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India the Superpower? Think again

http://biz.yahoo.com/hftn/070209/020807_pluggedin_murphy_india_fortune.html?.v=1

Friday February 9, 6:30 am ET
By Cait Murphy, Fortune assistant managing editor

Plug in the words “India” and “superpower” into an Internet search engine and it’s happy to oblige - with 1.3 million hits. I confess that I did not check each one, but I suspect that almost all of these entries date from the last couple of years.

This is understandable. For the first time ever, India has posted four straight years of 8 percent growth; since it cracked open its economy in 1991, it has averaged growth of 6 percent a year - not in the same league as China, but twice the derisory “Hindu rate of growth” that had marked the first 45 years of independence.

India has gone nuclear, and even gotten the United States to accept that status. Its movies are crossing over to become international hits. The recent $11.3 billion takeover of Corus by Mumbai-based Tata Steel, was the biggest acquisition ever by an Indian firm.

No wonder the idea of India as the next superpower is fast becoming conventional wisdom. “Our Time is Now,” asserts The Times of India. And in an October survey by the Chicago Council on World Affairs, Indians said they saw their country as the second most influential in the world.

Sorry: India is not a superpower, and in fact, that is probably the wrong ambition for it, anyway. Why? Let me answer in the form of some statistics.

-47 percent of Indian children under the age of five are either malnourished or stunted.

-The adult literacy rate is 61 percent (behind Rwanda and barely ahead of Sudan). Even this is probably overstated, as people are deemed literate who can do little more than sign their name.

-Only 10 percent of the entire Indian labor force works in the formal economy; of these fewer than half are in the private sector.

-The enrollment of six-to-15-year-olds in school has actually declined in the last year. About 40 million children who are supposed to be in school are not.

-About a fifth of the population is chronically hungry; about half of the world’s hungry live in India.

-More than a quarter of the India population lives on less than a dollar a day.

-India has more people with HIV than any other country.

(Sources: UNDP, Unicef, World Food Program; Edward Luce). You get the idea.

The 2006 UN Human Development Report, which ranks countries according to a variety of measures of human health and welfare, placed India 126th out of 177 countries. India was only a few places ahead of rival Pakistan (134th) and hapless Cambodia (129) and behind such not-about-to-be-superpowers as Equatorial Guinea (120), and Tajikistan (122).

As these and other numbers suggest, Indian triumphalism (a notable 126,000 hits on Google) is not only premature, it is misguided. Yes, growth has been brisk, and of course growth is necessary to make a dent in poverty. But as Edward Luce, author of the excellent, “In Spite of the Gods: The Strange Rise of Modern India,” noted in a recent talk, poverty in India is not falling nearly as fast as its brisk rate of growth might anticipate.

The reason for this is that Indian growth has been capital-intensive, driven by the growth in high-value services such as IT. This is a good thing, but what it does not do is create stable and reasonably paid employment for not particularly skilled people -and this matters a lot, considering eight to 10 million Indians enter the labor force every year. Luce estimates that there are 7 million Indians working in the formal manufacturing sector in India -and 100 million in China.

To look at it another way, the 1 million Indians working in IT account for less than one-half of one percent of the entire working population. This helps build reserves (and national confidence, and tax revenues) but is not the poverty buster that labor-intensive development is. As Prime Minister Singh told Luce, “Our biggest single problem is the lack of jobs for ordinary people.”

The problem with India’s self-proclaimed (and wildly premature) declaration of superpower status is that it reflects a complacency about both its present - which for many people is dire, as above - and its future. Eight percent growth for four years is wonderful, but as the saying goes, past performance is no guarantee of future results. And India is not doing what it needs to in order to sustain this momentum.

Consider the postwar history of East and Southeast Asia. The comparison is appropriate because India started at about the same point, and has watched just about every country in the region get ahead of it on the economic curve. All these places developed by being relatively open to trade; by investing in primary and secondary education; and by building pretty decent infrastructure (not only roads and ports, but health clinics and water supplies). India has begun to embrace one leg of this triangle - freer trade.

Even here, though, many of the worst features of the swadeshi (“self-reliance”) era remain intact, including an unreformed state banking sector; labor regulations that actively discourage hiring; abstruse land laws (and consequent lack of land titles); misshapen subsidies that hurt the poor; and corruption that is broad, deep, and ubiquitous. Nothing useful is being done about any of this.

As for the other two legs of this development triangle - education and infrastructure - these are still badly broken. About a third of teachers fail to show up on any given day (and, of course, are unsackable); the supply of both water and power is expensive and unreliable.

