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The Next China? India Must First Beat Bangladesh

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The Next China? India Must First Beat Bangladesh

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By Andy Mukherjee | Bloomberg
Oct. 17, 2020 at 4:44 a.m. EDT

India’s Covid-19 economic gloom turned into despair this week, on news that its per capita gross domestic product may be lower for 2020 than in neighboring Bangladesh.(1)
“Any emerging economy doing well is good news,” Kaushik Basu, a former World Bank chief economist, tweeted after the International Monetary Fund updated its World Economic Outlook. “But it’s shocking that India, which had a lead of 25% five years ago, is now trailing.”

Ever since it began opening up the economy in the 1990s, India’s dream has been to emulate China’s rapid expansion. After three decades of persevering with that campaign, slipping behind Bangladesh hurts its global image. The West wants a meaningful counterweight to China, but that partnership will be predicated on India not getting stuck in a lower-middle-income trap.

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The relative underperformance may also dent self-confidence. If a country with large-power ambitions is beaten in its own backyard — by a smaller nation it helped liberate in 1971 by going to war with Pakistan — its influence in South Asia and the Indian Ocean could wane.

Where have things gone wrong? The coronavirus pandemic is definitely to blame. Bangladesh’s new infections peaked in mid-June, while India’s daily case numbers are starting to taper only now, after hitting a record high for any country.

With 165 million people, Bangladesh has recorded fewer than 5,600 Covid-19 deaths. While India has eight times the population, it has 20 times the fatalities. What’s worse, the severe economic lockdown India imposed to stop the spread of the disease is set to wipe out 10.3% of real output, according to the IMF. That’s nearly 2.5 times the loss the global economy is expected to suffer.

Fiscal squeamishness, an undercapitalized financial system and a multiyear investment funk would all delay India’s post-Covid demand recovery. Worse, even without the pandemic, India might have eventually lost the race to Bangladesh. The reason is nested in a new paper by economist Shoumitro Chatterjee of Pennsylvania State University and Arvind Subramanian, formerly India’s chief economic adviser, titled “India’s Export-Led Growth: Exemplar and Exception.”

Consider first the exceptionalism of India’s growth. Bangladesh is doing well because it’s following the path of previous Asian tigers. Its slice of low-skilled goods exports is in line with its share of poor-country working-age population. Vietnam is punching slightly above its weight. But basically, both are taking a leaf out of China’s playbook. The People’s Republic held on to high GDP growth for decades by carving out for itself a far bigger dominance of low-skilled goods manufacturing than warranted by the size of its labor pool.

India, however, has gone the other way, choosing not to produce the things that could have absorbed its working-age population of 1 billion into factory jobs. “India’s missing production in the key low-skill textiles and clothing sector amounts to $140 billion, which is about 5% of India’s GDP,” the authors say.

If half of India’s computer software exports in 2019 ceased to exist, there would be a furor. But that $60 billion loss would have been the same as the foregone exports annually from low-skill production. It’s real, and yet nobody wants to talk about it. Policymakers don’t want to acknowledge that the shoes and apparel factories that were never born — or were forced to close down — could also have earned dollars and created mass employment. They would have provided a pathway for permanent rural-to-urban migration in a way that jobs that require higher levels of education and training never can. Bangladesh has two out of five women of working age in the labor force, double India’s 21% participation rate.

A bigger danger is that instead of taking corrective action, politicians may double down on past mistakes and seek salvation in autarky: “Poorer than Bangladesh? Never mind. We can erect barriers to imports and make stuff for the domestic economy. Let’s create jobs that way.”

Suddenly, the 1960s and ’70s slogan of self-reliance is making a return in economic policy.
It’s in dispelling this pessimism that the Chatterjee-Subramanian study comes in handy again: Contrary to popular belief, India has been an exemplar of export-led growth, doing better than all countries except China and Vietnam. The glass is more than half full.

Trade has worked for the country. It’s the composition that’s wrong, because of an unusual “comparative advantage–defying specialization,” the researchers show. India exports a lot of high-skilled manufacturing goods and services, such as computer software.

But as the world’s factory, China is now ceding room to others at the lower end of the spectrum. That is where India’s opportunity — and the competitive advantage of its cheap and not particularly healthy or well-educated labor — really lies.

Given the urgent challenge of creating at least 8 million jobs year after year, it’s also the country’s biggest post-pandemic headache.

(1) At their current prices, and not adjusted for the difference in the purchasing power of their local currencies.

This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners.

Andy Mukherjee is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering industrial companies and financial services. He previously was a columnist for Reuters Breakingviews. He has also worked for the Straits Times, ET NOW and Bloomberg News.

For more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.com/opinion
©2020 Bloomberg L.P.

