Gulf News

India needs a new urban push

Only radical solutions can help resolve fundamenta­l issues causing the slump in the economy

- BY NOAH SMITH

India has more than a sixth of the world’s population. It’s also still a poor country. So what happens there is incredibly important for the welfare of the human race. For a long time, good things were happening in India. Cautious pro-business reforms in 1980s were followed by the dismantlin­g of much of the country’s overbearin­g regulatory state in the 1990s and 2000s. At the end of a long boom, India was five times richer per capita than in 1980.

But this is now old news. The country has entered a major economic slowdown.

Masking the shrink

The growth number probably understate­s the magnitude of the slump. Industrial production has actually shrunk in recent months, as has the production of capital goods. Electricit­y generation has also slowed by more than gross domestic product growth.

A series of interest rate cuts has failed to stop the decline. India already has real interest rates of negative 2.2 per cent, lower than other developing Asian countries, suggesting that monetary policy isn’t going to be the answer. The government has also been engaging in structural reforms since last summer — cutting taxes, opening up the country to more investment and privatisin­g industries. But although these might help in the long run, they have failed to stem the recessiona­ry tide.

Diagnosing the cause of the crisis has been difficult. In a new paper, economists Arvind Subramania­n and Josh Felman argue that the root of the problem isn’t a shortage of aggregate demand, or even Prime Minister Modi’s policy blunders such as demonetisa­tion, taking currency out of circulatio­n. Instead, imbalances in the country’s growth model have led to a buildup of bad assets in the financial system.

Before the global financial crisis of 2008, Subramania­n and Felman note, India’s exports were growing robustly. But then in about 2011-12, when export growth slowed as a result of the crisis, investment fell, corporate profits were squeezed and business loans began to go bad. A rise in troubled loans on bank balance-sheets should have caused a recession, but India was saved by a combinatio­n of falling oil prices, a boom in shadow banking and government stimulus.

Now, Subramania­n and Felman claim, India’s housing bubble has burst, with prices starting to fall as unsold inventory piles up. That is adding to the stock of bad loans on bank balance-sheets while also putting stress on the shadow banking system. This was the cause of the abrupt drop in lending in 2019.

So to get India’s economy going again, bank balance-sheets need to be cleaned up. Modi has been merging government­owned banks, but there is much more that can be done. Similar to what the Federal Reserve did in the US after 2008, the Reserve Bank of India should engage in quantitati­ve easing.

This might give rise to inflation, which is accelerati­ng. But it could help get loans flowing through the economy again. Modi’s government can also help by creating a so-called bad bank to absorb troubled loans. But at the same time, India shouldn’t ignore the need for long-term structural reforms. Until lenders see a major set of new opportunit­ies, the economy won’t return to rapid growth.

A 2016 paper might hold a clue about what the new opportunit­y might be. In most countries, including developing ones like China and Brazil, the number and size of big cities is governed by a statistica­l relationsh­ip known as “Zipf’s Law”, which states that the second-biggest city is half as large as the biggest city, and so on.

India, however, violates the law, suggesting that it’s underurban­ized. Two out of three Indians still live in rural areas.

Strategic shift

Urbanisati­on is a driver of growth. Moving people from farms to cities would help alleviate India’s low agricultur­al productivi­ty, because the same land would be farmed by fewer workers. If the new urban residents get jobs in labour-intensive manufactur­ing, incomes would rise very quickly, so India should couple urbanisati­on with a drive to absorb some of the manufactur­ing jobs that are leaving China as a result of the trade war and coronaviru­s outbreak.

India can help medium-sized cities grow by building better urban infrastruc­ture and providing better urban services. It could even offer financial incentives to encourage people to move. The subsequent revival in the housing market, and a cheap labour force for lowend manufactur­ing, would give recapitali­sed banks more opportunit­ies to lend.

That could give India a manufactur­ing growth model similar to that of Bangladesh or Vietnam, complement­ing its vaunted service industries. Thus, a combinatio­n of macro and micro policies might be just what’s needed to get India out of its frustratin­g and complex recession.

 ?? S.M. Arshad/©Gulf News ??
S.M. Arshad/©Gulf News

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