Economic Indicators and Various Reports On It- GDP, FD, EODB, WIR etc

India as a ‘developed’ country: where we are, and the challenges ahead

Note4Students

From UPSC perspective, the following things are important :

Prelims level: GDP, GNI

Mains level: India's roadmap for development

In his Independence Day address, PM asked Indians to embrace the “Panch Pran” — five vows — by 2047 when the country celebrates 100 years of independence.

What are the Panch Prans?

  • Calling it the ‘panch pran‘ — the five resolutions to help India become a developed nation in the next 25 years — PM said:
  1. Every Indian should focus on developing the country;
  2. 100 per cent freedom from slavery (100% Azadi from Ghulami);
  3. Taking pride in Indian heritage;
  4. Ensuring importance is given to unity and integrity and
  5. Every citizen should be responsible

What is a “developed” country?

  • Different global bodies and agencies classify countries differently.
  • The ‘World Economic Situation and Prospects’ of the United Nations classifies countries into three broad categories: developed economies, economies in transition, and developing economies.
  • The idea is “to reflect basic economic country conditions”, and the categories “are not strictly aligned with the regional classifications”.
  • So, it isn’t as though all European countries are “developed”, and all Asian ones are “developing”.
  • To categorise countries by economic conditions, the United Nations uses the World Bank’s categorisation, based on Gross National Income (GNI) per capita (in current US dollars).

Issues with such categorization

  • But the UN’s nomenclature of “developed” and “developing” is being used less and less, and is often contested.
  • Former US President Donald Trump had criticised the categorisation of China as a “developing” country, which allowed it to enjoy some benefits in the World Trade Organization.
  • If China is a “developing” country, then the US should also be “made” one, Donald Trump once said.

But why is the United Nations classification contested?

  • It can be argued that the UN classification is not very accurate and, as such, has limited analytical value.
  • Only the top three mentioned in chart 3 alongside — the US, the UK and Norway — fall in the developed country category.
  • Today, there are 31 developed countries according to the UN in all.
  • All the rest — except 17 “economies in transition” — are designated as “developing” countries, even though in terms of proportion, China’s per capita income is closer to Norway’s than Somalia’s.
  • China’s per capita income is 26 times that of Somalia’s while Norway’s is just about seven times that of China’s.
  • Then there are countries — such as Ukraine, with a per capita GNI of $4,120 (a third of China’s) — that are designated as “economies in transition”.

Where does India stand?

  • As chart 2 shows, India is currently far behind both the so-called developed countries, as well as some developing countries.
  • Often, the discourse is on the absolute level of GDP (gross domestic product).
  • On that metric, India is one of the biggest economies of the world — even though the US and China remain far ahead.
  • However, to be classified as a “developed” country, the average income of a country’s people matters more.
  • And on per capita income, India is behind even Bangladesh.
  • China’s per capita income is 5.5 times that of India, and the UK’s is almost 33 times.

India’s progress

  • India has made a secular improvement on HDI metrics.
  • For instance, the life expectancy at birth (one of the sub-metrics of HDI) in India has gone from around 40 years in 1947 to around 70 years now.
  • India has also taken giant strides in education enrolment at all three levels — primary, secondary, and tertiary.

What is the distance left to cover?

  • When compared to the developed countries or China, India has a fair distance to cover.
  • Even though India is the world’s third-largest economy in purchasing power parity (PPP) terms, most Indians are still relatively poor compared to people in other middle income or rich countries.
  • Ten per cent of Indians, at most, have consumption levels above the commonly used threshold of $10 (PPP) per day expenditures for the global middle class.
  • Other metrics, such as the food share of consumption, suggest that even rich households in India would have to see a substantial expansion of their total consumption to reach levels of poor households in rich countries.

How much can India achieve by 2047?

  • One way to make this assessment is to look at how long other countries took to get there.
  • For instance, in per capita income terms, Norway was at India’s current level 56 years ago — in the year 1966.
  • Comparing India to China is more useful. China reached that mark in 2007.
  • Theoretically then, if India were to grow as fast as China did between 2007 and 2022, then, broadly speaking, it will take India another 15 years to be where China is now.
  • But then, China’s current per capita income was achieved by the developed countries several decades earlier — the UK in 1987, the US and Norway in 1979.

Where does India lag?

  • India’s current HDI score (0.64) is much lower than what any of the developed countries had even in 1980.
  • China reached the 0.64 level in 2004, and took another 13 year to reach the 0.75 level — that, incidentally, is the level at which the UK was in 1980.

What can India achieve by 2047?

  • The World Bank’s 2018 report had made a mention of what India could achieve by 2047.
  • By 2047 — the centenary of its independence — at least half its citizens could join the ranks of the global middle class.
  • By most definitions, this will mean that households have access to better education and health care, clean water, improved sanitation, reliable electricity, a safe environment, affordable housing, and enough discretionary income to spend on leisure pursuits.

Way forward

  • Fulfilling these aspirations requires income well above the extreme poverty line, as well as vastly improved public service delivery.
  • To see this in perspective, note that at the last count, as of 2013, India had 218 million people living in extreme poverty — which made India home to the poorest people in the world.

 

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