 
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Nothing to really see here.....BD has historically been the richest part of the subcontinent..... the status quo is being restored.



This is not a milestone but a small confirmation of the fact that we going in the right direction and that our reforms & schemes are paying off.




Down this path, many great things will come for the nation, we mustn't go astray, however, we must weed out the devils amongst us and refine our path from time to time.


Staying true to our roots but not disregarding the need for timely course corrections.

We needed this little pointer, now we must work doubly as hard. Make Bengal great again.


Joi Bangla!
 
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Next China?? We are not planing on spreading virus world over and celebrate afterwords. For Bangladesh, keep up the good work👍
If India had one minute to respect the facts. Maybe India has reached the level of Vietnam.... Of course, Indians should be grateful for the Yankee virus. At least the virus made Indians forget their economic situation in 2019...

.Good luck, superpower 2020.
 
If India had one minute to respect the facts. Maybe India has reached the level of Vietnam.... Of course, Indians should be grateful for the Yankee virus. At least the virus made Indians forget their economic situation in 2019...

.Good luck, superpower 2020.
We are at level with all nations and will bring down flying bats CCP holding there nostril to the level earth so they start respecting fellow humans.
 
Next China?? We are not planing on spreading virus world over and celebrate afterwords. For Bangladesh, keep up the good work👍
Nobody want to reach india level of 7 million affected and still rising. Virus is not the key. They keynis enforce and control. Obviously indian is incompetent and hopeless. Even u spread 100 virus to China, Cnina will never reached the stage of India. Becos Chinese are competent and resourceful.

Indian are just too dumb. :enjoy:
We are at level with all nations and will bring down flying bats CCP holding there nostril to the level earth so they start respecting fellow humans.
Lol... Yes, China spread virus to india and what u can do? You have nothing that can beat China besides having million of covid-19 than China. U cant out nuke us, out trade us or out spend us. India is a poor small fry country , act as a punching bag for rich China to bash. :lol: So pathetic!
 
We are at level with all nations and will bring down flying bats CCP holding there nostril to the level earth so they start respecting fellow humans.
No, please stop lying. Vietnam still leads India. Even Bangladesh leads India in some aspects (urbanization rate, GDP per capita, life expectancy, etc.). India as a BBB- country (S&P International Credit Rating). First, India should respect the facts, stop lying, and stop making international jokes. I believe in the next 10 years. India will be truly developed. Reach the level of Vietnam. . .
 
The virus now can be earliest traced back to Spain, and as the reports say,US's Covid was from Europe, Australia's covid was from US, none was from China. so who is spreading Covid?


Can you post the source of your information because what you are saying i have not seen reported anywhere. Thanks
 
Well, India is a top cotton producer, so actually they have competitive advantage in textile industry. let alone their 1.3 billion people as the consumers.

Top ten cotton-producing countries are India, China, the United States, Pakistan, Brazil, Australia, Uzbekistan, Turkey, Turkmenistan, and Burkina Faso.

 
Can you post the source of your information because what you are saying i have not seen reported anywhere. Thanks
Cuomo: The Coronavirus That Came To New York "Did Not Come From China, It Came From Europe"
Ian Schwartz
On Date April 24, 2020

Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D-NY) argued the coronavirus that hit New York state did not come from China but Europe, probably Italy he said. At his Friday coronavirus press briefing, Cuomo said President Trump's China travel ban was too late and the horse had long left the barn.

"Researchers now find and they report in some newspapers, the virus was spreading wildly in Italy in February and there was an outbreak, massive outbreak in Italy in February," Cuomo said. "Researchers now say there were likely 28,000 cases in the United States in February, including 10,000 cases in the state of New York and the Coronavirus flu virus that came to New York, did not come from China. It came from Europe."

"When you look at the number of flights that came from Europe to New York, the New York metropolitan area, New York and New Jersey during January, February, up to the close down, 13,000 flights bringing 2.2 million people," he said. "All right. So November, December you have the outbreak in China. Everybody knows."

"We acted two months after the China outbreak," the governor said. "When you look back, does anyone think the virus was still in China waiting for us to act two months later? We all talk about the global economy and how fast people move and how mobile we are. How can you expect that when you act two months after the outbreak in China, the virus was only in China waiting for us to act? The horse had already left the barn by the time we moved."

https://www.realclearpolitics.com/v..._not_come_from_china_it_came_from_europe.html

Most Australian coronavirus cases coming from USA: Scott Morrison
By Nick Pearson
10:56am Mar 20, 2020
The United States is the country of origin for most of the coronavirus cases in Australia, the prime minister has said.

Speaking on 2GB this morning, Scott Morrison said now was the right time to close the nation's borders.

"We were able to slow the virus' start and spread in Australia through these early periods," Mr Morrison said.

