(Indian Economic Development) CHAPTER-10 : COMPARATIVE DEVELOPMENT EXPERIENCES OF INDIA AND ITS NEIGHBOURS (NCERT Class-XII)

  • Nations have been primarily trying to adopt various means which will strengthen their own domestic economies. 
  • To this effect, they are forming regional and global economic groupings such as the SAARC, European Union, ASEAN, G-8, G-20, BRICS etc.
  • In addition, there is also an increasing eagerness on the parts of various nations to try and understand the developmental processes pursued by their neighbouring nations as it allows them to better comprehend their own strengths and weaknesses vis-à-vis their neighbours.
  • In the unfolding process of globalisation, this is particularly considered essential by developing countries as they face competition not only from developed nations but also amongst themselves in the relatively limited economic space enjoyed by the developing world.
  • In this chapter we will compare the developmental strategies pursued by India and the largest two of its neighbouring economies—Pakistan and China. 
  • It has to be remembered that despite being endowed with vast natural resources, there is little similarity between the political power setup of India – the largest democracy of the world which is wedded to a secular and deeply liberal Constitution for over half a century, and the militarist political power structure of Pakistan or the command economy of China that has only recently started moving towards a democratic system and more liberal economic restructuring respectively.

DEVELOPMENTAL PATH—A SNAPSHOT VIEW

  • Do you know that India, Pakistan and China have many similarities in their developmental strategies? All the three nations have started towards their developmental path at the same time. 
  • While India and Pakistan became independent nations in 1947, People‘s Republic of China was established in 1949. 
  • In a speech at that time Jawaharlal Nehru had said, ―these new and revolutionary changes in China and India, even though they differ in content, symbolise the new spirit of Asia and new vitality which is finding expression in the countries in Asia.
  • All the three countries had started planning their development strategies in similar ways. While India announced its first Five Year Plan for 1951-56, Pakistan announced its first five year plan, now called the Medium Term Development Plan, in 1956. 
  • China announced its First Five Year Plan in 1953. 
  • Till 1998, Pakistan had eight five year plans whereas China‘s tenth five year period was 2001-06. The current planning in India is based on Eleventh Five Year Plan (2007-12). India and Pakistan adopted similar strategies such as creating a large public sector and raising public expenditure on social development. 
  • Till the 1980s, all the three countries had similar growth rates and per capita incomes. Where do they stand today in comparison to one another? Before we answer this question let us trace the historical path of developmental policies in China and Pakistan. 
  • China: After the establishment of People‘s Republic of China under one- party rule, all the critical sectors of the economy, enterprises and lands owned and operated by individuals were brought under government control. 
  • The Great Leap Forward (GLF) campaign initiated in 1958 aimed at industrialising the country on a massive scale. People were encouraged to set up industries in their backyards. In rural areas, communes were started. Under the Commune system, people collectively cultivated lands.
  • In 1958, there were 26,000 communes covering almost all the farm population.
  • GLF campaign met with many problems. A severe drought caused havoc in China killing about 30 million people.
  • When Russia had conflicts with China, it withdrew its professionals who had earlier been sent to China to help in the industrialisation process. In 1965, Mao introduced the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution (1966-76) under which students and professionals were sent to work and learn from the countryside.
  • The present-day fast industrial growth in China can be traced back to the reforms introduced in 1978. China introduced reforms in phases.
  • In the initial phase, reforms were initiated in agriculture, foreign trade and investment sectors.
  • In agriculture, for instance, commune lands were divided into small plots which were allocated (for use not ownership) to individual households. They were allowed to keep all income from the land after paying stipulated taxes.
  • In the later phase, reforms were initiated in the industrial sector. Private sector firms, in general, and township and village enterprises, i.e. those enterprises which were owned and operated by local collectives, in particular, were allowed to produce goods.
  • At this stage, enterprises owned by government (known as State Owned Enterprises— SOEs), which we, in India, call public sector enterprises, were made to face competition.
  • The reform process also involved dual pricing. This means fixing the prices in two ways; farmers and industrial units were required to buy and sell fixed quantities of inputs and outputs on the basis of prices fixed by the government and the rest were purchased and sold at market prices.
  • Over the years, as production increased, the proportion of goods or inputs transacted in the market also increased. In order to attract foreign investors, special economic zones were set up.

