The Star Early Edition

If India wants to rival China, it must address inequality

- Hamish McRae

IN ABOUT five years’ time, India will pass China to become the world’s most populated country, which gives an immediate edge to the welcome that the UK will roll out for Narendra Modi, India’s Prime Minister, this week. This is not a state visit like that accorded to China last month, for Modi is the head of government rather than the head of state. But on the red-carpet scale it is similar, including lunch with the Queen, and – something that the Chinese leadership did not do – a mass rally with 60 000 of the British-Indian community at Wembley Stadium.

In the space of three weeks, Britain will have played host to the leaders of 40 percent of the world’s population.

There is a particular link with India: the country’s investment in the UK. The Tata Group, notwithsta­nding the job losses in steel, is Britain’s largest manufactur­ing employer, and Modi will be visiting one of its Jaguar Land Rover factories.

Fertility rates

There is, of course, a political dimension to the visit, and Modi is seen by many as a divisive figure. There is also some pushback against his platform of economic reform, for his Bharatiya Janata Party lost important state elections in Bihar last week.

From a British perspectiv­e, however, this is about economics. Irrespecti­ve of whatever happens to the UK’s relationsh­ip with Europe, its economic ties with China and India will become more important.

China will almost certainly pass the US to become the world’s largest economy by 2040, while at about the same time India will pass Japan to become the third-largest economy. The China/India story will dominate economics for the next generation.

Up to now, the focus has been more on China, for what happens there is of paramount importance to things that affect the rest of the world, including commodity and energy prices. But the helter-skelter growth of the past is slowing; this year, it looks as though growth in India will be faster than in China.

Up to now, the focus has been more on China, for what happens there is of paramount importance to things that affect the rest of the world.

This will affect the rest of the world. For example, the new World Energy Outlook, produced by the Organisati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t and the Institute of Economic Affairs, predicts that India will contribute more than any other country to increased energy demand in the years to 2040.

Oversimpli­fying a bit, economic growth is driven mainly by two factors: the size of the working population, and the pace of technologi­cal progress. The first is pretty straightfo­rward, the second much less so.

We can say quite a lot about demography, with reasonable confidence, for the next three decades. While the total population of China will peak in about 10 years, India’s will not peak until after 2050.

We know that the working age population in China has already started to fall, whereas that of India will rise for another half-century. Curiously, the ending of the one-child policy in China does not change things very much, because there is a strong trend among Chinese people to have smaller families anyway.

Three of the four administra­tive regions in the world with the lowest fertility rates are Chinese communitie­s: Singapore, Macao and Hong Kong. In India, while fertility rates are falling, they are likely to remain above replacemen­t rate for another generation.

So in the size of the workforce, the big winner is India. But if living standards of people are to rise, that workforce has to be effectivel­y employed, and that is a function of education, investment and technology.

Here India’s record is uneven. In education, the best is very good, but much of the population growth is in poorer, less developed regions where education remains weak. UN figures show India to have the largest number of illiterate adults in the world: 287 million, or 37 percent of the global total.

Inequality

Investment? Here again the record is uneven. If you take infrastruc­ture, a huge effort is being made. Internal airlines have improved hugely since the airways were opened to competitio­n in the 1990s. Roads have been improved, too, with a new national network of dual carriage ways linking major cities.

The big missing link has been inward foreign direct investment (FDI).

The key point here, as China appreciate­s, is that such inward investment also brings in technology and access to foreign markets. Just yesterday, India eased controls on inward investment in 15 sectors including defence, broadcasti­ng, construc- tion and retail. That is fine (except that the existence of such restrictio­ns says a lot about the country’s reservatio­ns); however, the latest data does show a boom in inward FDI in the first half of this year, which if sustained would suggest the Modi programme is working.

India has also climbed up a few places in the World Economic Forum’s list of countries’ competitiv­eness, rising to 55, which may not sound great but is decent progress. When investment decisions are being made, direction of travel is probably more important than actual position in a league table.

There are many other challenges. One particular­ly divisive issue is growing inequality. Mumbai is a wonderful city, but it does have the dubious distinctio­n of having the world’s most expensive private home, “Antilia”, a jagged 27-storey tower block that looks like an office building and cost billionair­e Mukesh Ambani $1bn to construct. It is certainly an example of extreme inequality. – The Independen­t

 ?? FILE PHOTO: AP ?? India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi addresses a conference by the Environmen­t Ministry in New Delhi, India. The UK will roll out the red carpet when Modi visits the country this week, soon after the Chinese president’s visit.
FILE PHOTO: AP India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi addresses a conference by the Environmen­t Ministry in New Delhi, India. The UK will roll out the red carpet when Modi visits the country this week, soon after the Chinese president’s visit.

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