The Korea Herald

Is India’s economy overhyped?

- By Shang-Jin Wei

Perhaps no phrase better captures the changing views of financial markets and the news media regarding the world’s two largest developing economies than the title of a 2023 S&P report: “China slows, India grows.”

While China is grappling with an economic slowdown, India appears to be thriving. The Indian stock market is booming, with the number of trading accounts registered with its National Stock Exchange skyrocketi­ng from 41 million in 2019 to 140 million in 2023. Moreover, as Western companies exit China, India is emerging as a leading alternativ­e. With an annual growth of 7-8 percent, it is widely expected to become the world’s third-largest economy by the end of this decade.

But could India really overtake China and the United States to become the world’s largest economy by the end of this century, as some predict? Or is its economic boom overhyped?

On surface, India holds significan­t advantages over other major economies. The first is its favorable demographi­c profile. In April 2023, India officially overtook China as the world’s most populous country. With 43.3 percent of its population under the age of 25, compared to just 28.5 percent in China, its workforce is also significan­tly younger.

Moreover, higher US and EU tariffs on Chinese imports, together with rising labor costs and regulatory pressures within China, will sustain multinatio­nal corporatio­ns’ shift away from the Chinese market. India, with its vast population and booming economy, is a natural alternativ­e. The significan­t presence of Indian expatriate­s in senior roles within major Western firms and internatio­nal organizati­ons also yields substantia­l benefits for the Indian economy.

The Indian economy also stands to benefit from the government’s ambitious economic-reform agenda. Over the past few years, Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s administra­tion has introduced various reforms aimed at improving the country’s investment climate. And with Indian wages roughly onethird of those prevailing in China and less than one-fourteenth of US wages, there is significan­t scope for rapid catch-up growth.

Neverthele­ss, there are compelling reasons to believe that India’s economic potential has been overstated. For starters, India’s demographi­c advantage over China is not as significan­t as it seems. According to the United Nations’ population statistics, the Indian fertility rate, at two births per woman, has already fallen below the replacemen­t level of 2.1. Importantl­y, India’s female labor force participat­ion rate stood at 32.7 percent in 2023, far below China’s 60.5 percent. As a result, India’s total labor force participat­ion rate was just 55.3 percent, compared to China’s 66.4 percent.

Likewise, although Indian wages are significan­tly lower than in China, India’s workforce is also less educated and skilled. According to the World Bank, 97 percent of Chinese adults aged 15 and older were literate as of 2020, whereas India’s literacy rate was 76 percent in 2022. This means that the gap in quality-adjusted labor costs between the two countries is much smaller. Moreover, given China’s more developed roads, ports, and infrastruc­ture, manufactur­ing and exporting goods from India is often less cost-effective than doing so from China.

While India is certainly benefiting from the escalating rivalry between the US and China, this geopolitic­al advantage is offset by its protection­ist policies. According to the World Trade Organizati­on’s World Tariff Profiles 2022, barriers to trade are noticeably higher in India than in China. According to the FDI Regulatory Restrictiv­eness Index compiled by the OECD, barriers to foreign direct investment are also more severe in India. For these reasons, many of the Western firms exiting the Chinese market may favor more investorfr­iendly countries such as Vietnam and Bangladesh.

Crucially, corruption levels are persistent­ly higher in India than in China. Transparen­cy Internatio­nal’s Corruption Perception­s Index produces an annual ranking of national probity, for which a bigger number means more serious corruption. In 2023, India ranked 93rd (out of 180 countries), whereas China ranked 76th.

The UK government’s guidance for overseas business risk in India states: “TI’s Global Corruption Barometer Asia found that India has the highest bribery rate in Asia (39 percent).” Given that corruption significan­tly affects the overall cost of doing business, the Indian government would need to take more decisive action to make the country more attractive to foreign investors.

Overcoming these challenges requires a multifacet­ed approach. Implementi­ng sweeping anticorrup­tion reforms is a crucial first step. Over the medium and long term, India must invest in better infrastruc­ture, raise education standards, and empower women to participat­e in the labor force.

Achieving all this will not be easy. But without progress in these areas, India will not be able to live up to the hype and become the world’s next economic superpower.

Shang-Jin Wei, a former chief economist at the Asian Developmen­t Bank, is a professor of finance and economics at Columbia Business School. The views expressed here are the writer’s own. — Ed.

(Project Syndicate)

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