By Eric Vandenbroeck
and co-workers
Why Is There No Inevitability In China's
Decline To India's Rise
Indian policymakers may
be tempted into believing that China's decline ordains India's dizzy
resurgence. But, in the end, whether or not India turns into the next China is
not merely a question of global economic forces or geopolitics. It will require
a dramatic policy shift by New Delhi itself.
With China’s status
as the “workshop of the world” marred by rising political risks, slowing
growth, and increasingly untenable “zero COVID” policies, no country seems more
poised to benefit than India. In May, The Economist ran a cover
story about India, asking whether this was the country’s moment—and concluded
that yes, it probably was. More recently, Stanford economist and Nobel laureate
Michael Spence declared that “India is the outstanding performer now,” noting
that the country “remains the most preferred investment destination.” And in
November, Chetan Ahya, Morgan Stanley’s chief Asia
economist, predicted that the Indian economy would account for one-fifth of
global growth over the next decade.
Without a doubt,
India could be on the cusp of a historic boom—if it manages to increase private
investment by attracting large numbers of global firms from China. But will New
Delhi be able to seize this opportunity? The answer is not apparent. In 2021,
we provided a sobering assessment of India’s prospects in Foreign
Affairs. We pointed out that popular assumptions about a booming economy
were inaccurate. The country’s economic rise faltered after the 2008 global
financial crisis and stalled entirely after 2018. And we argued that this slowdown
lay deep in India’s economic framework: its emphasis on self-reliance and the
defects in its policymaking process—“software bugs,” as we called them.
One year later,
despite the exuberant press, India’s economic environment remains essentially
unchanged. As a result, we believe that radical policy changes are needed
before India can revive domestic investment, much less convince large numbers
of global businesses to move their production there. An important lesson for
policymakers is that there is no inevitability, no straight line of causation,
from China's decline to India's rise.
Promised Land?
In some ways, India
looks like a promised land for global companies. It has structural advantages,
its potential rivals have serious drawbacks, and the government offers
significant investment incentives.
Could you start with
the structural advantages? Commanding a territory nine times larger than
Germany and a population that will soon overtake China as the world’s largest,
India is one of the few countries that is big enough to house many large-scale
industries, producing initially for global markets and ultimately for the
burgeoning domestic market. Moreover, it is an established democracy with a
long legal tradition and a notably young, talented, and English-speaking
workforce. And India also has some considerable achievements to its credit: its
physical infrastructure has improved dramatically in recent years. In contrast,
its digital infrastructure—particularly its financial payments system—has
somewhat surpassed that of the United States.
Beyond these
advantages, there is the matter of alternatives. If international firms do not
go to India, where else might they go? A few years ago, other South Asian
countries might have been considered attractive candidates. But that has
changed. Over the past year, Sri Lanka has experienced an epochal social,
political, and economic crisis. Pakistan has been ravaged by an environmental
shock that has aggravated its perennial macroeconomic vulnerability and
political instability. Even Bangladesh, long a development darling, has been
forced to borrow from the International Monetary Fund after Russia’s invasion
of Ukraine caused commodity prices to soar, depleting the country’s foreign
exchange reserves. Amid this South Asian “polycrisis,”
as the economic historian, Adam Tooze has called it,
India stands out as a haven of stability.
More significant is
the comparison with China, India’s most apparent economic competitor. Over the
past year, Chinese President Xi Jinping’s regime has been buffeted by multiple
challenges, including slow economic growth and a looming demographic decline.
The Chinese Communist Party’s draconian COVID-19 lockdowns and assault on the
private sector have only worsened things. In recent weeks, Beijing has
confronted an increasingly restive population, including the most widespread
antigovernment protests the country has witnessed in decades. This turn toward
authoritarianism at home and aggression abroad—and the inept governance that
has taken the sheen off the fabled “China model”—have made democratic India
look even more inviting.
