Page 1
CHAPTER
02
2014-2022 is an important period in the economic history of India. The economy underwent
a gamut of wide-ranging structural and governance reforms that strengthened the
economy’ s fundamentals by enhancing its overall efficiency. With an underlying emphasis
on improving the ease of living and doing business, the reforms were based on the broad
principles of creating public goods, adopting trust-based governance, co-partnering with
the private sector for development, and improving agricultural productivity. Under normal
circumstances, reforms of such scale and relevance would have accelerated economic
growth. However, largely due to the balance sheet stress caused by the credit boom in
the previous years and secondarily due to the one-off global shocks that followed, key
macroeconomic variables such as credit growth, capital formation, and hence economic
growth were adversely impacted during this period. Further, some reforms deliver results
with lagged effects as their diffusion in the economy takes time.
This situation is analogous to the period 1998-2002 when transformative reforms undertaken
by the government had lagged growth returns due to temporary shocks in the economy. Once
these shocks faded, the structural reforms paid growth dividends from 2003. Similarly, in
the present decade, the presence of strong medium-term growth magnets gives us optimism
and hope that once these global shocks of the pandemic and the spike in commodity prices
in 2022 fade away, the Indian economy is well placed to grow faster in the coming decade.
With improved and healthier balance sheets of the banking, non-banking and corporate
sectors, a fresh credit cycle has already begun, evident from the double-digit growth in
bank credit over the past months. Additionally, the economy has started benefiting from
the efficiency gains resulting from greater formalisation, higher financial inclusion, and
economic opportunities created by digital technology-based economic reforms. Thus, India’ s
growth outlook seems better than in the pre-pandemic years, and the Indian economy is
prepared to grow at its potential in the medium term.
Introduction
2.1 Indian economy has undergone a transformative process of New Age reforms in the
last eight years. These diverse policies converge towards improving the economy’s overall
efficiency and lifting its potential growth. To achieve the broader policy goal of unleashing the
productive potential of the economy and its people, the reforms aimed at enhancing the ease of
living and doing business at the fundamental level. The use of technology, in particular digital
technology, undergirds the reforms. The economic energy and positive mindset that the reforms
unleashed would have led to a sharp acceleration in growth but for the balance sheet repair of
INDIA'S MEDIUM-TERM
GROWTH OUTLOOK: WITH
OPTIMISM AND HOPE
Page 2
CHAPTER
02
2014-2022 is an important period in the economic history of India. The economy underwent
a gamut of wide-ranging structural and governance reforms that strengthened the
economy’ s fundamentals by enhancing its overall efficiency. With an underlying emphasis
on improving the ease of living and doing business, the reforms were based on the broad
principles of creating public goods, adopting trust-based governance, co-partnering with
the private sector for development, and improving agricultural productivity. Under normal
circumstances, reforms of such scale and relevance would have accelerated economic
growth. However, largely due to the balance sheet stress caused by the credit boom in
the previous years and secondarily due to the one-off global shocks that followed, key
macroeconomic variables such as credit growth, capital formation, and hence economic
growth were adversely impacted during this period. Further, some reforms deliver results
with lagged effects as their diffusion in the economy takes time.
This situation is analogous to the period 1998-2002 when transformative reforms undertaken
by the government had lagged growth returns due to temporary shocks in the economy. Once
these shocks faded, the structural reforms paid growth dividends from 2003. Similarly, in
the present decade, the presence of strong medium-term growth magnets gives us optimism
and hope that once these global shocks of the pandemic and the spike in commodity prices
in 2022 fade away, the Indian economy is well placed to grow faster in the coming decade.
With improved and healthier balance sheets of the banking, non-banking and corporate
sectors, a fresh credit cycle has already begun, evident from the double-digit growth in
bank credit over the past months. Additionally, the economy has started benefiting from
the efficiency gains resulting from greater formalisation, higher financial inclusion, and
economic opportunities created by digital technology-based economic reforms. Thus, India’ s
growth outlook seems better than in the pre-pandemic years, and the Indian economy is
prepared to grow at its potential in the medium term.
