GROWING
INDIA MUST SPEND MORE ON BASICS: AMARTYA SEN
By Arun Kumar (IANS), Washington, 14 August 2007
Nobel
laureate Amartya Sen says India must use resources generated by
its fast economic growth to remedy its continuing deficiencies in
basic health care, in school education and in rapidly expanding
physical infrastructure. "Money will continue to come very
rapidly into the government's hands if the fast economic growth
continues," he says in a commentary on "India At 60"
published Monday by Forbes.com, the website of leading American
business magazine.
"What
is critically important is to use these generated resources to remedy
India's continuing deficiencies, in particular in basic health care,
in school education and in rapidly expanding its physical infrastructure."
"In
some of these, the private sector can help," said Sen, the
Lamont University professor and a professor of economics and philosophy
at Harvard University who was the first Asian to be awarded the
Nobel Prize in Economics in 1998 "for his contributions to
welfare economics".
"But
a lot more has to be spent on public services themselves, in addition
to improving the system of delivery of these services, with more
attention paid to incentives and disciplines, and better cooperation
with the unions, consumer groups and other involved parties,"
he said himself posing the question, "Where will the money
come from?"
Sen's
answer: "If the total revenue, from taxes and other channels,
of the central and state governments keeps pace with the rapid growth
of the economy, when the economy is growing at eight percent a year,
that would be a big rate of increase of available funds for public
services.
GOVERNMENT
REVENUE HAS GROWN FASTER THAN GDP
"As
it happens, government revenue has persistently grown faster than
the growth of gross domestic product: in 2003-04, the economic growth
of 6.5 percent was exceeded by the revenue growth of 9.5 percent,
and in 2004-05 to 2006-07, the growth rates of 7.5 percent, 9 percent,
and 9.4 percent have been bettered, respectively, by the expansion
rates of government revenue (in "real terms"-that is corrected
for price change) of 12.5 percent, 9.7 percent and 11.2 percent."
"As
we look back over the last 60 years, some things have happened well
enough, and some, where the gaps were large, have started to catch
up.
However,
there are other areas in which there are still huge shortfalls,"
Sen said. "These gaps would need to be urgently remedied. We
know what to do, and there are resources to do it. What we need
now is some determined action to do what we can do and must do."
DEMOCRACY
HAS FLOURISHED NICELY IN INDIA
Noting
"democracy has indeed flourished nicely in India", the
Nobel laureate said, "The story is very different on the economic
side. The growth rate of the Indian economy remained stuck at its
low traditional point of three percent a year for a very long time.
The economic policies needed substantial reform."
"In
the old days, some wise guys used to put forward the thesis that
India's growth rate was low because of its democracy, which seemed
to many of us rather ridiculous. But with continued low growth,
that anti-democratic point of view gained some ground among high-octane
commentators (never with the general public, though).
"When
India changed its economic policies, the growth rate picked up as
expected, without India becoming any less of a democracy to achieve
this result," Sen said noting, "The economic changes came
amid much hesitation and huge resistance.
"When
Manmohan Singh came to office in the early 1990s as the newly appointed
finance minister, in a government led by the Congress party, he
knew these problems well enough, as someone who had been strongly
involved in government administration for a long time," said
Sen who was once Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's colleague as a
professor at Delhi University.
"And
Singh's response was sure-footed though cautious, given the complex
politics of policy reorientation. While the going has been rough
from time to time, the direction of policy change has been unmistakable
from that point onwards, endorsed even by successor governments
run by other political parties."
India
is now getting used to its much higher rate of growth, first around
six percent a year and now about eight percent, occasionally touching
nine percent, Sen said.
GROWTH
FRON NEWER INDUSTRIES
It
is also remarkable that India's main success has come not in traditional
areas of exports but largely on newer industries, with a large component
of high-tech, such as the information technology industry, which
has rapidly grown to be a giant from a very modest beginning.
Another
area is that of pharmaceuticals. Even though in that field the Indian
entry began with generic drugs (with a huge reduction-sometimes
a cut of 80 percent or so in the price for many essential drugs,
like AIDS medicines), it is now going much more into new research
as well, he noted.
There
is reason enough to celebrate many things happening in India right
now. But there are failures as well, which need urgent attention,
Sen said citing widespread under nourishment, the astonishing neglect
of elementary education in India and low life expectancy as examples.
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