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India needs to create and sustain essential competitive advantages
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Top Stories |
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Amit Kapoor | 03 Apr, 2018
Our chief economic advisor very succinctly put it recently that India is
both a story of revival and risks. It was further noted that although
the level is still below potential, the economy seems to be picking up
resiliently in terms of direction.
Now, echoing on similar lines,
India has again become the world's fastest-growing large economy as the
latest trends from the CSO data have reported a GDP growth of 7.2 per
cent in Q3 of the current fiscal year. No less than an opportunity, this
has patently presented all of us with a sense of euphoria while taking
our economy to reclaim the "fastest-growing" mantle from China. However,
sadly it cannot be for long that one can hold up to all the zest
surrounding the Indian economy: Our performance in the global prosperity
order is the case in question here.
India has made a ripping
progress over the last few decades, with its presence now also being
felt at the world level, but when we look at the per capita real GDP
figures, the country stands far lower on the economic spectrum compared
to the rest of the world: $1,861.5 at 2010 prices for 2016 (World Bank
data).
Keeping its economic peers in mind in going by this
measure of prosperity, a quintessential question that besets us is why
is India where it is today in terms of standard of living for its
citizens? Is there a "magic sword" that some countries swing in their
favour and maintain decent levels of living standards? Well, differences
in GDP per capita across countries have abstracted much of growth and
development economics amongst economists which continues even today.
However, no less than a magical sword or a master key, the answer lies
in looking at the competitiveness of India's national economy.
Conventional
definitions of competitiveness would normally involve discussions about
the availability of cheap abundant labour and natural resources,
interest rates, exchange rates, the state policies in action and the
management practices adopted. But an idea which is single-handedly much
more eloquent to the theme of competitiveness is productivity. In its
simplest form, productivity is the value of output per unit of input
used. National competitiveness, then, is defined as the productivity of
the factors of production (labour, land and capital) employed during
production processes.
This explanation of productivity being the
most meaningful concept of competitiveness is sufficient by itself to
demonstrate that there tends to be more broad and complex forces at work
than ones that have been traditionally talked about.
Since it is
an overriding goal for a nation to produce a high and rising standard
of living for its citizens, its ability to be able to deliver on this
front depends entirely on the productivity of some of the principal
factors of production. Depending on the quality as well as the features
of the product, productivity is concerned with the efficiency with which
this product is produced.
Being the root cause of national per
capita income, productivity, however, must not be mistaken with higher
participation of the labour force although it is productivity which
determines the rate of return that a factor can earn for itself. This is
because it is possible for the overall output to rise even though the
per worker per hour productivity goes down. Hence, sustained standards
of living and productivity growth require that an economy continually
upgrade itself.
An economy that is made up of companies and a set
of industry segments must incessantly work towards improving
productivity by boosting production efficiency through added quality and
features. In the process that is unleashed, capabilities must be
developed to compete in more advanced segments as well in entirely newer
sections. Because no nation can be productive in everything it does,
the ideal is to position the limited pool of resources into uses that
are the most productive ones. The search then is for the unwavering
quality of a country that can allow its industries and companies to
create sustained competitive advantage in selected fields, not only
locally but also globally.
Therefore, policymakers seeking to
unravel higher levels of living standards must first fully understand
the determinants of productivity and its growth. It is incontestably
about how and why that underpins the process of achieving and upgrading a
nation's productivity. To find answers to some of the basic caveats,
the economy then must not be studied as a whole but in terms of specific
defining industries and segments where companies in the modern
international competition set-up compete with global strategies
involving both trade and foreign investment. This approach has the
capability to provide for an understanding why a nation like India can
build up a home base for its companies that compete on a global level.
The
home base here which is to be built over time is nothing but the nation
itself where essential competitive advantages are created and hence
sustained.
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Customs Exchange Rates |
Currency |
Import |
Export |
US Dollar
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84.35
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82.60 |
UK Pound
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106.35
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102.90 |
Euro
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92.50
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89.35 |
Japanese
Yen |
55.05 |
53.40 |
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