These facts of life too often go unremarked in the current euphoria about the state of the nation. “We no longer discuss the future of India,” Commerce Minister Kamal Nath told the Financial Times in a typical comment. “The future is India.” Hubris, of course, is the stuff of politics everywhere. But the future will not belong to India unless it takes action to embrace it, and that means more than high-profile vanity projects like putting a man on the moon or building the world¹s tallest tower. It means showing that the world’s largest democracy can deliver real progress to the hundreds of millions who have never used the phone, much less the Internet. And in important ways, that just isn’t happening.

India has many reasons to be proud, but considering it remains a world leader in hunger, stunting and HIV, its waxing self-satisfaction seems sadly beside the point.

Re: India the Superpower? Think again

[quote]
The reason for this is that Indian growth has been capital-intensive, driven by the growth in high-value services such as IT. This is a good thing, but what it does not do is create stable and reasonably paid employment for not particularly skilled people -and this matters a lot, considering eight to 10 million Indians enter the labor force every year.** Luce estimates that there are 7 million Indians working in the formal manufacturing sector in India -and 100 million in China.**
[/quote]

That's pretty shocking, and indicates that India faces an employment crisis in the years to come. Basically China is making everything (and exporting it), and India in comparison is not making much (and exporting very little).

Re: India the Superpower? Think again

that number is astonishing... half the world?!?!? damn.

Re: India aims to end poverty by 2040

we have so many pissing contests that everything begins to look like a judgement.

dont be so sensitive, if i was passing a judgement I would not have stated this.

good vision, aggressive, but unless somone is going to pit a stake in the ground, its not going to happen. Best of luck to India in embarking on this ambitious and important mission

Re: India aims to end poverty by 2040

please read my previous post, every post is not about trying to show others up u know. I said it was a good move to put a stake in the ground and then shared stats on why it is important and how tough of a challenge this is. Thats it.

I am not into pissing contests :slight_smile:

Re: Growth push for Muslims in India.

yes ofcourse, it was indian muslims who wanted pakistan right. :). why did u leave your brothers behind. U took mostly the rich muslims and left the poorest of poor muslims in india. U even treated mohajirs badly. I am not even talking about the bangladeshies.

Re: India aims to end poverty by 2040

Sorry if I said that u passed judgments. I was meaning the article writer. I had already read the article somewhere else. It was meant for the writer.

Re: India the Superpower? Think again

Considering that India represents only 1/6th of the world population, yet has 1/2 of the poor those figures are very shocking. They should be a wake up call to those foolishly dreaming of Indian dominance in the world. The only thing India dominates the world in, is malnutrition and poverty.

Re: India the Superpower? Think again

itsnt shocking. Indians know it and they are doing their bit.
In every article about Indian growth there is a thing about Indian poor. It was much higher before. Indian economy is growing at 8-9 percent. Either the poor will die out or manage to get up in society. The only thing india should ensure is honest implementation and localisation of resources and a govt free from corruption.

Re: Indian Muslims are the most disadvantage group in India

u can blame that on 60 years of incompetency in muslim uma in india. Any way they are the previlaged race right. A community dominated indian continent for 500 years.:D. what do u think abou that.

Re: India orders Assam shutdown as military operation fails

^ rotfl.. who is so obsessed following what is happening in other countries..:D. Did you ever look at yourself in a mirror.

Re: Growth push for Muslims in India.

I do not understan why majority of Muslims in India remains uneducated.

Re: India orders Assam shutdown as military operation fails

i find it funny how in india states with signifcant non-indic populations are vouching for indepdence/seccesion.

Re: India the Superpower? Think again

Tavleen Singh has also written similar article(s) in the Indian Express
over the last few years. I totally agree with the basic premise. It pains
me everytime I read about, see, and experience the booming economy in
India and then right the next moment also come face-to-face with the complete
lack of basic facilities, infrastructure, and so on.

However, I find it rather ironic for India to be pontificated at by a
citizen of the greatest economy in the history of the world that after
18 months STILL cannot provide for its own citizens struck by natural
disaster, still cannot provide health coverage to 15% of its citizens (not
counting the illegal immigrants), still debates the teaching of basic science in
its schools, and so on... :-) Sheeshay ke ghar mein rehanewaley....

Case in point...

This lady, at my client site in downtown, read in the National
Geographic at the Dentist's Office about a Dalit dude being traumatized in UP. She set about collecting money at her church for him and took the money with
her to deliver it personally. Of course she made a big hoopla about it!
I was asked if I wanted to talk to her about Dalits in India - she was
soliciting opinions of local Indians at the office. I suggested to the
interlocutor that the kind lady first turn her attention 4 blocks south
of her office to the poverty, crime, and such of the underprivileged folks
in the poor neighbourhoods of Columbus. And she did go to India AFTER
Katrina happened! Wouldn't the money and effort have been better served in
N'awleans?!

