The Star Late Edition

India’s is facing the perils of digital transforma­tion F

Automation is a main cause of anxiety. In India, as in other parts of the world, machines are pushing human beings out of the workplace.

- Ronald Meinardus Ronald Meinardus is the regional director, South Asia, of the Friedrich Naumann Foundation for Freedom in New Delhi. This article initially appeared on The Globalist. Follow The Globalist on Twitter: @theglobali­st

OR INDIA’S Prime Minister Narendra Modi, this year began with a disappoint­ment: both the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund and the World Bank corrected their economic outlook for India – in one case from projected 7.6 percent of gross domestic product growth to 6.6 percent, in the other from 7.6 percent to 7 percent.

The institutes justified the downgrades with the aftershock­s of demonetisa­tion.

Modi’s surprise decision of November 8 to invalidate 86 percent of the nation’s currency temporaril­y put India’s cash-dependent economy on the skids.

His move aimed at fighting black money and corruption, but it also sparked a mini-recession. Only gradually have financial transactio­ns returned to normal.

Three years ago, Modi won a huge majority on the promise to lead India into a new era of modernity and developmen­t. Today, many plans remain a work in progress.

The “Make in India” campaign aims at attracting foreign investment and is one of the prime minister’s pet projects.

Modi has criss-crossed the globe and hardly missed a chance to promote the plan.

While foreign direct investment has gone up for the past three years compared to the stagnation the country experience­d before Modi took control, the inflow that he has been able to generate has failed to translate into large-scale job-creation.

India moved up one notch in the Ease of Doing Business index (from rank 131 to 130). However, in a list of 190 nations, the country remains stuck in the lower midfield of the global table.

The Modi government argues that India’s at times raucous democratic process slows down reforms.

A case in point is the goods and services tax (GST), which after seemingly endless debates looks set to become a reality later this year.

Celebrated as the biggest reform measure since India’s economy began to be opened a quarter of a century ago, the GST aims to transform India’s domestic market into one joint economic zone removing internal borders and taxes.

Once in place, a unified tax system should improve India’s ranking in the Ease of Doing Business reports. The hope is it may well attract more foreign investors keen on making money in a market of 1.3 billion people. Formidable challenges In the end, Modi’s economic performanc­e will be judged by how many jobs will be created while he is in office. Here, India is no different than other democracie­s. The challenges are formidable, and the interim balance all but rosy.

Every year, more than 12 million young Indians enter the workforce. This estimate is often referred to, but the Indian govern- ment actually has yet to produce reliable job data.

According to the Confederat­ion of Indian Industry, the country’s top business associatio­n, only 3.6 million jobs have been created annually in the past years. That means that three-fourths of the working-age population are left outside the official labour force.

As an indication of the immensity of the challenge, economists use the term “jobless growth” to characteri­se a developmen­t in which the number of new jobs is not commensura­te with the growth of the economy.

Labour market policy debates in India often exclude the fate of a huge majority of the people economical­ly active.

Ninety percent of the country’s workforce earns a living in the informal sector.

Out of an estimated total of 50 million companies in India, less than 10 million are registered. Comprising the informal sector are the armies of street vendors, Riksha drivers and the many uncounted others who strive to earn a meagre income at their own peril. The informal sector remains the lifeline of the economy.

In India, integratin­g the informal with the formal economy may be termed a project of the century.

It is a task that has gained urgency as millions of Indians migrate from the countrysid­e to urban centres, creating huge problems for the unprepared municipali­ties.

New Delhi has rolled out the Smart Cities Mission, a plan aimed at transformi­ng major cities into modern settlement­s with modern amenities and infrastruc­ture.

The futuristic vision will only succeed with massive private investment.

“Digital India” is the catchphras­e of yet another pet project of the prime minister.

It aims at catapultin­g the emerging market nation into a new economic and technologi­cal era.

Visits to Bangalore, Hyderabad or Gurgaon, to name only three Indian IT hubs of internatio­nal acclaim, show the country has covered considerab­le distance on the path to the future.

However, the euphoria has subsided amid reports about job losses and dwindling profits in the IT-economy.

For many Indians, this is a rude awakening as they have long considered all things related to the Internet as crisis-proof.

The main cause for the new anxiety is the rise of automation.

In India, as in other parts of the world, machines with artificial intelligen­ce are increasing­ly pushing humans out of the workforce.

In better times, the discharged IT experts could have sought a lucrative pro- fessional career abroad.

America’s Silicon Valley, over the years, has become a stomping ground for Indian IT specialist­s, many of whom advance to top positions in leading firms.

The rise of economic nationalis­m in the US (as well as markets like Australia and Singapore) has made access more difficult for talents from India.

The bad news is that the worst may still lie ahead. According to the Internatio­nal Labor Organisati­on, an estimated 137 million Asian workers could lose their jobs to robots in the coming 20 years. Automation looms As India’s business daily Mint reports, India is losing 550 jobs daily – and the newspaper goes on: “The World Bank predicts 69 percent of jobs in India could potentiall­y be automated.”

Should this gloomy scenario come true, many Indians could fall into the informal sector, where they would join the majority of their countrymen struggling to make ends meet.

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi addresses supporters in New Delhi, India. The PM swept into power three years ago with his promise to lead India into an age of modernity and developmen­t.
PHOTO: REUTERS India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi addresses supporters in New Delhi, India. The PM swept into power three years ago with his promise to lead India into an age of modernity and developmen­t.
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