Introduction
2.1 Indian economy has undergone a transformative process of New Age reforms in the
last eight years. These diverse policies converge towards improving the economy’s overall
efficiency and lifting its potential growth. To achieve the broader policy goal of unleashing the
productive potential of the economy and its people, the reforms aimed at enhancing the ease of
living and doing business at the fundamental level. The use of technology, in particular digital
technology, undergirds the reforms. The economic energy and positive mindset that the reforms
unleashed would have led to a sharp acceleration in growth but for the balance sheet repair of
INDIA'S MEDIUM-TERM
GROWTH OUTLOOK: WITH
OPTIMISM AND HOPE
25 India's Medium-Term Growth Outlook: With Optimism and Hope
the over-leveraged domestic financial sector (banking & non-banking) and the corporate sector
and secondarily to the one-off global shocks that followed.
2.2 With the impetus of the persistent structural and governance reforms introduced in the
country and strong macroeconomic stability, it is essential to get a handle on the medium-term
growth outlook for India. Will the economy achieve and sustain a steady growth rate once the
one-off shocks recede? This chapter attempts to answer this question and concludes that the
chances of India growing at its potential and for the potential growth itself to be lifted are higher
than it has been in the last two decades. The chapter starts with a brief discussion of the history
of India’s product and capital market reforms over the previous three decades. It further delves
into the overarching philosophy behind the landmark reforms undertaken from 2014 to 2022
and elaborates on the shocks faced by the Indian economy during this period. It concludes with
a discussion on the medium-term growth magnets for India.
Product and Capital Market Reforms
Initiation of the reforms- 1991
2.3 The macroeconomic imbalances of the late 1980s and early 1990s pushed the government
towards introducing the structural reforms of 1991. The high combined deficit of the central
and state governments, elevated inflationary pressures, and large and unsustainable current
account deficit (CAD) led to a balance of payments crisis in the Indian economy.
1
In response
to the situation, trade and investments were liberalised in 1991. Import licensing on almost all
intermediate inputs and capital goods was done away with, and the entry restrictions for firms
were simplified. The new policy encouraged the entry of private sector firms by ending the
public sector monopoly in many sectors and initiating the automatic approval policy for FDI
up to 51 per cent. The exchange rate was made flexible and allowed to depreciate as necessary
to maintain competitiveness. The rupee was made fully convertible on the current account and
partially on the capital account. These reforms had a positive effect on the economy. The real
growth went up from an average of 5.5 per cent during the 1980s to 6.3 per cent from FY93 to
FY2000. Trade liberalisation had a visible effect on external trade as the total goods and services
trade to GDP rose from 17.2 per cent in 1990 to 30.6 per cent in 2000.
2
Continuity in Reforms with a Renewed Impetus
2.4 The product and capital market reforms continued slowly over the decade of the 1990s.
They got a renewed impetus from the government closer to the decade’s end. Investments were
liberalised further to encourage Foreign Direct Investment as a main source of non-debt-creating
capital inflows (Figure II.1). The telecom sector was entirely reformed by the New Telecom
Policy 1999. It was opened for private sector participation with a strengthened regulatory regime
(TRAI). The reforms separated the licensing and policy functions of the government from that of
an operator (BSNL). These reforms were a cornerstone for the IT sector boom in India and had
widespread spillover benefits to other sectors of the economy. The policy on disinvestment and
privatisation also gathered steam during this period. The government set up a dedicated Ministry
to take this agenda forward. It sold equity stakes in some CPSEs and privatised companies such
as Maruti Udyog, Hindustan Zinc, Bharat Aluminum, and Videsh Sanchar Nigam Limited.
1 History of Reserve bank of India-V olume IV (https://www.rbi.org.in/scripts/RHvol-4.aspx)
2 Arvind Panagariya, 2004. “India in the 1980’s and 1990’s: A Triumph of Reforms,”IMF Working Papers2004/043, International Monetary
Fund. (https://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/wp/2004/wp0443.pdf )
Page 3
CHAPTER
02
2014-2022 is an important period in the economic history of India. The economy underwent
a gamut of wide-ranging structural and governance reforms that strengthened the
economy’ s fundamentals by enhancing its overall efficiency. With an underlying emphasis
on improving the ease of living and doing business, the reforms were based on the broad
principles of creating public goods, adopting trust-based governance, co-partnering with
the private sector for development, and improving agricultural productivity. Under normal
circumstances, reforms of such scale and relevance would have accelerated economic
growth. However, largely due to the balance sheet stress caused by the credit boom in
the previous years and secondarily due to the one-off global shocks that followed, key
macroeconomic variables such as credit growth, capital formation, and hence economic
growth were adversely impacted during this period. Further, some reforms deliver results
with lagged effects as their diffusion in the economy takes time.
