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A Summary of Indian Economy (with politics and demography)

A Summary of Indian Economy (with politics and demography). Tapen Sinha AXA Chair Professor, ITAM, Mexico Special Professor, University of Nottingham, UK. Outline. Democracy Demography Macroeconomic performance Role of the government Broad sectoral performance Trade and investment

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A Summary of Indian Economy (with politics and demography)

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  1. A Summary of Indian Economy(with politics and demography) Tapen Sinha AXA Chair Professor, ITAM, Mexico Special Professor, University of Nottingham, UK

  2. Outline • Democracy • Demography • Macroeconomic performance • Role of the government • Broad sectoral performance • Trade and investment • Socioeconomic problems • Macroeconomic modelling of the future

  3. Election in India • 670 million voters • One million electronic voting machines • The machines cost around US$100 • No electricity is needed: 6 volt battery • Design is akin to a “black box” in aircraft • Once a vote is cast, it is impossible to repeat • Counting is done in a few hours • Box stuffing is virtually impossible • Invalid votes used to exceed the winning margin

  4. Election Results of 2009

  5. Current demographics • Population: 1,189,172,906 (July 2011 est.) • (Mexico: 111,211,789) • Age structure: • 0-14 years: 31.1% • 15-64 years: 63.6% • 65 years and over: 5.3% • Median age: 25.3 years • (Mexico 26.3)

  6. Current demographics • Population growth rate: 1.55% (2010 est.) • (Mexico: 1.13%) • Birth rate: 22.01 births/1,000 population • (Mexico 19.71%) • Death rate: 8.18 deaths/1,000 population • (Mexico 4.78%) • Net migration rate: -0.07 migrant(s)/1,000 • (Mexico -3.61)

  7. Current demographics • Sex ratio: • at birth: 1.05 male(s)/female • (Mexico 1.05) • under 15 years: 1.06 male(s)/female • (Mexico 1.04) • 15-64 years: 1.07 male(s)/female • (Mexico 0.94) • 65 years and over: 1.02 male(s)/female • (Mexico 0.82) • Total population: 1.06 male(s)/female • (Mexico 0.96)

  8. Why is there an imbalance of sexes? • In many Asian countries the ratio of male tofemale population is higher than in theWest • As high as 1.07 in China and India, and evenhigher in Pakistan. • Amartya Sen, 1992has suggested that this imbalance reflects excessfemale mortality • As a result, he has argued that as many as 100 million women aremissing

  9. Sex Ratio in India 1961-2001

  10. Preston Curve

  11. Current rate 55, Mexico 21, US 6.5 and Singapore 2.2

  12. India has a large rural population This is very different from the Latin American experience

  13. Is India densely populated? • Are there too many people in Holland? • Population density highest in the world are Hong Kong and Singapore over 6,300 per square km • Perception versus reality: Indian ranks below Bangladesh (1,000), Belgium, the Netherlands and Japan (400+) • India has 330 persons per square km (rank 15) • Mexico ranks 117 • The story of The Little Prince

  14. Macroeconomic performance • Measure of general well being is measured by per capita income • But which per capita income • Atlas Method • PPP Method • Reason they do not coincide is that the exchange rates do not reflect underlying purchasing power: BigMac Index

  15. Comparing per capita income: India China 1700-2000

  16. Healthcare expenditure is extremely uneven in India

  17. Sectoral • Agriculture: how it is shrinking but not demographics • Industry: the industry puzzle • Services • Banking/Finance • IT – the expanding role (cyber cafes and post offices)

  18. Socio-economic problems • Human development • Poverty • Corruption • Unemployment • Regional imbalance • Ethnic-religious problems

  19. HDI

  20. Poverty

  21. Corruption

  22. 1.5

  23. Role of the state • State planning • Over half a century, India has undergone ten five year plans • Problem: What is planned does not necessarily happen • The idea was to have key sectors under state control: defense, electricity, roads, education (public goods) • Later it expanded to other things: insurance business, banking, sugar mills • Public expenditure and receipts: what goes where

  24. Government does not do things well • Why? Incentives are wrong • Most activities are NOT driven by needs • They are driven by politics • Example 1: public education problem • Example 2: salaries of comparable public and private sector jobs • Note: Mexican case

  25. Government: Role of the state • Deficit(t)=Revenue(t) minus Expenditure(t) • Debt(t)=Deficit(t)plusDeficit(t-1)plus…. • They are usually measured as a percentage of GDP: GDP gives a proxy of ability to pay • Is high debt to GDP ratio bad? • Note: debt is not all foreign debt

  26. Are government bonds net wealth • Government deficit can be financed in two ways: printing money or issuing bonds • But bonds have to be paid • How does government pay for outstanding debt – by taxing • Who does it tax • Portfolio of people: government bonds versus private bonds or stocks

  27. What is the difference between pre-crisis and post-crisis periods?

  28. Government revenue • In the developed countries, they mainly come from income taxes • In India, 8% people work in the formal sector • Most taxes come from customs duty and other types of indirect avoidable taxes • Government revenue is around 8% of GDP

  29. Government expenses • Policy: free rural electricity • It benefits the rural rich, it distorts the use of energy for production • Policy: highly subsidized seeds and fertilizer • Most subsistence farmers do not benefit from them, it benefits the agri-business • It distorts incentives for farming

  30. Trade • Trade and investment • Internal trade and infrastructure • External trade • Domestic saving and investment • Foreign investment

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