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What India can learn from China's 70 years of economic growth

beijingwalker

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What India can learn from China's 70 years of economic growth
China's rise is quite extraordinary from the Indian viewpoint as the two nations were at par with each other in 1950.
IANS|
Oct 06, 2019, 12.32 PM IST

China celebrated the 70th anniversary of becoming a communist republic with much fanfare. Back in October 1949, when China was adopting the communist model of societal organisation, India was framing its constitution. Less than four months later, India was a democratic republic.

The two nations in their current identities were, thus, born out of the ashes of the colonial world around the same time but adopted a contrasting system of economic and social development.

After seventy years, the two nations stand at very different levels of development in terms of their economic, military and technological progress. China's prowess on these fronts is incomparable to that of India.

China's rise is quite extraordinary from the Indian viewpoint as the two nations were at par with each other in 1950. In fact, China was at a disadvantage on some aspects of development.

Over the nineteenth century, the two countries had been following the opposite trajectory. As per Maddison estimates, India's per capita income grew from $533 in 1820 to $673 in 1913 (in 1990 dollars).

During the same period, China's per capita income declined from $600 to $552. In the first half of the twentieth century, the per capita incomes of both nations declined. Between 1913 and 1950, India's per capita income declined from $673 to $619 while China's per capita income declined from $552 to $439. Thus, in 1950 when India became a republic, it was ahead of China in economic terms.

Even as recently as 1978, the per capita GDP of China was $979, and India was $966. The excesses of Mao's rule that culminated in the disastrous programmes of the Great Leap Forward and the Cultural Revolution kept economic progress of China subdued in the first three decades.

However, all that changed with the coming of Deng Xiaoping in 1978. As a result, China's per capita income today is about 4.6 times than that of India. Despite all the demerits of the authoritarian rule in China, the performance of the Chinese economy in just the last four decades is noteworthy and holds key lessons for India as well.

The first, and probably the most important thing that China did well right from the start was its focus on human development. Even under Mao, China's emphasis on education for all and the healthcare facilities provided by its communes helped the country perform well on human development.

While the human development index (HDI) was introduced in 1990, its long run calculations have been provided by Nicholas Crafts. The HDI numbers for China and India are, thus, available for 1950 and 1973. While both the countries had almost similar HDI scores in 1950 (0.163 and 0.160 respectively), Chinaa¿s score was markedly higher in 1973 (0.407 against India's 0.289).

So, the improvement in human development poised the society perfectly for the reforms that would be imposed under Deng's China. The development of a vast pool of human capital primed the economy for economic reforms and, therefore, allowed the country to maximise its gains form it.

On the other hand, education and health have always been an area for concern for India. By the time India began undertaking economic reforms in the early 1980s, India's health and education levels were still poor. An average Indian died at the age of 54 in 1980 while merely 43.6 percent of its population was literate. By comparison, life expectancy in China was 64 years and its literacy rate was 66 percent around the same time.

The second key difference was the focus on the type of industries by the two countries. China focussed on industries that were more labour-intensive leveraging on its pool of cheap labour. Industries like textile, light engineering and electronics received higher investment. China also introduced special economic zones (SEZs) as early as 1980, which pushed manufacturing growth and setting up of export-oriented industries. India, on the other hand, focused more on heavy industries that were capital-intensive and employed less labour. Moreover, the policy focus on attracting foreign investment through instruments like SEZ came much later. As a result, by 1998 China had FDI investments of $183 per capita as per Maddison estimates and India was merely at $14.

As India hardly pushed for labour-intensive manufacturing growth, the sector never picked up and the country became a services-led economy. China, on the other hand, became the manufacturing powerhouse of the world. A similar edge is being created by Bangladesh in recent times. The export-industries that are moving out of China due to rise in labour costs and the trade war with the United States are being effectively captured by countries like Bangladesh. The country has eclipsed India's growth rate since 2017 and has become the fastest-growing country in South Asia. Most of its growth is being led by its manufacturing sector, which implies that the country will be able to create high employment for its citizens and improve their standard of living at a higher and more equitable rate than India; exactly what China has achieved over the last four decades.

Thus, India has a lot to learn from the development trajectories of its neighbours. The focus on health and education parameters for long-term growth and market-oriented policies in the short term has been an effective strategy for Asian countries. Perhaps it is time that India does the same.

https://economictimes.indiatimes.co...s-of-economic-growth/articleshow/71463414.cms
 
Indian analyzing skill again. Never accept the truth and never recognize the real weak points.