This situation is analogous to the period 1998-2002 when transformative reforms undertaken
by the government had lagged growth returns due to temporary shocks in the economy. Once
these shocks faded, the structural reforms paid growth dividends from 2003. Similarly, in
the present decade, the presence of strong medium-term growth magnets gives us optimism
and hope that once these global shocks of the pandemic and the spike in commodity prices
in 2022 fade away, the Indian economy is well placed to grow faster in the coming decade.
With improved and healthier balance sheets of the banking, non-banking and corporate
sectors, a fresh credit cycle has already begun, evident from the double-digit growth in
bank credit over the past months. Additionally, the economy has started benefiting from
the efficiency gains resulting from greater formalisation, higher financial inclusion, and
economic opportunities created by digital technology-based economic reforms. Thus, India’ s
growth outlook seems better than in the pre-pandemic years, and the Indian economy is
prepared to grow at its potential in the medium term.
Introduction
2.1 Indian economy has undergone a transformative process of New Age reforms in the
last eight years. These diverse policies converge towards improving the economy’s overall
efficiency and lifting its potential growth. To achieve the broader policy goal of unleashing the
productive potential of the economy and its people, the reforms aimed at enhancing the ease of
living and doing business at the fundamental level. The use of technology, in particular digital
technology, undergirds the reforms. The economic energy and positive mindset that the reforms
unleashed would have led to a sharp acceleration in growth but for the balance sheet repair of
INDIA'S MEDIUM-TERM
GROWTH OUTLOOK: WITH
OPTIMISM AND HOPE
25 India's Medium-Term Growth Outlook: With Optimism and Hope
the over-leveraged domestic financial sector (banking & non-banking) and the corporate sector
and secondarily to the one-off global shocks that followed.
2.2 With the impetus of the persistent structural and governance reforms introduced in the
country and strong macroeconomic stability, it is essential to get a handle on the medium-term
growth outlook for India. Will the economy achieve and sustain a steady growth rate once the
one-off shocks recede? This chapter attempts to answer this question and concludes that the
chances of India growing at its potential and for the potential growth itself to be lifted are higher
than it has been in the last two decades. The chapter starts with a brief discussion of the history
of India’s product and capital market reforms over the previous three decades. It further delves
into the overarching philosophy behind the landmark reforms undertaken from 2014 to 2022
and elaborates on the shocks faced by the Indian economy during this period. It concludes with
a discussion on the medium-term growth magnets for India.
Product and Capital Market Reforms
Initiation of the reforms- 1991
2.3 The macroeconomic imbalances of the late 1980s and early 1990s pushed the government
towards introducing the structural reforms of 1991. The high combined deficit of the central
and state governments, elevated inflationary pressures, and large and unsustainable current
account deficit (CAD) led to a balance of payments crisis in the Indian economy.
1
In response
to the situation, trade and investments were liberalised in 1991. Import licensing on almost all
intermediate inputs and capital goods was done away with, and the entry restrictions for firms
were simplified. The new policy encouraged the entry of private sector firms by ending the
public sector monopoly in many sectors and initiating the automatic approval policy for FDI
up to 51 per cent. The exchange rate was made flexible and allowed to depreciate as necessary
to maintain competitiveness. The rupee was made fully convertible on the current account and
partially on the capital account. These reforms had a positive effect on the economy. The real
growth went up from an average of 5.5 per cent during the 1980s to 6.3 per cent from FY93 to
FY2000. Trade liberalisation had a visible effect on external trade as the total goods and services
trade to GDP rose from 17.2 per cent in 1990 to 30.6 per cent in 2000.
