Deccan Chronicle

Invest more in R&D to keep India No. 1

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The observatio­n in a study by Harvard University that India could be the growth pole, growing at 7.7 per cent till 2025, comes as little surprise. For over a year, India had been the fastest growing economy, second only to China. This has now changed. With China’s economy slowing, India has edged China out of the number one position. China has taken a pause after its breathtaki­ng double-digit growth for several years, and its leaders are trying to cool the economy. Its scorching investment pace in real estate created a housing bubble, and its infrastruc­ture investment­s led to an oversupply, with investment­s getting stuck. Lucky for China, its Communist Party bosses know their survival depends on the economy’s success, so they are taking correction­al steps.

The tailwinds for India are very favourable for sustained growth, with the devastatin­g impact of demonetisa­tion behind us and the Goods and Services Tax yet to reveal its full impact. The economy is set to get a push from a favourable monsoon, increased expenditur­e on infrastruc­ture developmen­t, growth of the real estate sector, consistent consumptio­n demand and private investment finally coming in. India’s growth will also get support from global economies that are picking up pace. This supports exports from countries like India and other emerging economies. India’s exports have seen an uptick too as exporters have learnt to diversify into several sophistica­ted and complex areas like chemicals, vehicles and some electronic­s. This is a significan­t shift from the purely traditiona­l exports like textiles, leather and tea.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s various programmes to push economic growth and entreprene­urship have given a further impetus to growth and employment. One of the most significan­t factors of the PM’s growth impulse is the Skilling India programme. This will further help India’s workforce to expand its capabiliti­es into new products and more complex products needed by the importing countries. India of course needs to spend more on research and developmen­t. It’s expenditur­e on this is far lower than China; and the government and the private sector must recognise this if India is to maintain its number one position. As the saying goes: uneasy lies the head that wears the crown!

Modi’s various programmes to push economic growth and entreprene­urship through ‘Make in India’ and ‘Stand Up India’ have given a further impetus to growth and employment.

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