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Introduction:
China and India, the two most populous countries in the world, both embarked on new journeys around the same time.
More than 70 years later, China has progressed much faster. India, other the other hand, is yet to reach the development indicators that China attained back in the early 1990s.
Growth of incomes in India will make India more attractive for investors. A stronger industrial system will give India more headroom in trade negotiations too.
Unique conditions that are prevailing in India:
India’s challenge now is to build an Indian ecosystem in which competitive enterprises will grow to create more opportunities for jobs for youth and for increasing citizens’ incomes.
Increase in disposable incomes
People-centric policies: case study of China and Delhi governments:
Conclusion: More free trade not the answer for Inclusive growth:
The RCEP decision shows that India is now standing up to pressure from a rump of Washington Consensus economists who continue to advocate that more free trade is the solution to India’s economic problems, even when there is evidence that India has not benefited from the agreements it has entered into.
India’s industrial and entrepreneurial ecosystem’s growth must be accompanied by an improvement in environment.
Policies must be managed with a whole systems view. While ‘Ease of doing Business’ gauges health from a business perspective, ‘ease of living’ should become the measure of the health of the whole system.
Policy decisions invariably require compromises between competing interests. Here, Mahatma Gandhi’s talisman provides a good test.
The government should think of the needs of the poorest citizens first. Reduced duties on imports benefit citizens as consumers.
However, a citizen’s more fundamental need is for a good job and source of income to buy the imported goods.
India urgently requires an employment and income strategy to guide its industry and trade policies.
By: Priyank Kishore ProfileResourcesReport error
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