2
Continuity in Reforms with a Renewed Impetus
2.4 The product and capital market reforms continued slowly over the decade of the 1990s.
They got a renewed impetus from the government closer to the decade’s end. Investments were
liberalised further to encourage Foreign Direct Investment as a main source of non-debt-creating
capital inflows (Figure II.1). The telecom sector was entirely reformed by the New Telecom
Policy 1999. It was opened for private sector participation with a strengthened regulatory regime
(TRAI). The reforms separated the licensing and policy functions of the government from that of
an operator (BSNL). These reforms were a cornerstone for the IT sector boom in India and had
widespread spillover benefits to other sectors of the economy. The policy on disinvestment and
privatisation also gathered steam during this period. The government set up a dedicated Ministry
to take this agenda forward. It sold equity stakes in some CPSEs and privatised companies such
as Maruti Udyog, Hindustan Zinc, Bharat Aluminum, and Videsh Sanchar Nigam Limited.
1 History of Reserve bank of India-V olume IV (https://www.rbi.org.in/scripts/RHvol-4.aspx)
2 Arvind Panagariya, 2004. “India in the 1980’s and 1990’s: A Triumph of Reforms,”IMF Working Papers2004/043, International Monetary
Fund. (https://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/wp/2004/wp0443.pdf )
26 Economic Survey 2022-23
Figure II.1: Foreign Direct Investment to India- Increased after the
impetus to investment liberalisation in 2000-2003
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
FY96
FY97
FY98
FY99
FY00
FY01
FY02
FY03
FY04
FY05
FY06
FY07
FY08
FY09
US $ billion
Source: RBI
2.5 This period also marked the launch of the then largest infrastructure project of independent
India, the ‘Golden Quadrilateral’. The project brought significant economic benefits to the country
through enhanced connectivity, improved industrial activity, trade, and economic growth.
3
Alongside this, structural policies were formulated to address the macroeconomic imbalances.
The Fiscal Responsibility and Budget Management (FRBM) Act was passed to address the
historic highs of the combined Gross fiscal deficit of the Government (Figure II.2). The banking
system, which had accumulated bad debts during the period of economic resurgence after the
1991 reforms, was supported through the deregulation of interest rates and the enactment of the
SARFAESI Act 2002. Interest rates were deregulated to promote competition amongst banks,
provide more banking options to depositors, and strengthen monetary policy transmission.
4
The
SARFAESI Act allowed banks and financial institutions to recover their dues by proceeding
against the secured assets of the borrower/guarantor without the intervention of the court/
tribunals.
5
Both these reforms improved the credit situation in the economy (Figure II.3).
Figure II.2: Gross Fiscal Deficit (centre and
states combined) (% of GDP)
Figure II.3: Growth in Non-Food Credit by
Scheduled Commercial Banks
Post
FRBM
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
FY88
FY90
FY92
FY94
FY96
FY98
FY00
FY02
FY04
FY06
FY08
Per cent of GDP
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
FY97
FY00
FY03
FY06
FY09
FY12
FY15
FY18
FY21
Per cent
Source: RBI Source: RBI
3 Ghani, Ejaz & Grover, Arti & Kerr, William. (2012). Highway to Success: The Impact of the Golden Quadrilateral Project for the Location
and Performance of Indian Manufacturing. The Economic Journal. (https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/ecoj.12207)
4 Reserve Bank of India RBI, 2011. “Deregulation of Savings Bank Deposit Interest Rate: A Discussion Paper,”Working Papersid:3959,
eSocialSciences. (https://rbidocs.rbi.org.in/rdocs/Content/PDFs/DPS270411F.pdf )
5 Vinod Kumar, & Rajiv Khosla. (2017). IMPLEMENTATION AND IMPACT OF SARFAESI ACT 2002.International Education and Research
Journal (IERJ),3(5). (http://ierj.in/journal/index.php/ierj/article/view/863/869); https://pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=1578808
Page 4
CHAPTER
02
2014-2022 is an important period in the economic history of India. The economy underwent
a gamut of wide-ranging structural and governance reforms that strengthened the
economy’ s fundamentals by enhancing its overall efficiency. With an underlying emphasis
on improving the ease of living and doing business, the reforms were based on the broad
principles of creating public goods, adopting trust-based governance, co-partnering with
the private sector for development, and improving agricultural productivity. Under normal
circumstances, reforms of such scale and relevance would have accelerated economic
growth. However, largely due to the balance sheet stress caused by the credit boom in
the previous years and secondarily due to the one-off global shocks that followed, key
macroeconomic variables such as credit growth, capital formation, and hence economic
growth were adversely impacted during this period. Further, some reforms deliver results
with lagged effects as their diffusion in the economy takes time.
