoid this predicament and achieve the critical velocity needed to move into the high-income bracket.

How can India avoid the middle-income trap

1) Improve productivity

  • Re-allocation of labour from low-productivity agriculture to high-productivity sectors, such as manufacturing, has been a primary channel through which today’s advanced economies raised their living standards.
  • In India, growth in labour productivity has consistently declined over the past decade.
  • The annual growth rate of output per worker has dipped from 7.9% in 2010 to 3.5% in 2019, as per International Labour Organization estimates.
  • This was also a period of low growth in India’s manufacturing sector.
  • In 2020-21, it accounted for only 14.5% of India’s gross value added, down from 17.4% in 2011-12.
  • An essential first step in improving productivity would be strengthening this sector.

2) Strengthen manufacturing sector

  • Industrial labour relations is among the most critical elements to revitalize India’s manufacturing sector especially in the context of labour productivity.
  • These labour laws created incentives for firms to remain small and uncompetitive, thereby affecting productivity.
  • The new code, once implemented, would increase the threshold relating to layoffs and retrenchment in industrial establishments to 300 workers.
  • Other countries, such as China, Vietnam and Bangladesh, with whom India competes for foreign investment and export markets do not require the approval of administrative or judicial bodies for dismissals.
  • Therefore, in spite of recent reforms, India’s labour laws stay rigid in comparison with those of its competitor countries.

3) Technology intensive manufacturing

  • Engendering innovation in higher value-added, tech-intensive activities is important for economies before they reach that juncture.
  • If exports are taken as a proxy for the manufacturing capabilities and competitiveness of an economy, the present status of tech-intensive manufacturing in India leaves a lot to be desired.
  • As per World Bank data, high-tech exports accounted for only 10.3% of India’s manufacturing exports in 2019.
  • Rival countries had a much higher share of the same: 31% in China, 13% in Brazil, 40% in Vietnam and 24% in Thailand.
  • Low R&D spending in India, ranging from a mere 0.64% to 0.86% of gross domestic product over the past two decades, has held the country back.

Steps to improve tech-intensive manufacturing

  • The government has introduced a production-linked incentive scheme to ensure a greater share of local value addition.
  • While this would attract foreign investments in tech-intensive manufacturing, there is also a need for greater incentives for R&D investments by firms in India.
  • A first step in this direction could be reinstating the tax exemption on R&D under Section 35 (2AB), even for companies opting for the lower corporate tax rate of 22%.

Conclusion

We need appropriate interventions to improve productivity—both economy-wide and within the sector. And we must do it now.

Get an IAS/IPS ranker as your 1: 1 personal mentor for UPSC 2024

Attend Now

Subscribe
Notify of
0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

JOIN THE COMMUNITY

Join us across Social Media platforms.

💥Mentorship New Batch Launch
💥Mentorship New Batch Launch