India
is Passing China in Population. Can Its Economy Ever Do the Same?
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India has a young, vast work force that is
expanding as China’s ages and shrinks. But the country’s immense size also lays
bare its enormous challenges.
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India has a work force that is young and
expanding even as those in most industrialized countries, including China, are aging
and in some cases shrinking.
India’s leaders rarely miss a
chance to cheer the nation’s many distinctions, from its status as the world’s largest
democracy to its new rank as the world’s fifth-largest economy, after recently surpassing
Britain, its former colonial overlord. Even its turn this year as host of the Group
of 20 summit is being celebrated as announcing India’s arrival on the global stage.
Now, another milestone is approaching,
though with no fanfare from Indian officials. The country will soon pass China in
population, knocking it from its perch for the first time in at least three centuries,
data released by the United Nations on Wednesday shows.
With size — a population that
now exceeds 1.4 billion people — comes geopolitical, economic and cultural power
that India has long sought. And with growth comes the prospect of a “demographic
dividend.” India has a work force that is young and expanding even as those in most
industrialized countries, including China, are aging and in some cases shrinking.
But India’s immense size and
lasting growth also lay bare its enormous challenges, renewing in this latest spotlight
moment a perennial, if still uncomfortable, question: When will it ever fulfill its vast promise and become a power on the order of
China or the United States?
“The young people have a great
potential to contribute to the economy,” said Poonam Muttreja,
the executive director of the Population Foundation of India. “But for them to do
that requires the country to make investments in not just education but health,
nutrition and skilling for employability.”
There also need to be jobs. That’s
a longstanding deficiency for a top-heavy and at times gridlocked economy that must
somehow produce 90 million new jobs before 2030, outside agriculture, to keep employment
rates steady. Even in the years immediately before the pandemic, India was falling
far short of that pace.
In China, a shrinking and aging
population will make it harder to sustain economic growth and achieve its geopolitical
ambitions to surpass the United States. But in previous decades, when it was still
growing, it found its way to transformative growth through export-driven manufacturing,
like smaller East Asian countries did before it.
India has yet to be able to replicate
that formula or to come up with one of its own that can achieve more than incremental
gains.
India’s infrastructure, while
vastly improved from where it stood a few decades ago, remains far behind China’s,
hindering foreign investment, which has stagnated in recent years. Another major
problem is that only one in five Indian women are in the formal work force, among
the lowest rates anywhere and one that has actually declined as India has gotten
more prosperous. Apart from quashing the aspirations of the country’s hundreds of
millions of young women, keeping them out of formal jobs acts as a terrible brake
on the economy.
“In terms of education, employment,
digital access and various other parameters, girls and women do not have equal access
to life-empowering tools and means as the boys and men have,” Ms. Muttreja said. “This needs to change for India to truly reap
the demographic dividend.”
India’s economy has been growing
much faster than its population for a generation, and the proportion of Indians
living in extreme poverty has plummeted. Yet most Indians remain poor by global
standards. To enter the top 10 percent by income, an Indian need make only about
$300 a month. Famines are a thing of the past, but more than a third of all children
are malnourished.
The country’s economic shortfalls,
which have bred fierce competition even for the lowest-level jobs and stoked impatience
among an aspirational Indian middle class, bring the risk of instability as dreams
and realities diverge.
The rate of development across
the huge country remains widely unequal, with some Indian states akin to middle-income
nations and others struggling to provide the basics. The distribution of resources
is increasingly becoming a tense political issue, testing India’s federal system.
When Gayathri Rajmurali, a local politician from the southern state of Tamil
Nadu, found herself in India’s north for the first time this year, the disparity
shocked her. “The north, they are behind 10 to 15 years to our places,” she said,
pointing to indicators like basic infrastructure and average income.
And then there is the combustible
environment created by the Hindu-first nationalism of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s
ruling party, as his support base has sped up a century-old campaign to reshape
India’s pluralist democratic tradition and relegate Muslims and other minorities
to second-class citizenship. Demographic numbers are part of the political provocation
game, with right-wing leaders often falsely portraying India’s Muslim population
of 200 million as rising sharply in proportion to the Hindu population as they call
on Hindu families to have more children.
Mr. Modi and his lieutenants
say India is heading in only one direction: Up. They point to the undeniable gains
in a country that has quadrupled the size of its economy within a generation.
Among major economies, India’s
is projected to be the fastest-growing this year, with the World Bank expecting
it to expand 6.3 percent in the new fiscal year after a sharp downturn early in
the pandemic. A rapid increase in public investment is still improving the country’s
lagging infrastructure. It has multiple dazzling tech start-up scenes and a technologically
savvy middle class, and its unique system of digital public goods is lifting
up the marginalized. Its culture, from popular films to a rich tradition of music,
will only grow in influence as it expands its reach to new audiences.
And now it has an enviable demographic
profile, with people in their most economically productive years represented in
the largest numbers. While China’s extended “one-child policy” has resulted in a
steep decline in population that could put dire strain on its economy, similar extreme
measures in India, like forced sterilization, were short-lived.
