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India's Reforms - How they Produced Inclusive Growth (Hardcover, New)
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India's Reforms - How they Produced Inclusive Growth (Hardcover, New)
Series: Studies in Indian Economic Policies
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When India embraced systematic economic reforms in 1991 and began
opening its economy to both domestic and foreign competition,
critics argued that they had contributed little to the acceleration
of economic growth. Their argument had rested on the claim that
growth in the 1990s was no faster than in the 1980s. This claim was
quickly refuted on the grounds that when properly evaluated, growth
had indeed accelerated in the 1990s and, more importantly, while
reforms had been made systematic in 1991, they had actually begun
much earlier in the late 1970s. Subsequently, the reforms of the
late 1990s and early 2000s have led to a jump in the growth rate
from six percent in the 1990s to eight to nine percent beginning in
2003. The reforms have also led to a major structural change in the
economy: the trade to GDP ratio tripled since 1991, there has been
a gigantic expansion of foreign investment in India, and sectors
such as telecommunications, airlines, and automobiles have expanded
at rates much higher than those observed any time in the past. This
dramatic turn-around has led the critics to shift ground. They now
argue that opening the economy to trade has hurt the poor; that
rapid growth is leaving the socially disadvantaged groups behind;
and that the reforms have led to increased inequality. They also
argue that people themselves do not feel that their fortunes are
improving. The five original essays in this volume, topped by a
substantial introductory essay summarizing their findings, take
these challenges head on. They use large-scale sample surveys and
other data to systematically address each of these arguments. They
show that trade openness has indeed helped reduce poverty not just
in general but also among the socially disadvantaged groups. The
contributors to the volume find no evidence whatsoever in favor of
a negative impact of trade openness on poverty on any groups. The
essays also show that inequality shows no clear trend and is
unrelated to trade openness. Peoples responses have also now turned
grossly in favor of reforms. Thus, when asked how they feel about
the change in their fortunes in the recent past, an overwhelmingly
large proportion of individuals from every conceivable group report
improvements. Moreover, systematic analysis of the 2009
parliamentary elections show that people now reward the Chief
Ministers in states in which they deliver superior growth outcomes
and punish those that do not. This book is the first volume in the
series Studies in Indian Economic Policies edited by Jagdish
Bhagwati and Arvind Panagariya and published by OUP. It contains
the first set of five original papers produced under the auspices
of the Columbia Program on Indian Economic Policies housed in the
School of International and Public Affairs (SIPA) and the Institute
for Social and Economic Research and Policy (ISERP).
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