Finally, India has
taken steps that, on paper, should sweeten the deal for international firms. In
early 2021, the government introduced its Production-Linked Incentives (PLI)
scheme to provide economic inducements to foreign and domestic manufacturing
firms that “Make in India.” Since then, the PLI initiative—which offers
significant subsidies to manufacturers in advanced sectors such as telecom,
electronics, and medical devices—has had a few notable successes. In September
2022, for example, Apple announced that it plans to produce between five and
ten percent of its new iPhone 14 models in India; in November, Foxconn said it
plans to build a $20 billion semiconductor plant in the country in conjunction
with a domestic partner.
Rhetoric Vs. Reality
If India is the
promised land, however, many others should join these examples. International
firms should be lining up to shift their production to the subcontinent, while
domestic firms boost their investments to cash in on the boom. Yet there is
little sign that either of these things is happening. By many measures, the
economy is still struggling to regain its pre-pandemic footing.
Take India’s GDP. As enthusiastic
commentators never point out, it is true that growth over the past two years
has been exceptionally rapid, higher than any other major country. But this is
essentially a statistical illusion. Left out is that during the first year of
the pandemic, India suffered the worst contraction in output of any large
developing country. Measured relative to 2019, GDP today is just 7.6 percent
larger, compared with 13.1 percent in China and 4.6 percent in the slow-growing
United States. In effect, India’s annual growth rate over the past three years
has been just two and a half percent, far short of the seven percent annual
rate that the country considers its growth potential. The performance of the
industrial sector has been weaker still.
And forward-looking
indicators are hardly more encouraging. Announcements of new projects (as
measured by the Center for the Monitoring of the Indian Economy) have again
fallen off after a brief post-pandemic rebound, remaining far below the levels
achieved during the boom in the early years of this century. Even more
striking, there is little evidence that foreign firms are relocating production
to India. Despite all the talk about India as the destination of choice,
foreign direct investment has stagnated for the past decade, remaining around
two percent of the GDP. For every firm that has embraced the India opportunity,
many more have had unsuccessful experiences in India, including Google,
Walmart, Vodafone, and General Motors. Even Amazon has struggled, announcing in
late November that it was shutting three of its Indian ventures in fields as
diverse as food delivery, education, and wholesale e-commerce.
Why are global firms
reluctant to shift their China operations to India? For the same reason that
domestic firms are unwilling to invest: because the risks remain far too high.
Bugs In The Software
Of the many risks to
investing in India, two are particularly important. First, firms still need
more confidence that the policies in place when they support will not be
changed later in ways that render their investments unprofitable. And even if
the policy framework remains attractive on paper, firms cannot be sure that
rules will be enforced impartially rather than in favor of “national
champions”—the giant Indian conglomerates that the government has favored.
These problems have
already had severe consequences. Telecom firms have seen their profits
devastated by shifting policies. Energy providers have needed help passing on
cost increases to consumers and collecting promised revenues from the State
Electricity Boards. E-commerce firms have discovered that government rulings
about acceptable practices can be reversed after making large investments
according to the original rules.
At the same time,
national champions have prospered mightily. As of August 2022, nearly 80
percent of the $160 billion year-to-date increase in India’s stock market
capitalization was accounted for by just one conglomerate, the Adani Group,
whose founder has suddenly become the third richest person in the world. In
other words, the playing field is tilted.
Nor can foreign firms
reduce their risks by partnering with large domestic firms. Going into business
with national champions is risky, as these groups seek to dominate the same
lucrative fields, such as e-commerce. And other domestic firms have no wish to
tread in sectors dominated by groups that have received extensive regulatory
favors from the government.
The Price Of Entry
Apart from elevated
risks, there are several other reasons why international firms are likely to
remain gun-shy about India. For example, one of the key elements of the PLI
scheme is raising tariffs on foreign-made components. The idea is to encourage
firms relocating to India to purchase inputs in the domestic market. Still, the
approach significantly hinders most global enterprises since advanced products in
many sectors are typically made of hundreds or thousands of parts sourced from
the most competitive producers worldwide. By attaching high tariffs to these
parts, New Delhi has provided a powerful disincentive for firms contemplating
investment in the country.