Indian has never been equal with China in human history, even if their GDP per capita were the same at some points. In 19th century, Germany's GDP per capita might be on par with Liberia's (or perhaps lower), but one was an industrializing country and one was still primitive culturally. But perhaps at that time, Liberian considered themselves superior (because they inherited all of American system), at least to their African fellows.

Same with Indian.
 
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china didn't have 70 years of economic growth, as a matter of fact chinese mao policies if continued today would have made china even worse than india, chinese liberalizing economy in the 1970s as a matter of fact made what china is today, india did the same 20 years later in the 1990s, china opening earlier got most of the american investments, while india couldn't because it was late.

regards

Indian analyzing skill again. Never accept the truth and never recognize the real weak points.

Indian has never been equal with China in human history, even if their GDP per capita were the same at some points. In 19th century, Germany's GDP per capita might be on par with Liberia's (or perhaps lower), but one was an industrializing country and one was still primitive culturally. But perhaps at that time, Liberian considered themselves superior (because they inherited all of American system), at least to their African fellows.

Same with Indian.

ok, so india was inferior to china in human history, veit congs and chinese were superior, india was inferior culturally, can you elaborate on this jingoism?

regards
 
china didn't have 70 years of economic growth, as a matter of fact chinese mao policies if continued today would have made china even worse than india, chinese liberalizing economy in the 1970s as a matter of fact made what china is today, india did the same 20 years later in the 1990s, china opening earlier got most of the american investments, while india couldn't because it was late.

regards



ok, so india was inferior to china in human history, veit congs and chinese were superior, india was inferior culturally, can you elaborate on this jingoism?

regards

Chinese believed every one were equal from the time of Confucius, or even before that. But until now, there are still untouchables in India. That is one point.

If you read historical books, the world's greatest civilizations, at least as per Western historian, were Roman civilization and Chinese civilization. Persian and Indian civilizations were not considered equal.
 
If you read historical books, the world's greatest civilizations, at least as per Western historian, were Roman civilization and Chinese civilization. Persian and Indian civilizations were not considered equal.

Should it be mentioned that the very first signs of civilization in vietnam was due to indian presence in the mekong delta in the form of oc eo culture? dated to 2nd century BC, the viet congs had not civilized until 10-12 centuries later and were mostly barbarians.

regards
 
Should it be mentioned that the very first signs of civilization in vietnam was due to indian presence in the mekong delta in the form of oc eo culture? dated to 2nd century BC, the viet congs had not civilized until 10-12 centuries later and were mostly barbarians.

regards

Thank for reminding us. The Indian cultural trace is still remaining in South Vietnam, that's why they are so backward (culturally) compared to the North. That was why the North could defeat the South so easily after American withdrawn, and that is why now Northerners dominating in every areas of education, economy, science and technology, even in the most remote corners of the South, like in Phu Quoc island.
 
Thank for reminding us. The Indian cultural trace is still remaining in South Vietnam, that's why they are so backward (culturally) compared to the North. That was why the North could defeat the South so easily after American withdrawn, and that is why now Northerners dominating in every areas of education, economy, science and technology, even in the most remote corners of the South, like in Phu Quoc island.

the way you viet congese stating things is pretty funny, racism and stereotyping goes a long way, i wont be surprised if tomorrow viet congese demand liberty from indian infuenced south vietnam. If south vietnam is so bad why dont you hand over the territory to india and you merge your country with china?

the barbarian viet congese who dont have a history spanning few centuries and cannot trace their language without chinese help will talk about superior civilizations and human history.

regards
 
the way you viet congese stating things is pretty funny, racism and stereotyping goes a long way, i wont be surprised if tomorrow viet congese demand liberty from indian infuenced south vietnam. If south vietnam is so bad why dont you hand over the territory to india and you merge your country with china?

the barbarian viet congese who dont have a history spanning few centuries and cannot trace their language without chinese help will talk about superior civilizations and human history.

regards
Your words are full of hatred and racism and you say I am racist.

In addition, this is only my view, from historical aspect it is not state policy so do not need to generalize about Vietnam.

Are you real Pakistani? I do not like Indian culture but i always think Islam culture is different.
 
Are you real Pakistani? I do not like Indian culture but i always think Islam culture is different.

islam is a religious denomination while india is a regional denomination, pakistan culture is islamic, but its an indo islamic not arab islamic. An indo islamic culture is almost same as hindu except the prohibited taboos in islam like hindu rites etc.

regards
 

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