This situation is analogous to the period 1998-2002 when transformative reforms undertaken
by the government had lagged growth returns due to temporary shocks in the economy. Once
these shocks faded, the structural reforms paid growth dividends from 2003. Similarly, in
the present decade, the presence of strong medium-term growth magnets gives us optimism
and hope that once these global shocks of the pandemic and the spike in commodity prices
in 2022 fade away, the Indian economy is well placed to grow faster in the coming decade.
With improved and healthier balance sheets of the banking, non-banking and corporate
sectors, a fresh credit cycle has already begun, evident from the double-digit growth in
bank credit over the past months. Additionally, the economy has started benefiting from
the efficiency gains resulting from greater formalisation, higher financial inclusion, and
economic opportunities created by digital technology-based economic reforms. Thus, India’ s
growth outlook seems better than in the pre-pandemic years, and the Indian economy is
prepared to grow at its potential in the medium term.
Introduction
2.1 Indian economy has undergone a transformative process of New Age reforms in the
last eight years. These diverse policies converge towards improving the economy’s overall
efficiency and lifting its potential growth. To achieve the broader policy goal of unleashing the
productive potential of the economy and its people, the reforms aimed at enhancing the ease of
living and doing business at the fundamental level. The use of technology, in particular digital
technology, undergirds the reforms. The economic energy and positive mindset that the reforms
unleashed would have led to a sharp acceleration in growth but for the balance sheet repair of
INDIA'S MEDIUM-TERM
GROWTH OUTLOOK: WITH
OPTIMISM AND HOPE
25 India's Medium-Term Growth Outlook: With Optimism and Hope
the over-leveraged domestic financial sector (banking & non-banking) and the corporate sector
and secondarily to the one-off global shocks that followed.
2.2 With the impetus of the persistent structural and governance reforms introduced in the
country and strong macroeconomic stability, it is essential to get a handle on the medium-term
growth outlook for India. Will the economy achieve and sustain a steady growth rate once the
one-off shocks recede? This chapter attempts to answer this question and concludes that the
chances of India growing at its potential and for the potential growth itself to be lifted are higher
than it has been in the last two decades. The chapter starts with a brief discussion of the history
of India’s product and capital market reforms over the previous three decades. It further delves
into the overarching philosophy behind the landmark reforms undertaken from 2014 to 2022
and elaborates on the shocks faced by the Indian economy during this period. It concludes with
a discussion on the medium-term growth magnets for India.
Product and Capital Market Reforms
Initiation of the reforms- 1991
2.3 The macroeconomic imbalances of the late 1980s and early 1990s pushed the government
towards introducing the structural reforms of 1991. The high combined deficit of the central
and state governments, elevated inflationary pressures, and large and unsustainable current
account deficit (CAD) led to a balance of payments crisis in the Indian economy.
1
In response
to the situation, trade and investments were liberalised in 1991. Import licensing on almost all
intermediate inputs and capital goods was done away with, and the entry restrictions for firms
were simplified. The new policy encouraged the entry of private sector firms by ending the
public sector monopoly in many sectors and initiating the automatic approval policy for FDI
up to 51 per cent. The exchange rate was made flexible and allowed to depreciate as necessary
to maintain competitiveness. The rupee was made fully convertible on the current account and
partially on the capital account. These reforms had a positive effect on the economy. The real
growth went up from an average of 5.5 per cent during the 1980s to 6.3 per cent from FY93 to
FY2000. Trade liberalisation had a visible effect on external trade as the total goods and services
trade to GDP rose from 17.2 per cent in 1990 to 30.6 per cent in 2000.
