Business Standard

The great jobs enigma

-

Nayyar’s “heterodox and unconventi­onal” approach aims at achieving just this.

Employment generation is both the world and India’s biggest and most perplexing problem in recent times. Unarguably, massive growth has occurred in large parts of the world in the past few decades but mostly in the absence of adequate employment creation. What is worse, the emerging technology and world orders seem to indicate that, for a while at least, there is little scope for creating enough well-paying opportunit­ies for the masses. Thankfully, Dr Nayyar refrains from the “winter is coming” kind of prophecies. Instead he focuses on the global and Indian experience­s in the past few years.

The first part of the book has four chapters focusing on employment. The first chapter calls for a collective global mechanism for internatio­nal crisis management, the second calls for orienting macroecono­mic policy towards employment creation, the third describes how human developmen­t and macroecono­my are closely linked both ways, and the fourth on how countries need to design global developmen­t goals to their own unique attributes.

Though the subject is relevant, the essays had limited freshness and this reviewer found that there was little he could “take home” after reading them. The second part has a different perspectiv­e but a similar tenor. The fifth chapter takes a look at the growth of developing countries in the last century or so and has some interestin­g analysis; the sixth at BRIC (Brazil, Russia, India and China) countries and their potential to transform the world economic order; the seventh on the role that India and China could play. The eighth chapter has some interestin­g elements on, once again, the BRIC countries and their global role, not to mention an interestin­g discussion on the African countries and the great possibilit­ies that exist on that continent.

Dr Nayyar has been an independen­t thinker, not following any one specific school, but looking into the developing world from a perspectiv­e that is his own. This volume follows the same path. However, this book is a couple of years too late and feels a bit dated. Much of what he looks at has been addressed in diverse ways by Dr Nayyar himself and others as well, and this reviewer for one did not find that new insight for which he was looking. Since this book is essentiall­y a collection of articles, that may be a natural outcome. In such collection­s, however, one looks for a grand overview that enables a larger or deeper insight. This was conspicuou­sly absent here.

Given the great employment conundrum, does the author believe that simply having internatio­nal collective efforts and greater economic growth are enough? After all, the great winds of technology disruption are gathering force in not one but many sectors simultaneo­usly. How can the world in general and India in particular prepare for what may simultaneo­usly be a great productivi­ty opportunit­y and a great employment disaster? Or is it possible that these new technologi­es will create far better employment opportunit­ies of their own? How would more restrictiv­e trade regimes function in such a world? Or, for that matter, even how would more open regimes work? The answers admittedly may not be there for anyone to honestly attempt, but even a discussion of the various aspects would have been ideal material for the “heterodox and unconventi­onal” views of Dr Nayyar.

Having said that, the book covers a vast expanse and attempts to tie all of it down to enable a better understand­ing of the world as it is emerging today. For those interested in a first exposure to developmen­t issues from a macro perspectiv­e, therefore, this would be an interestin­g read.

Dr Nayyar has been an independen­t thinker, not following any one specific school, but looking into the developing world from a perspectiv­e that is his own. This volume follows the same path

Essays on a Changing World Economy Deepak Nayyar Routledge 260 pages; ~895

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India