General Studies Paper 3
Context: Davos and Delhi have framed the moral and intellectual crises affecting Indian economic policies.
- Chairman of Tata Sons in the World Economic Forum said: The three things most important are growth, growth, and growth.”
Background of Indian Economy:
After Independence India’s strategy of development comprised four elements:
- Raising the savings and investment rate
- Dominance of state intervention
- Import substitution
- Domestic manufacture of capital goods
Reason for Economic reforms of 1990-91:
- Economic crisis of 1990-91.
- Model India had chosen was not delivering.
Moral crisis in employment:
- Cover up the declining employment elasticity of India’s shining growth.
- Job creation has not kept pace with the demand for jobs.
- Most jobs hardly pay enough and have no social security.
- The Indian economy is not generating enough good jobs.
- Organized manufacturing and service sectors are also employing fewer people per unit of capital in order to improve their own labor productivity.
Solution:
- Productivity of the agriculture sector must be improved by using more capital-intensive methods
- Moving people out of agriculture and rural areas, into cities and into manufacturing and modern services (such as information technology).
Problem of Indian economy:
- Large size of its “informal” sector and the small scale of its enterprises.
What is the current global scenario?
- Innovations in business models are changing the forms of large enterprises and creating more informality of employment.
- Employment in the formal sector is also becoming informal with outsourcing, contract employment, and gig work.
- Concepts of “economies of scale” are changing to “economies of scope
- Enterprise forms from concentrated to dispersed units.
Problems in employment policies:
- India’s formal sector cannot create enough good jobs.
- Too few Indian women venture out of their homes to earn money.
Role of Indian women:
- More Indian women have been working outside their homes to earn money
- Women have worked in large numbers on farms, as caregivers and domestic workers in others’ homes, as municipal sweepers, and weavers and producers of handicrafts in small enterprises.
- They are employed as teachers and as Anganwadi and ASHAs (Accredited Social Health Activists) providing essential services to communities.
Issues:
- The essential services that women provide to society (including mothering and family care) are not considered productive work for the economy.
- Their work is not valued and they are paid too little.
- They are being pulled into the limited jobs the formal economy offers to increase GDP.
Way Forward
- Pushing more women into the formal economy will improve the “female participation rate” in the formal economy and may add to GDP too.
- Young men need jobs: As increasing numbers of young and underemployed males are leading to more crime and violence, and sexual assaults of women in Indian cities.
- Capitalism needs to reinvent itself: The paradigm of “growth, growth, growth” treats human society and nature as a means to its goals of producing more wealth for investors and more GDP.
- Human work and intelligence are commodities for producing value for investors in capitalist enterprises.
- The state must take care of its citizens.
- India’s leaders must find a path to reach “poorna swaraj” — social, political, and economic freedoms — for all Indians.
- Economic growth must create equal opportunities for all to learn and earn with dignity and not harm the natural environment that sustains all life.
- A new paradigm of economic science and policy is required, the development of which has become essential for humanity’s survival in this millennium.
- India should lead the way in the G-20 and beyond.