BusinessLine (Hyderabad)

‘India’s investment drive fuels 25-year global productivi­ty surge’

‘Fast lane’ economy powers over 10% of global productivi­ty growth: McKinsey Global Institute report

- KR Srivats

India’s ‘fast lane’ economy accounted for 11 per cent of global productivi­ty growth recorded in the last 25 years, McKinsey Global Institute (MGI) said in a report.

Nearly 50 per cent of global productivi­ty growth in the last 25 years came from China (37 per cent) and India (11 per cent) alone, the report ‘Investing in Productivi­ty Growth’ said. As much as 75 per cent of global productivi­ty growth came from all emerging economies combined, the report highlighte­d. MGI in the report explored how productivi­ty in 125 economies has fared over the last 25 years and, in particular, why it has stalled.

The standout lesson from the research: businesses and policymake­rs in advanced and emerging economies need to take action to boost the investment­s that drive productivi­ty. India grew its productivi­ty by 5.6 per cent on average annually, only next to China which grew faster. India’s productivi­ty (GDP per worker) went from $6,200 to $21,800 between 1997 and 2022.

As much as 70 per cent of India’s productivi­ty growth is explained by growth in capital per worker.

“India’s capital stock per worker grew by close to 4x, which is impressive. And yet its level capital stock per worker is still around $38,000, less than half of China’s and less than a third of Central and Eastern Europe, so plenty of margin to keep improving”, the MGI report said.

Rajat Dhawan, Managing Partner, India, McKinsey & Company, said, “India has done very well across several productivi­ty dimensions, yet there several opportunit­ies to keep improving. India would need to keep up investment­s to urbanise eŸectively, build infrastruc­ture, support productivi­ty in services and build higher-value manufactur­ing.

For this, the right enablers need to be in place, from institutio­ns that incentivis­e investment and innovation to education that allows workers to make the most of those investment­s.”

Chris Bradley, Senior Partner, McKinsey & Company and Director, McKinsey Global Institute, said, “It can be hard to pick apart what impacts productivi­ty; there are a lot of moving parts. But our research delivers a crystal-clear diagnostic: investment. In most places, increases in capital per worker explain 70 to 80 per cent of overall productivi­ty growth.”

INVESTMENT WAS KEY

With high investment across sectors, India did well across most dimensions. It urbanised fast, starting from a low level. With high productivi­ty growth in agricultur­e (4.2 per cent per annum) it was able to reduce employment in the sector and move people to higher value-added constructi­on and service-sector jobs, increasing­ly in cities.

But India’s urbanisati­on rate remains low, so there is a significan­t margin to keep improving. The share of constructi­on workers went up by 12 percentage points, the share of servicesec­tor workers by 7 percentage points.

Service-sector productivi­ty growth, often downplayed in developmen­t, was very high, at 5.8 per cent per annum, the highest in the world only matched by China.

Manufactur­ing productivi­ty growth was also high, at 5.7 per cent, in part thanks to the relatively high and increasing complexity of its exports. But manufactur­ing employment remains somewhat low in India, at 12 per cent of the economy compared to 20 per cent in fast-lane countries such as China, Poland or Vietnam. From 1997 it has only increased by 1 percentage point, so this could be another opportunit­y, particular­ly amid global supply chain reconfigur­ation.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOT­O ?? UP AND UP. India’s productivi­ty (GDP per worker) went from $6,200 to $21,800 between 1997 and 2022
GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOT­O UP AND UP. India’s productivi­ty (GDP per worker) went from $6,200 to $21,800 between 1997 and 2022

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