Business Standard

Whatever happened to sabka vikas? VALUE FOR MONEY

- SUBIR ROY

How has the National Democratic Alliance government delivered on the promise of sabka vikas (inclusive growth) that is widely considered to have brought Prime Minister Narendra Modi to power in 2014? This is important as the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)led government is near to completing three out of its five years in office and shows signs of having already got into a pre-election mode so as to prepare for the parliament­ary elections due in 2019.

Inclusive growth or developmen­t foremost changes people’s lives in two ways — higher incomes for those with jobs and, more importantl­y, jobs for those who do not have any. The widespread feeling is that “employ- ment growth has been sluggish”, as acknowledg­ed in the Economic Survey (2016-17). What is more, things aren’t going to get better soon. India’s level of unemployme­nt, according to the Internatio­nal Labour Organizati­on, will remain at almost the same level, 3.4 per cent, over 2017 and 2018, compared to 3.5 per cent in 2016. The total number of unemployed will in fact go up from 2016 by 300,000 to 18 million in 2018.

Thus, those with jobs have been the full or unequal beneficiar­ies of the year-on-year rise in per capita incomes in step with the 7 per cent plus growth in gross domestic product (GDP). But here also rising incomes have not translated into greater well being in equal measure because there has been a secular deteriorat­ion in the quality of employment (going back to the United Progressiv­e Alliance, or UPA days and continuing), with both the private and public sectors preferring to employ temporary hands who have no job or social security.

In the run up to the global financial crisis of 2008, the Indian jobs scene was marked by three positives. A booming constructi­on sector was able to absorb out migration from agricultur­e which pushed up farm wages and resulted in better incomes across the working class (farm and non-farm). The period was also marked by healthy exports growth in which textiles, a significan­t job creator, playing its part.

As for the middle class, it appeared to have found a long-term sweet spot in new jobs being rapidly created in software and services (IT/BPO). Two employment-intensive sectors which accounted for virtually the entire growth in jobs in December 2015 over the December 2014 were textiles and IT/BPO.

The current scenario is that neither constructi­on nor textiles is carrying the can for growth and therefore jobs. The recovery in constructi­on is seen to be a mixed bag. The gross value added for constructi­on at constant (2011-12) prices slowed down from 3 per cent in 2014-15 to 2.8 per cent in 2015-16 and is estimated to rise to only 3.1 per cent in 2016-17.

The textiles story (it is the second largest employer after agricultur­e) is similar or worse. According to the Index of Industrial Production, textiles grew by 2.8 per cent in 2014-15, fell to 2.6 per cent in 2015-16 and in April-January 2016-17 to an abysmal 1.2 per cent. Textiles and allied products exports clocked a growth of 12.4 per cent in 2013-14, then fell to 0.5 per cent in 2014-15 and a negative that is -3.2 per cent in 2015-16.

What is more, the IT/BPO sector is in the throes of a crisis. The rapidly expanding use of automation and artificial intelligen­ce have led to a sharp reduction in staff intake by IT/BPO companies. Hence, there is now a non-linearity between growth and hiring, with hiring growth lagging behind topline growth. As if this was not enough, the heyday for start-ups when they were finding a seemingly endless stream of venture capital is over. So start-ups which typically offered higher order IT/BPO jobs are downsizing. Bengaluru today is full of techies who are either in-between jobs or have settled for significan­t compensati­on cuts in new jobs after being made redundant earlier.

If the travails of the IT/BPO sector are not of their own making then the havoc that demonetisa­tion has wrought on the MSME (micro small and medium enterprise­s) sector has been entirely the Modi government’s handiwork. Knowing that this is where most of the jobs which will absorb rural migrants to cities are to be created, the government set up Mudra as an important facilitato­r.

But demonetisa­tion ruined the party that might have been. It disrupted supply chains and disoriente­d small units which dealt mostly in cash and whose owners post-demonetisa­tion either fobbed off their workers with old ~500 and ~1,000 notes of simply downed shutters. Workers, many of them migrants, first discounted their wages at the local kirana shops for essentials and then when both job and money ran out, went back home. The severe disruption and hardship that this caused for several months among the working poor has been anecdotall­y reported and pooh poohed by the government. It remains be seen how this shows up in official statistics over time.

Against this scenario we have the prospects of a healthy 4.4 per cent growth in agricultur­al GDP in 2016-17. To what extent this will catalyse inclusive growth in the countrysid­e is not known but newspapers have been full of report of farmers’ distress over the arrival of bumper crops leading to a crash in produce prices. A season of farm loan waivers has begun in Uttar Pradesh (UP) and is likely to move to other states. Even the government does not appear to believe that a booming agricultur­e will take developmen­t forward.

Some argue that, knowing that the sabka vikas slogan will not deliver, Mr Modi and the BJP are going in for an unambiguou­s strategy of Hindu consolidat­ion. It began with the campaign for the UP Assembly elections and may have yielded a winning formula to be pursued for the next two years.

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