"The country which has actually been responsible for a large amount of these (coronavirus cases) has actually been the United States.

"At the end of the day, that's a function of the number of people who travel between the US and Australia."
Eighty per cent of coronavirus cases in Australia are people who have come in from overseas or have caught the disease directly from them.

A failure to conduct adequate numbers of coronavirus tests meant the United States appeared to have many more infections in recent weeks than had been announced.

https://www.9news.com.au/national/c...morrison/5b04121e-a597-4aaf-a1a7-04be02f9d376

Coronavirus entered India from Europe, Middle East and not China, claims IISc study
The report used genomics to suggest that the virus spread through the most travelled countries.


New Delhi | Jagran News Desk: The novel coronavirus in India may have originated from Europe, the Middle East, Oceania and South Asia regions, according to a study by the Indian Institute of Science (IISc) in Bengaluru.

The observation is a part of the findings of the IISc team comprising Kumar Somasundaram, Mainak Mondal and Ankita Lawarde after analysing 294 Indian viral genomes.

The objective of the study was to determine the genetic diversity among Indian SARS-CoV-2 viral isolates in comparison to the strains that are occurring worldwide.

"The potential origin appears to be countries mainly from Europe, the Middle East, Oceania and South Asia regions, which strongly implies the spread of virus through the most travelled countries," the team noted.

"Among different strains of the virus as identified by Global Initiative on Sharing All Influenza Data, Indian SARS-CoV-2 viruses are enriched with G (50 per cent) and I (6.7 per cent) clades in addition to 40 per cent samples with unknown genetic variants," it stated further.

The team is also finding the functional impact of high occurrence non-synonymous mutations on the viral protein functions and use this information toward understanding immune escape mechanisms and also developing mutant specific therapies.

The team noted that while the novel coronavirus increased to more than five million worldwide, it has just crossed over one lakh in India.

The low infection rate in India, according to the team, could be due to long lockdown with effective social distancing, active identification of COVID-19 patients and quarantining them with proper treatment, presumed cross-immune protection and possibly variation in the viral strains that are introduced or prevalent in India.

"Comparison of viral genome sequences from different regions/countries allows us to identify the genetic diversity among viruses which would help in ascertaining virulence, disease pathogenicity, as well as origin and spread of SARS- CoV-2, between countries," the team added.

 
Well, India is a top cotton producer, so actually they have competitive advantage in textile industry. let alone their 1.3 billion people as the consumers.

Top ten cotton-producing countries are India, China, the United States, Pakistan, Brazil, Australia, Uzbekistan, Turkey, Turkmenistan, and Burkina Faso.


Well - if production of cotton alone was a marker for success, then India would have prospered long ago.

However - ongoing investments in carding, spinning, dyeing and weaving is far more important. I am very close to many investors and industrialists in those sectors in Bangladesh so I know.

Similar ongoing investments in India did not occur per my personal accounts and reports, which hurt their prospects of success. India's textile industry is run by equipment of 1960's/70's vintage largely, and even WWI vintage equipment in some cases. Investment in newer equipment largely did not occur. Efficiency is a second thought, keeping down production costs is a priority.

India is a self-serving economy, bolstering exports by boosting unskilled or semi-skilled industry and exports was never a priority in India. Businessmen there are after quick gains in shortest amount of time and they focus on services (such as cellphone and e-commerce) that takes advantage of the humongous population and burgeoning middle class, whose number exceeds that of the population of many EU countries joined together.

Heck Bangladesh and Indonesian Middle class are bigger than the population of many EU countries, to say nothing of India. :-)

Bangladesh massively invested in these industries some three decades ago with very high quality infra from Germany and Switzerland (mainly Trutzschler and Ritter branded equipment as I recall, among other best-of-the-best equipment) and that helped tremendously.

Of course having very low labor rates did not hurt either. Bangladesh labor rates are half that of India and maybe one-third or one-fourth that of other Tiger economies, including China, in the textile sector.

Over time, this labor rate advantage will evaporate, but you have to then move up-market with further value addition steps, if you don't want to fall into the middle-income trap like some of the older ASEAN tiger economies.
 
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You have got some time to enjoy. So enjoy. Congratulations for your limited victory. I really like to see economic race in SA, not war.


Whatever makes you feel better.



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But okay......



Human development indices are a sham, India can never be bested by anyone in the region.




All hail the indomitable Bharat.



Just do something about your obnoxious egos and sense of denial; Ignorance stops being blissful after a while.




@Michael Corleone what I'd give to be back in high school right now lol, they can try call us 'bhikari'....


I'd be passing out black eyes for absolutely free :devil:
 
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Thread hijack and derailing attempts will be reported. Some Indian trolls are seen attempting this here.
 

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