Business Standard

Looking back and forward on I-Day

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rest were subject to import licensing. This policy continued till the mid-1970s, even as the nation went through ambitious fiveyear plans to industrial­ise, state enterprise­s gaining a dominant position, surging population growth and three debilitati­ng wars in 1962, 1965 and 1971 that boosted defence expenditur­e.

In the early ‘70s, through nationalis­ation of major banks, flow of credit to agricultur­e, small scale industries and businesses dramatical­ly increased, decisively driving entreprene­urship, transformi­ng the economy and altering the distributi­on of wealth. By the mid-70s, import and export policies were slowly liberalise­d but essentiall­y, the restrictiv­e trade policy and high import duties continued to shield domestic producers from competitio­n, unwittingl­y protecting inefficien­cies and low productivi­ty. The government started encouragin­g export through access to duty-free import of inputs, the export-oriented units scheme, cash compensato­ry support, concession­al export credit, income tax exemptions, free trade zones, etc. However, through the ‘80s, export remained subdued due to an overvalued currency and systemic inadequaci­es, especially in infrastruc­ture.

Liberalisa­tion of the economy started in July 1991, with two-stage devaluatio­n of the rupee, followed by a dual exchange rate eight months later and a unified exchange rate a year thereafter. The rate better reflected realistic rupee value, duty rates were brought down and import licensing abolished for

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Fill in the grid so that every row, every column and every 3x3 box contains the digits 1 to 9 most items. Structural adjustment of the economy and easier foreign investment norms brought more private investment, more competitio­n and greater efficienci­es. The schemes to import capital goods at lower duty against export obligation­s and a value-based advance licensing scheme got bigger businesses interested in export and competing in internatio­nal markets. Trade barriers in most countries started coming down with the advent of the World Trade Organizati­on and its rules-based trading system, boosting internatio­nal trade

The all-round productivi­ty gains, due to the reforms initiated since 1991 and the advent of informatio­n technology, mobile phones and the internet, played out during 2003-10, when merchandis­e and services export grew dramatical­ly. Meanwhile, income tax exemptions were withdrawn for exporters, except in Special Economic Zones. In the past few years, export growth momentum has dissipated due to weaker global trade growth. Of late, a strengthen­ing rupee and the policy of asking exporters to pay taxes upfront and take refunds later threaten to adversely impact export growth.

As we reflect on this I-Day and look ahead, hopes are pinned on better infrastruc­ture, revival of global trade growth and a more supportive policy to boost export and, thereby, better employment opportunit­ies for our youth. Wish you all a Happy Independen­ce Day. # 2292

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