Pakistan:

  • Pakistan adopted various economic policies, that have many similarities with India.
  • Pakistan also follows the mixed economy model with co-existence of public and private sectors. In the late 1950s and 1960s, Pakistan introduced a variety of regulated policy framework (for import substitution industrialization).
  • The policy combined tariff protection for manufacturing of consumer goods together with direct import controls on competing imports.
  • The introduction of Green Revolution led to mechanization and increase in public investment in infrastructure in select areas, which finally led to a rise in the production of food grains.
  • This changed the agrarian structure dramatically. In the 1970s, nationalization of capital goods industries took place. Pakistan then shifted its policy orientation in the late 1970s and 1980s when the major thrust areas were denationalization and encouragement to private sector.
  • During this period, Pakistan also received financial support from western nations and remittances from continuously increasing outflow of emigrants to the Middle-east. This helped the country in stimulating economic growth. The then government also offered incentives to the private sector.
  • All this created a conducive climate for new investments. In 1988, reforms were initiated in the country. Having studied a brief outline of the developmental strategies of China and Pakistan, let us now compare some of the developmental indicators of India, China and Pakistan.

DEMOGRAPHIC INDICATORS

  • If we look at the global population, out of every six persons living in this world, one is an Indian and another Chinese. 
  • The population of Pakistan is very small and accounts for roughly about one-tenth of China or India.
  • Though China is the largest nation and geographically occupies the largest area among the three nations, its density is the lowest. 
  • Scholars point out the one- child norm introduced in China in the late 1970s as the major reason for low population growth. 
  • They also state that this measure led to a decline in the sex ratio, the proportion of females per 1000 males. 
  • the sex ratio is low and biased against females in all the three countries. Scholars cite son- preference prevailing in all these countries as the reason.
  • In recent times, all the three countries are adopting various measures to improve the situation.
  • One-child norm and the resultant arrest in the growth of population also have other implications. For instance, after a few decades, in China, there will be more elderly people in proportion to young people.
  • This will force China to take steps to provide social security measures with fewer workers. 
  • The fertility rate is also low in China and very high in Pakistan.
  • Urbanisation is high in both Pakistan and China with India having 28 per cent of its people living in urban areas

GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT AND SECTORS (Data may vary with compared to the recent trend)

  • One of the much-talked issues around the world about China is its growth of Gross Domestic Product. China has the second largest GDP (PPP) of $10.1 trillion whereas India‘s GDP (PPP) is $4.2 trillion and Pakistan‘s GDP is $0.47 trillion, roughly about 10 per cent of India‘s GDP.
  • When many developed countries were finding it difficult to maintain a growth rate of even 5 per cent, China was able to maintain near double-digit growth for more than two decades as can be seen from Table 
  • Also notice that in the 1980s Pakistan was ahead of India; China was having doubledigit growth and India was at the bottom. In 2000-10, there is a marginal decline in India and 
  • China‘s growth rates whereas Pakistan met with drastic decline at 4.7 per cent. 
  • Some scholars hold the reform processes introduced in 1988 in Pakistan and political instability as reasons behind this trend. We will study in a later section which sector contributed to this trend in these countries.
  • First, look at how people engaged in different sectors contribute to Gross Domestic Product.
  • It was pointed out in the previous section that China and Pakistan have more proportion of urban people than India.
  • In China due to topographic and climatic conditions, the area suitable for cultivation is relatively small — only about 10 per cent of its total land area.
  • The total cultivable area in China accounts for 40 per cent of the cultivable area in India.
  • Until the 1980s, more than 80 per cent of the people in China were dependent on farming as their sole source of livelihood.
  • Since then, the government encouraged people to leave their fields and pursue other activities such as handicrafts, commerce and transport. In 2008, with 40 per cent of its workforce engaged in agriculture, its contribution to GDP in China is 10 per cent.
  • In both India and Pakistan, the contribution of agriculture to GDP were at 19 and 21 per cent, respectively, but the proportion of workforce that works in this sector is more in India.
  • In Pakistan, about 45 per cent of people work in agriculture whereas in India it is 56 per cent. 
  • The sectoral share of output and employment also shows that in all the three economies, the industry and service sectors have less proportion of workforce but contribute more in terms of output.
  • In China manufacturing contributes the highest to GDP at 47 per cent whereas in India and Pakistan, it is the service sector which contributes the highest. In both these countries, service sector accounts for more than 50 per cent of GDP.
  • In the normal course of development, countries first shift their employment and output from agriculture to manufacturing and then to services.
  • The proportion of workforce engaged in manufacturing in India and Pakistan were low at 19 and 20 per cent respectively.
  • The contribution of industries to GDP is also just equal to or marginally higher than the output from agriculture. In India and Pakistan, the shift is taking place directly to the service sector. 
  • Thus, in both India and Pakistan, the service sector is emerging as a major player of development. It contributes more to GDP and, at the same time, emerges as a prospective employer.
  • If we look at the proportion of workforce in the1980s, Pakistan was faster in shifting its workforce to service sector than India and China In the 1980s, India, China and Pakistan employed 17, 12 and 27 per cent of its workforce in the service sector respectively. In 2008-10, it has reached the level of 25, 33 and 35 per cent, respectively.
  • In the last two decades, the growth of agriculture sector, which employs the largest proportion of workforce in all the three countries, has declined.
  • In the industrial sector, China has maintained a double-digit growth ratewhereas for India and Pakistan growth rate has declined. In the case of service sector, China has been able to raise its rate of growth in 2008-10 while India and Pakistan stagnated with their service sector growth.
  • Thus, China‘s growth is mainly contributed by the manufacturing sector and India‘s growth by service sector. During this period, Pakistan has shown deceleration in all the three sectors

