CID Working Paper No. 089, March 2002
A Decade of Economic Reforms in India: the Unfinished Agenda
Nirupam Bajpai
Abstract
This paper aims to assess the economic reforms in India undertaken
during the 1990s. India has gone through the first decade of her reform process. Hence, an
assessment of what has been achieved so far and what remains on the reform agenda is in
order. Reforms in the industrial, trade, and financial sectors, among others, have been
wide and deep. As a consequence, they have contributed more meaningfully in attaining
higher rates of growth.
A decade of opening of the economy has produced new dynamism, most dramatically
in the information technology sector, but in others as well. The new
technologies (especially information technology and biotechnology) give new
opportunities for economic and social development. It is necessary to move
swiftly to complete many of the reforms, which are now underway. Examples of
such continuing reforms are the reduction in protection levels, continuing
reforms in banking sector, product de-reservation for the small-scale industry,
decontrol of prices, such as petroleum, reform of the power sector and so on.
Among other things, sustaining higher rates of economic growth would require a
more vigorous pursuit of economic reforms at both the federal and state levels.
Significant reduction of fiscal deficit is the first order of business. Unless
substantial fiscal consolidation is achieved, in our view, continued fiscal
deficits pose India's greatest risk to future destabilization. Other critical
reforms include, labor laws, exit policy, privatization of state-owned
enterprises, further opening-up of the economy to trade and foreign direct
investment. In addition, there is a vast amount of economic reform that can be
carried out to improve conditions in rural India, especially in the Gangetic
valley.
The reforms implemented so far have helped India attain 6 plus percent growth,
however, should India be able to implement the remaining reforms and re-orient
governmental spending away from inessential expenditures towards high priority
areas of health and education and infrastructure development, then it is very
likely to attain and sustain even higher rates of economic growth.
Keywords: India's economic reforms, unfinished reform agenda
Download the paper in PDF format
_______________________________________________________________
Back to CID Working Papers page
Direct site comments or questions to CID's Webmaster.
Copyright © 2008 by
the President and Fellows of Harvard College.