High import tariffs
may be less of an issue for companies such as Apple that plan to sell their
products in India. But these firms are few and far between since India’s market
of middle-class consumers remains surprisingly tiny—no more than $500 billion
compared with a global market of some $30 trillion, according to a study by Shoumitro Chatterjee and one of us (Subramanian). According
to international definitions, only 15 percent of the population can be
considered middle class. At the same time, the rich, who account for a large
share of GDP, tend to save a large percentage of their earnings. Both factors
reduce middle-class consumption. For most firms, the risks of doing business in
India outweigh the potential rewards.
Recognizing the
growing tension between its protectionist policies and its goal of enhancing
India’s global competitiveness, New Delhi has recently negotiated free trade
agreements with Australia and the United Arab Emirates. But these
initiatives—with smaller and less dynamic economies—pale beside those of
India’s competitors in Asia. Vietnam, for example, has signed ten free trade
agreements since 2010, including with China, the European Union, and the United
Kingdom, as well as with its regional partners in the Association of Southeast
Asian Nations (ASEAN).
Dangerous Deficits
A well-known
prerequisite for economic take-off in any country has key macroeconomic
indicators in reasonable balance: fiscal and external trade deficits need to be
low, as does inflation. But in India today, these indicators are off-kilter.
Since well before the pandemic began, inflation has been above the central
bank’s legally mandated ceiling of six percent. Meanwhile, India’s current
account deficit has doubled to about four percent of GDP in the third quarter
of 2022, as it struggles to increase exports while its imports continue to
grow.
Of course, many
countries have macroeconomic problems, but India’s average of these three indicators
is worse than any other large economy, save the United States and Turkey.
India’s general government deficit, at around 10 percent of GDP, is one of the
world's most worrisome, with interest payments alone accounting for more than
20 percent of the budget. (By comparison, debt payments account for just eight
percent of the U.S. budget.) The plight of India’s state-run electricity
distribution companies is aggravating the situation, whose losses are now about
1.5 percent of GDP, over and above the fiscal deficits.
A final barrier to
growth is a profound structural shift that has undermined the dynamism and
competitiveness of private enterprises. India’s huge informal sector has been
especially hard hit: first by the 2016 demonetization of large-denomination
notes, which dealt a devastating blow to smaller firms that kept their working
capital in cash; then by a new goods-and-services tax the following year, and
finally by the COVID-19 pandemic. As a result, employment of low-skilled
workers has fallen significantly, and real rural wages have declined, forcing
India’s poor and low-income population to cut back their consumption.
These labor market
vulnerabilities are a cautionary reminder that the country’s vaunted digital
sector—whose promise does seem almost unbounded—employs high-skilled workers
who constitute a small fraction of the workforce. As such, India’s rise as a
digital powerhouse, no matter how successful, seems unlikely to generate
sufficient economy-wide benefits to effect the broader structural
transformation that the country needs.
India’s Choice
In other words, India
faces three major obstacles in its quest to become “the next China”: investment
risks are too big, policy inwardness is too intense, and macroeconomic
imbalances are too large. These obstacles must be removed before global firms
invest since they have other alternatives. They can bring their operations back
to ASEAN, which served as the world’s factory floor before that role shifted to
China. They can bring them back home to advanced countries, which played that
role before ASEAN countries. Or they can maintain them in China, accepting the
risks because the Indian alternative is no better.
If the Indian
authorities are willing to change course and remove the obstacles to investment
and growth, the rosy pronouncements of pundits could indeed come true. If not,
however, India will continue to muddle along, with parts of the economy doing
well but the country failing to reach its potential.
Indian policymakers
may be tempted into believing that China's decline ordains India's dizzy
resurgence. But, in the end, whether or not India turns into the next China is
not merely a question of global economic forces or geopolitics. It will require
a dramatic policy shift by New Delhi itself.
As for a potential
Europe-India relations ship, this November, Germany’s Economic Minister Robert Habeck promised “no more naivety in trade dealings with
Beijing.” The extent to which the German government will change its approach
depends on the coalition. Habeck and Baerbock belong to the Green Party, which intends to put
its stamp on international relations strategy. Yet, as leader of the SDP,
Scholz may not be ready to make significant concessions to a rival political
group.
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