INDICATORS OF HUMAN DEVELOPMENT

  • China is moving ahead of India and Pakistan. This is true for many indicators income indicator such as GDP per capita, or proportion of population below poverty line or health indicators such as mortality rates, access to sanitation, literacy, life expectancy or malnourishment. 
  • Pakistan is ahead of India in reducing proportion of people below the poverty line and also its performance in education, sanitation and access to water is better than India. But neither of these two countries have been able to save women from maternal mortality.
  • In China, for one lakh births, only 38 women die whereas in India and Pakistan, more than 200 women die. 
  • Surprisingly all the three countries report providing improved water sources for most of its population.
  • the proportion of people below the international poverty rate of $1 a day, India has the largest share of poor among the three countries.
  • Along with these, we also need what may be called  liberty indicators‘. 
  • One such indicator has actually been added as a measure of the extent of democratic participation in social and political decision-making’ but it has not been given any extra weight.
  • liberty indicators‘ like measures of ‘the extent of Constitutional protection given to rights of citizens‘ or the extent of constitutional protection of the Independence of the Judiciary and the Rule of Law‘ have not even been introduced so far.
  • Without including these (and perhaps some more) and giving them overriding importance in the list, the construction of a human development index may be said to be incomplete and its usefulness limited.

DEVELOPMENT STRATEGIES — AN APPRAISAL

  • It is common to find developmental strategies of a country as a model to others for lessons and guidance for their own development. It is particularly evident after the introduction of the reform process in different parts of the world.
  • Though countries go through their development phases differently, let us take the initiation of reforms as a point of reference. 
  • reforms were initiated in China in 1978, Pakistan in 1988 and India in 1991. Let us briefly assess their achievements and failures in pre- and post-reform periods.
  • Why did China introduce structural reforms in 1978? China did not have any compulsion to introduce reforms as dictated by the World Bank and International Monetary Fund to India and Pakistan.
  • The new leadership at that time in China was not happy with the slow pace of growth and lack of modernization in the Chinese economy under the Maoist rule.
  • They felt that Maoist vision of economic development based on decentralization, self sufficiency and shunning of foreign technology, goods and capital had failed.
  • Despite extensive land reforms, collectivization, the Great Leap Forward and other initiatives, the per capita grain output in 1978 was the same as it was in the mid-1950s.
  • It was found that establishment of infrastructure in the areas of education and health, land reforms, long existence of decentralized planning and existence of small enterprises had helped positively in improving the social and income indicators in the
  • post reform period. Before the introduction of reforms, there had already been massive extension of basic health services in rural areas. 
  • Through the commune system, there was more equitable distribution of food grains. Experts also point out that each reform measure was first implemented at a smaller level and then extended on a massive scale.
  • The experimentation under decentralized government enabled to assess the economic, social and political costs of success or failure.
  • For instance, when reforms were made in agriculture, as pointed out earlier by handing over plots of land to individuals for cultivation, it brought prosperity to a vast number of poor people.
  • It created conditions for the subsequent phenomenal growth in rural industries and built up a strong support base for more reforms. 
  • Though the data on international poverty line for Pakistan is quite healthy, scholars using the official data of Pakistan indicate rising poverty there.
  • The reasons for the slow-down of growth and re-emergence of poverty in Pakistan‘s economy, as scholars put it, are agricultural growth and food supply situation were based not on an institutionalized process of technical change but on good harvest.
  • When there was a good harvest, the economy was in good condition, when it was not, the economic indicators showed stagnation or negative trends.
  • India had to borrow from the IMF and World Bank to set right its balance of payments crisis; foreign exchange is an essential component for any country and it is important to know how it can be earned.
  • If a country is able to build up its foreign exchange earnings by sustainable export of manufactured goods, it need not worry. In Pakistan most foreign exchange earnings came from remittances from Pakistani workers in the Middle-east and the exports of highly volatile agricultural products; there was also growing dependence on foreign loans on the one hand and increasing difficulty in paying back the loans on the other.
  • To quote, ―the economy is under stress as the floods, delays in implementation of economic reforms; dilapidated security situation and low foreign direct investment inflows are hampering growth in all major sectors. 
  • Massive floods took a heavy toll on agriculture and infrastructure while energy crisis coupled with steep decline in foreign direct investment is soaking up business activity. Besides facing high rates of inflation and rapid privatization, the government is increasing the expenditure on various areas that can reduce poverty.

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