An
appreciating exchange rate, stock market volatility and global pessimism
are yet to affect India’s growth story. Figures released by the Central
Statistical Organisation at the end of August indicate that GDP grew by
9.3 per cent during the first quarter (April-June) of 2007-08 when compared
with the corresponding quarter of 2006-07. This is the sixth of the last
seven quarters in which the annualized rate of growth of GDP has exceeded
9 per cent, the exception being the third quarter of 2007 when growth
fell short of that target by just 0.3 percentage points.
The quarter-on-quarter annual GDP growth rate first crossed the 9 per
cent mark in the second quarter of 2003-04, and has remained above that
level in 10 of the 16 quarters since then. Restricting the analysis to
the current series of national income statistics with 1999-2000 as base,
we find that in the 13 quarters prior to that (starting with the first
quarter of 2000-01), the GDP growth rate never crossed the 6.7 per cent
mark and stood below 5 per cent in five of those annual comparisons. In
the event, if we make a crude comparison of averages of quarterly growth
rates for the two sub-periods starting with the first quarter of financial
year 2000-01 and the second quarter of 2003-04 respectively, India appears
to have traversed from a rate of growth averaging 4.8 per cent to a rate
of growth of 8.8 per cent (Chart 1). In sum, the country seems to have
experienced a sudden boost in the middle of 2003 that resulted in a more
than 80 per cent increase in its average quarter-on-quarter GDP growth
rate.
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While celebration over this remarkable transition to a new growth trajectory
continues, convincing explanations of this statistical trend are difficult
to come by. One route to follow to arrive at such an explanation, however
tentative, is to search for sectoral drivers of growth in overall GDP.
There are a number of features of the sectoral composition of growth that
needs noting. To start with, the widely held perception that the agricultural
sector (broadly defined to include forestry and fishing) has not been
part of India’s growth transition is corroborated by the data. Agriculture
has languished at a time when the trend rate of growth has been rising.
The divergence in growth rates of overall and agricultural GDP has persisted
and even widened after the 2003 breakpoint, even though the volatility
in agricultural growth rates has fallen since then. While agriculture’s
share in aggregate GDP averaged more than 21 per cent during this decade,
its contribution to the quarter-on-quarter absolute increase in GDP has
remained below 10 per cent in most recent quarters.
The second much-noted feature is that services seem to have played an
important part in India’s growth story. Services GDP has grown faster
than aggregate GDP for most of the period since 2000. What is more there
appears to have been acceleration in the growth of services GDP during
the second of the two sub-periods being discussed. In most quarters since
2003, services have contributed between 50 and 65 per cent of the quarter-on-quarter
increment in GDP.
However, a disaggregated analysis suggests that it is only one component
of the services sector—Financing, Insurance, Real Estate and Business
Services—that appears to have contributed to the acceleration in GDP growth.
The rate of growth of this segment of services has been accelerating since
the middle of 2002. On the other hand, the rate of growth of the other
important segment of services—Trade, Hotels, Transport and Communications—though
higher on average in the second sub-period, has shown no signs of any
significant acceleration.
Fourth, in a less noticed development, the sector that appears to have
contributed significantly to the growth transition is manufacturing, which
has seen a sharp acceleration in annual rates of growth between the first
and second periods. It has also registered a significant and consistent
increase in its contribution to the annual quarter-on-quarter increment
in GDP. This less-recognized aspect of the growth story signifies a shift
away from the excessive dependence on services to generate increases in
India’s GDP growth.
Overall, therefore, the evidence seems to suggest that financial, real
estate and business services and manufacturing are the two sectors that
have driven India’s transition to a higher growth trajectory. Four questions
arise. What has been the relative importance of exports and domestic demand
in explaining the transition? Is the simultaneous role of finance and
manufacturing as growth drivers coincidental or related? If related, what
is the mechanism by which their interaction translates into higher growth?
And, if this mechanism did trigger the transition, why did it come into
operation when it did?
Export revenues have unquestionably contributed to the expansion of the
business services sector, which includes software and IT-enabled services.
But manufactured exports have also played a significant role. The average
rate of growth of the dollar value of merchandise exports from India rose
from 13.2 per cent during 2000-01 to 2002-03 to 25 per cent during 2003-04
to 2005-06. Sectors under manufacturing that have contributed to this
recovery include Chemicals (17 to 25 per cent), Manufacture of metals
(15.2 to 31.4), Machinery and instruments (19.7 to 33.7) and Transport
equipment (18.7 to 50.9). However, while this step up in export growth
would have has contributed to the acceleration in manufacturing growth
rates, the small share of exports in manufacturing production still gives
domestic demand an important role in explaining the growth recovery.
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Domestically,
the simultaneous boom in finance and real estate on the one hand and manufacturing
on the other is not fortuitous. The financial boom is based on an increase
in liquidity in the system that has permitted a sharp increase in credit
provision and ensured a relatively low interest rate regime. This has,
in turn, triggered a boom in the real estate sector, driven by a sharp
increase in housing finance and lending to and investment in the real
estate sector. Thus, within the Finance and Real Estate sub-sector there
are internal linkages that deliver a rapid increase in GDP based on easy
finance.
But easy finance impacts on manufacturing too in two ways. First, it results
in a credit-financed housing and consumption boom that significantly steps
up manufacturing demand. And, second, the profits derived from the credit
financed manufacturing boom are much higher than would have otherwise
been the case because of much lower interest costs. Higher profits in
manufacturing trigger, in turn, an investment-led boom in that sector.
Thus, the Indian economy’s sudden transition in mid-2003 to a higher growth
trajectory, while influenced by a revival in exports, was driven in the
final analysis by a financial boom that eased credit availability, reduced
interest rates and encouraged debt-financed consumption and investment.
But why did this financial spur occur when it did? The timing was influenced
by factors external to the Indian economy that resulted in a surge in
inflows of foreign capital into developing countries since around 2003.
India benefited disproportionately from those flows both because of her
liberalised investment environment, relatively good economic performance
and also because of the concessions offered to foreign investors in India,
including the abolition of the long-term capital gains tax in the Budget
for 2003-04. The liquidity overhang that the surge in capital flows resulted
in created the environment that facilitated the growth transition.
However, this role of capital inflows in placing India on a new growth
trajectory also make that growth process fragile for reasons that are
becoming clear in recent months. One source of such fragility is the continued
appreciation of the exchange rate of the rupee despite the efforts of
the Reserve Bank of India to stall such appreciation. Signs are that rupee
appreciation is reducing the competitiveness of India’s exports and weakening
the export stimulus that contributed to an improvement in both services
and manufacturing growth.
The other potential source of fragility is the threat of a liquidity crunch
because of an outflow of foreign capital for reasons unrelated to India’s
economic performance. Dependence on foreign capital flows has made India
vulnerable to the contagion effects of financial crises elsewhere, such
as the sub-prime crisis in the US. One consequence of that crisis has
been a tendency for foreign investors to sell out assets acquired in India
and repatriate the receipts so as to cover losses and meet commitments
in the US and elsewhere. That prospect is resulting in a degree of uncertainty
in India’s real estate market where foreign investors have been important
players in recent times. Their exit could slow or stall the expansion
of real estate sector. The exit of foreign investors could also absorb
much of the liquidity in the system, adversely affecting credit availability
in the Indian market and pushing up interest rates. If that happens the
spur to growth provided by easy finance would also be weakened, slowing
growth. These tendencies, though visible, have yet to substantially slow
India’s rapid growth. But if they gather strength the impact on growth
could be adverse. This is the inevitable outcome of India’s indirect dependence
on foreign capital inflows to ensure its transition to a new growth trajectory.
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