Instead, India addressed its
fears of overpopulation and reduced the growth rate through more organic and gradual
ways, including serious efforts to promote contraception and smaller families. As
mass education has spread, especially among girls and women, the fertility rate
has dipped to just above the level required to maintain the current population size.
And India is increasingly looking
to capitalize on China’s economic and diplomatic difficulties to become a higher-end
manufacturing alternative — it is now producing a small share of Apple’s iPhones
— and a sought-after geopolitical partner and counterweight.
“India’s time has arrived,” Mr.
Modi recently declared.
Parallels
The two nations share several
historical parallels. The last time they traded places in population, in the 18th
century or earlier, the Mughals ruled India and the Qing dynasty was expanding the
borders of China; between them they were perhaps the richest empires that had ever
existed. But as European powers went on to colonize most of the planet and then
industrialized at home, the people of India and China became among the world’s poorest.
As recently as 1990, the two
countries were still on essentially the same footing, with a roughly equal economic
output per capita. Since then, China has shaken the world by creating more wealth
than any other country in history. While India, too, has picked itself back up in
the three decades since it liberalized its economy, it remains well behind in many
of the most basic scales.
Today, China’s economy is roughly
five times the size of India’s. The average citizen of China has an economic output
of almost $13,000 a year, while the average Indian’s is less than $2,500. In human-development
indicators, the contrast is even sharper, with infant mortality rates much higher
in India, life expectancy lower and access to sanitation less prevalent.
The divergence, analysts say,
comes down largely to China’s central consolidation of policy power, serious land
reform, an earlier start in opening up its economy to market forces starting in
the late 1970s, and its single-minded focus on export-led growth. China took the
first-mover advantage and then compounded its dominance as it pursued its plans
relentlessly.
India started opening its quasi-socialist
economy nearly a decade later. Its approach remained piecemeal, constrained by tricky
coalition politics and the competing interests of industrialists, unions, farmers
and factions across its social spectrum.
The world now has a radically
different power structure than it did in 1990. China has already made itself the
world’s factory, all but closing off any path India could take to competitive dominance
in export-driven manufacturing.
A “Make in India” campaign, inaugurated
by Mr. Modi in 2014, has been stuttering ever since. Wage costs are lower in India
than in China, but much of the work force is poorly educated, and the country has
struggled to attract private investment with its restrictive labor laws and other impediments to business, including lingering
protectionism.
Where India has found success
is in the higher-value range of services. Companies like Tata Consultancy Services
have become world leaders, while plenty of multinational firms like Goldman Sachs
have more of their global staff working from India than anywhere else in the world.
But service-sector growth can
go only so far in reaping India’s promise of a demographic dividend, or blunt the
peril of an unemployment crisis. Hundreds of millions of people can’t find jobs
or are underemployed in work that pays too little. In the state of Andhra Pradesh,
for example, 35 percent of university graduates are estimated to be unemployed,
unable to find work commensurate to their credentials.
Nowhere is the competition for
jobs clearer than at the coaching centers that train young
Indians for the employment entrance exams at government agencies. These jobs are
still coveted as private sector work remains limited and less stable.
Models
The lessons Mr. Modi is taking
from China are most apparent in his push for infrastructure development, investing
heavily in highways, railways and airports to improve supply chains and connectivity.
India has quintupled its annual
spending on roads and railways during Mr. Modi’s nine years in power. In some weeks,
he has been able to preside over ribbon cuttings at a new airport, a new highway
and a new rail service.
But, analysts
and critics say, what also drew him to Beijing was his aspiration for something
approaching authoritarian power. Mr. Modi’s firm grip over the country’s democratic
pillars at the expense of the opposition — highlighted by the recent ouster from Parliament of his
most famous adversary, Rahul Gandhi — has pushed the country closer to a one-party
state.
As Mr. Modi has boxed in opponents,
cowed the press and
overwhelmed independent elements of civil society, his government has lashed out
at expressions of concern from abroad as evidence of a colonial plot to undermine
India or a lack of understanding of India’s “civilizational” approach — both elements
that diplomats had long heard in China’s own defensiveness.
All the while, the increasing
militancy of his Hindu nationalist supporters, as arms of the state hang back and
give perpetrators a free pass, exacerbates India’s religious fault lines and
clashes that threaten to disrupt India’s rise.
The perpetual potential for conflagration
was on display in recent weeks in episodes of violence across half a dozen states,
particularly in West Bengal in the country’s east, as celebrations of the birthday
of the Hindu deity Ram coincided with Ramadan.
As India’s democracy has eroded,
Western powers have remained largely silent, prioritizing trade deals and courting
India as a security ally. But deep down, diplomats say, there is a growing discomfort.
Increasingly, many countries are drawing a distinction between engaging with India
on issues such as trade and embracing India as a partner with shared values.
That could pose a problem for
an India whose appeal as an alternative to China is in part a reflection of its
position as the world’s largest democracy — a distinction that Mr. Modi lauds regularly
even as he tightens his grip on power.