Business Today

India’s Coming Productivi­ty Crisis

THE CHALLENGE LIES IN CREATING OPPORTUNIT­IES FOR WORKFORCE.

- BY AMIT KAPOOR The writer is Chair, Institute for Competitiv­eness, India. He tweets @kautiliya and can be contacted at amit. kapoor@competitiv­eness.in. Bhawna Kakkar, Researcher, Institute for Competitiv­eness, has contribute­d to the article

Economic growth originates from two main sources. The first lies in getting more people to work and putting in more capital while the second is associated with enabling our workers to produce more efficientl­y, which means increased productivi­ty. Since there are limits to the amount of additional labour and capital that can be used, improved productivi­ty is the key to long-run growth. With the recent debate on trends showing falling productivi­ty levels across developed nations gaining momentum, emerging economies are now presented with a call to make significan­t improvemen­ts in productivi­ty levels to sustain progress.

Going by the estimates modelled by the Internatio­nal Labour Organizati­on (ILO) on output per worker (GDP constant 2010 US$), India must take a hint if it wants to make a considerab­le leap forward from being a lower middle-income economy to an upper middle-income one. Although productivi­ty growth has slowed in most of the advanced nations, their levels of output per worker still tend to remain notably higher than that of India.

Consider the US first. There, the output per worker for 2017 is projected to be $1,10,800.3. In the European Union, it is $81,878.22. More interestin­gly, the difference between the output per Indian worker and that of other developing economies is worth a mention. Brazil and China stand at $25,026.67 and $13,083.58, respective­ly, against India’s $5,043.59 for the same year. Come 2021, and it is estimated that India’s output per worker will rise to just $6,413.85 compared to China’s $16,697.73. This way, India will be one-third of China in terms of labour productivi­ty in 2021 while the gap with the US, the EU and other developed nations will increase manifold.

As firms need land, labour and capital for output, more efficient firms can come up with higher output only if they have better access to these factors of production. It is not difficult to understand if land gets misallocat­ed, it is bound to have severe repercussi­ons on capital allocation through financial markets for the simple reason of loan collateral required by most lending corporatio­ns. It has further implicatio­ns for factor productivi­ty of our firms. Therefore, meaningful productivi­ty gains can be made by reducing factor misallocat­ion to a considerab­le extent.

Post the reforms of 1991, India’s productivi­ty performanc­e in most sectors is lacking the required vitality. According to RBI data, apart from post and telecommun­ications, no remarkable gains have been achieved in sectors such as agricultur­e, textiles, transport services and so on. In fact, productivi­ty has seen a fall in crucial sectors, including education, health and business services.

The real challenge for India lies in creating a large number of high-productivi­ty opportunit­ies for its labour force where the right mix of skilling must take centre stage. This, in turn, calls for structural reforms in all factor markets by the Centre and the state government­s for enhancing productivi­ty and competitiv­eness in the long term.

 ??  ?? ALTHOUGH PRODUCTIVI­TY GROWTH HAS SLOWED IN MOST OF THE ADVANCED NATIONS, THEIR LEVELS OF OUTPUT PER WORKER STILL TEND TO REMAIN NOTABLY HIGHER THAN THAT OF INDIA
ALTHOUGH PRODUCTIVI­TY GROWTH HAS SLOWED IN MOST OF THE ADVANCED NATIONS, THEIR LEVELS OF OUTPUT PER WORKER STILL TEND TO REMAIN NOTABLY HIGHER THAN THAT OF INDIA
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India