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In sum, the post-1996 evidence pointing to a slowing of import growth
despite liberalisation provides little cause for comfort. It by no means
suggests that there is no relationship between liberalisation and import
flows. Rather it suggests that signs of a strong positive relationship
during the 1993-94 to 1995-96 period was diluted by lower oil prices,
by a recession in industry and by a fall in the unit value indices of
imports. The decline in oil prices has been dramatically reversed over
the last year. Recession is too high a price to pay to sustain a viable
trade deficit. And as and when world growth revives and transnational
firms get a foothold in the domestic market, unit value indices would
turn firm.
All this is of special concern because, despite these "benefits",
export performance has been so poor that the trade deficit has tended
to widen precisely in the years of slower import growth (Chart 2). The
Commerce Minister has argued that it is this problem, rather than US
pressure to do away with QRs, that his exim policy announcement has
sought to address. However, it hardly bears stating that the "new"
measures announced amount to little more than mere rhetoric. Besides
further minor changes in import procedures, the only initiatives incorporated
in the announcement is the creation of a set of "special economic
zones" inspired by the Chinese experience and the decision to provide
incentives to the states to help contribute to the export effort.
Chart 2 >>
The special economic zones are to be export enclaves into which duty
free imports are to be permitted and in which foreign investors are
permitted to set up firms with up to 100 per cent equity holding. In
practice this would merely amount to the creation of larger sized free
trade zones, as is reflected in the fact that two such proposed FTZs
are to be converted in SEZs. Past experience with the free trade zones
has been dismal. And with growing liberalisation of trade and rules
governing foreign investment, the distinction between firms located
in such special zones and those operating out of the domestic tariff
area have been increasingly diluted.
Above all, what this initiative assumes is that an export drive has
to be FDI driven. The expectation is that India should not just attract
foreign direct investment, but relocative FDI, which chooses India as
a site for world market-oriented production. In practice, foreign investors
have hitherto contributed little to the export effort and in many cases
have not even met their export commitments under schemes such as the
Export Promotion Capital Goods Scheme, which permits capital imports
on concession terms in return for a promise to meet certain export targets.
Further, if we examine the kind of FDI flow into India in the wake of
liberalisation, we find that it consists of three types: that which
has come in to increase the equity stake of the foreign partner in exiting
joint ventures from the 40 per cent level mandated by FERA to levels
up to 100 per cent permitted in the wake of liberalisation; second,
that which has come to acquire India firms with a large share of the
market in certain products, a case epitomised by the acquisition of
Parle by Coca Cola; and third, that which has come into the infrastructural
(non-tradable) sector, in response to the generous concessions offered
by the government. It should be clear that a lot of these inflows are
not even into greenfield projects and all of them are targeted at the
domestic rather than the export market. There is no reason to expect
a shift from such FDI inflows to more export-oriented flows in the current
world environment, where internationally competitive capacities can
be acquired at bargain prices in East Asian countries going through
a "restructuring" process. In fact, what is likely is that
even FDI targeted at the domestic market would shrink, as happened last
financial year, since post-liberalisation that market can be serviced
with imports from abroad. |