Is all this a case of envy, future fear, etc. masquerading as ivory
tower lectures.

Re: India the Superpower? Think again

Telegraph
163-year lab lag with China
G.S. MUDUR

New Delhi, Feb. 10: A bit of school algebra may sometimes deliver a
reality check. India is hoping that its economic growth will edge
closer to China's 10 per cent, but it still lags over a century and a
half behind the northern neighbour in its science and technology
workforce.

A scientist at the Centre for Mathematical Modelling and Computer
Simulation in Bangalore has shown that India will take at least 163
years to match China's research workforce of 850,000 even if Beijing
were to freeze the number today.

Re: India the Superpower? Think again

“Indians said they saw their country as the second most influential in the world.”
:rolleyes:
Do these people ever watch the news or open up a newspaper?
Still, India has made many strides and thats commendable…
On the other hand… I find it unfair that the world can gloss over many of Indias many failings, while we in Pakistan, and other countries in the region, have our failings constantly thrown in our faces..
At least the shining India logo didnt fool any of Indias poor; but it sure as heck pulled the wool over the eyes of the Westerners.

Re: India the Superpower? Think again

Even Amid Its Wealth, India Finds, Half Its Small Children Are Malnourished

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By SOMINI SENGUPTA
Published: February 10, 2007

MUMBAI, India, Feb. 9 — Even after India’s years of sustained economic growth, child malnutrition rates here are comparable to some of the poorest countries, and at times worse.

In this young nation, where 40 percent of the people are under 18, figures released by the government on Friday offered an alarming portrait of child health: Among children under 3, nearly half are clinically underweight, the most reliable measure of malnutrition.

Additionally troubling, the incidence of child malnutrition declined only one percentage point, to 46 percent, in seven years, according the latest National Family Health Survey. During that time, the economy grew at 6 to 8 percent; it is poised to swell by more than 9 percent in the current fiscal year, the government announced this week.

India’s economic prospects pivot in part around what it calls its demographic dividend.

But the child malnutrition rates put India roughly on a par with Burkina Faso and Bangladesh. Sudan posted better results, according to data compiled by the United Nations Children’s Fund, or Unicef. Malnutrition in China was about 8 percent, Unicef said.

The long-awaited health report, which was quietly made public on Friday on a government Web site, also showed scant progress in childhood immunization. In the survey, compiled in 2005-6, 43.5 percent of children 12 to 23 months old were fully immunized, compared with 42 percent in the previous survey, in 1998-99.

Poverty amid plenty is hardly new in India. But the latest numbers are startling because they suggest that economic growth has not significantly uplifted the most destitute, nor have well-meaning government efforts to improve children’s well-being yielded measurable results.

The nutrition figures also reflect the grinding poverty in parts of rural India, and poor public health and sanitation in general. The health survey measured how many households had access to a toilet (44 percent nationwide) and the proportion of children who suffered from diarrhea and who were given oral rehydration salts (58 percent).

“It’s partly poverty, it’s partly the collapse of health services, it’s a measure of a completely lopsided pattern of growth in the country,” said Jean Drèze, an economist who led a study of India’s child nutrition programs late last year.

The nutrition figures showed a wide disparity among states. In central Madhya Pradesh, malnutrition rates are around 60 percent; in Tamil Nadu, the rates have steadily improved, bringing malnutrition down to 33 percent.

The national figures could be seen as an indictment of an ambitious government-financed program, the Integrated Child Development Services, which is intended to help poor families feed their children.

The program has been dogged by criticism in recent months, from charges of corruption in some states to poor accountability elsewhere. Studies by both Unicef and Mr. Drèze’s group have concluded that in some places, children get only raw grains. Some workers were not properly trained and some mothers were inadequately counseled about feeding newborns.

Werner Schultink, who runs child development and nutrition programs for Unicef in India, called the latest figures “very disappointing.”

“It gives an indication that some of the programs are not as effective as they should be,” he said. In mid-January, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh went further in his criticism, urging state officials to review the child nutrition program.

“There is strong evidence that the program has not led to any substantial improvement in the nutritional status of children under 6,” he wrote in a letter, adding that for the government actually to keep its promise of providing nutrition to poor children, it would require close monitoring of the program, and “political will.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/02/10/world/asia/10india.html