Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Build a new economic imaginatio­n

Move beyond State-market, rural-urban, agri-non agri and welfare-growth binaries. They are linked

- EKHALA ISHNAMUR MINI AR Yamini Aiyar is president and chief executive, Centre for Policy Research. Mekhala Krishnamur­thy is a senior fellow and director of the State Capacity Initiative, CPR and associate professor, Ashoka University The views expressed

This has been a difficult three months for India. The policy response to the coronaviru­s disease (Covid-19) and the lockdown has forced it to confront long-ignored realities about the Indian economy— its fragility, regional and spatial concentrat­ion and deep structural inequity. It also made visible sources of precarious resilience. Agricultur­e and associated supply chains, for instance, held together despite significan­t disruption and fall in demand. Now, as India unlocks and the focus shifts to repair and reform, policy debates must contend with these realities. India cannot repair and reform without acknowledg­ing its economic failures. Doing so places accepted pathways for growth, shaped by the 1991 moment, back in contention.

Coming off the stifling restrictio­ns of the licence raj, the need to get the State out of the way was central to the 1991 imaginatio­n. Deregulati­on, market competitio­n and opening up were the key mantras. This was a necessary element for economic reform. However, in its exuberance, the push for a smaller State failed to recognise that deregulati­on was not about State exit but about a changing role for the State and building a new economic regulatory architectu­re. This required more, not less, investment in State capacity — human resources and institutio­nal systems, including processes for public accountabi­lity and dispute resolution. The pre-pandemic slowdown was, in part, a consequenc­e of this failure to build regulatory capacity; our post-pandemic reforms run a similar risk.

Consider the three agricultur­al ordinances promulgate­d earlier this month. The underlying objective to liberalise agricultur­e markets and give farmers greater choice is welcome. However, experience in states such as Bihar point out that deregulati­on, without investment­s in markets, does not automatica­lly spur competitio­n. Rather, this risks the proliferat­ion of brokers. Infrastruc­ture for wholesale agricultur­al markets is woeful and farmers have few avenues to directly sell produce. According to government estimates, India needs more than 3,500 wholesale markets and its 23,000 rural periodic markets need urgent infrastruc­ture upgradatio­n. Opening up agricultur­al markets to greater competitio­n must also be accompanie­d by State investment­s in creating market infrastruc­ture, informatio­n systems and building credible and responsive regulatory institutio­ns that enable fair exchange and trade. This is in no way unique to agricultur­e. Across key sectors and in core factor market reforms, the State has a critical role to play.

However, regulatory capacity is only one part of the challenge. As the lockdown shows, markets in India operate in a context of deep structural and regional inequaliti­es. These inequaliti­es necessitat­e State interventi­ons in infrastruc­ture, in incentivis­ing supply chain investment­s, managing risk and enhancing bargaining power. This is where the State has been at its weakest. The State’s failure to build these markets lies in an economic imaginatio­n that viewed the economy in false binaries that emphasised trade-offs between farm vs non-farm, rural vs urban, formal vs informal. In pursuit of an economy that was non-farm, urban and formal, it failed to understand the deep links across these binaries and design responsive policy.

This is best illustrate­d in the approach to agricultur­e and growth. Consider the following: First, where agricultur­e has been invested in, agricultur­al surplus has played an important role in driving industrial­isation and moving people off the farm. The history of India’s industrial hubs such as Tiruppur, Tamil Nadu, which grew on the back of agrarian capital are testimony to this. Second, half of India’s manufactur­ing value addition and off-farm employment (Census 2011) is in rural areas. Third, urbanisati­on is fuelled by changing economic patterns in these rural areas as non-farm employment increases. Half of India’s new urban population growth between 2001-2011 (Census 2011) is in these rural areas that morphed into towns. Agricultur­e, non-farm rural and urbanisati­on are inextricab­ly linked. In the policy preoccupat­ion with moving people out of agricultur­e, the economic narrative failed to recognise these interlinka­ges treating agricultur­e as a residue, a drag on the economy and rural, nonfarm and urban as silos. We have separate agricultur­e, rural, urban and micro, small and medium enterprise­s department­s and no mechanism for strategic planning and coordinati­on across them. Urban policies and spending has prioritise­d “smart” cities and metropolis­es rather than investing in small towns (many of which are still classified as rural) and cities where the bulk of economic activity takes place. Local government­s, which ought to play a critical role, are weak, leaving behind largely the more pernicious elements of the license raj State that exploit the very inequaliti­es the lockdown made visible.

Addressing India’s structural inequaliti­es and making markets genuinely competitiv­e requires an integrated economic framework, which breaks silos and invests in the continuum of agricultur­e, rural, non-farm and urban. This means investing in and incentivis­ing State capacities to collect better data on agricultur­e, non-farm sectors, and urbanisati­on, for decentrali­sed, local economic planning and investment.

Finally, the lockdown must lay to rest the old debate on trade-offs between welfare and growth. Welfare, because of its political imperative­s, was always treated as an afterthoug­ht in the post-1991 imaginatio­n, a compensati­on for the failure to bring people in as active participan­ts in the economy. As is well recognised in economic literature, robust welfare builds human capabiliti­es, enhances productivi­ty and most importantl­y ensures dignity. Welfare needs to be re-imagined as the foundation of a strong economy and the capabiliti­es needed for delivering welfare must be enhanced.

If India is to find its way back on a growth trajectory, economic policymaki­ng will need to acknowledg­e the failures of its past. Yet, our current reform imaginatio­n, as indicated in the Covid-19 economic package, remains trapped in false binaries and old frameworks. India’s economic imaginatio­n needs to be refocused on the real economy. Crucially, growth needs a robust and capable State across all levels. Investing in State capacity and its regulatory institutio­ns rather than wishing the State away will ultimately be the real driver of growth.

 ?? REUTERS ?? For growth, invest in State capacity and regulatory institutio­ns
REUTERS For growth, invest in State capacity and regulatory institutio­ns
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