2
Continuity in Reforms with a Renewed Impetus
2.4 The product and capital market reforms continued slowly over the decade of the 1990s.
They got a renewed impetus from the government closer to the decade’s end. Investments were
liberalised further to encourage Foreign Direct Investment as a main source of non-debt-creating
capital inflows (Figure II.1). The telecom sector was entirely reformed by the New Telecom
Policy 1999. It was opened for private sector participation with a strengthened regulatory regime
(TRAI). The reforms separated the licensing and policy functions of the government from that of
an operator (BSNL). These reforms were a cornerstone for the IT sector boom in India and had
widespread spillover benefits to other sectors of the economy. The policy on disinvestment and
privatisation also gathered steam during this period. The government set up a dedicated Ministry
to take this agenda forward. It sold equity stakes in some CPSEs and privatised companies such
as Maruti Udyog, Hindustan Zinc, Bharat Aluminum, and Videsh Sanchar Nigam Limited.
1 History of Reserve bank of India-V olume IV (https://www.rbi.org.in/scripts/RHvol-4.aspx)
2 Arvind Panagariya, 2004. “India in the 1980’s and 1990’s: A Triumph of Reforms,”IMF Working Papers2004/043, International Monetary
Fund. (https://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/wp/2004/wp0443.pdf )
26 Economic Survey 2022-23
Figure II.1: Foreign Direct Investment to India- Increased after the
impetus to investment liberalisation in 2000-2003
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
FY96
FY97
FY98
FY99
FY00
FY01
FY02
FY03
FY04
FY05
FY06
FY07
FY08
FY09
US $ billion
Source: RBI
2.5 This period also marked the launch of the then largest infrastructure project of independent
India, the ‘Golden Quadrilateral’. The project brought significant economic benefits to the country
through enhanced connectivity, improved industrial activity, trade, and economic growth.
3
Alongside this, structural policies were formulated to address the macroeconomic imbalances.
The Fiscal Responsibility and Budget Management (FRBM) Act was passed to address the
historic highs of the combined Gross fiscal deficit of the Government (Figure II.2). The banking
system, which had accumulated bad debts during the period of economic resurgence after the
1991 reforms, was supported through the deregulation of interest rates and the enactment of the
SARFAESI Act 2002. Interest rates were deregulated to promote competition amongst banks,
provide more banking options to depositors, and strengthen monetary policy transmission.
4
The
SARFAESI Act allowed banks and financial institutions to recover their dues by proceeding
against the secured assets of the borrower/guarantor without the intervention of the court/
tribunals.
5
Both these reforms improved the credit situation in the economy (Figure II.3).
Figure II.2: Gross Fiscal Deficit (centre and
states combined) (% of GDP)
Figure II.3: Growth in Non-Food Credit by
Scheduled Commercial Banks
Post
FRBM
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
FY88
FY90
FY92
FY94
FY96
FY98
FY00
FY02
FY04
FY06
FY08
Per cent of GDP
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
FY97
FY00
FY03
FY06
FY09
FY12
FY15
FY18
FY21
Per cent
Source: RBI Source: RBI
3 Ghani, Ejaz & Grover, Arti & Kerr, William. (2012). Highway to Success: The Impact of the Golden Quadrilateral Project for the Location
and Performance of Indian Manufacturing. The Economic Journal. (https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/ecoj.12207)
4 Reserve Bank of India RBI, 2011. “Deregulation of Savings Bank Deposit Interest Rate: A Discussion Paper,”Working Papersid:3959,
eSocialSciences. (https://rbidocs.rbi.org.in/rdocs/Content/PDFs/DPS270411F.pdf )
5 Vinod Kumar, & Rajiv Khosla. (2017). IMPLEMENTATION AND IMPACT OF SARFAESI ACT 2002.International Education and Research
Journal (IERJ),3(5). (http://ierj.in/journal/index.php/ierj/article/view/863/869); https://pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=1578808
27 India's Medium-Term Growth Outlook: With Optimism and Hope
One-Off Shocks Overshadowed The Reforms of 1998-2002
2.6 The period of these reforms also witnessed a series of domestic and global shocks, which
subdued investor confidence. The sanctions imposed by the US on India after India’s nuclear
test led to a sharp decline in capital flows to India during the months following the nuclear tests
(Figure II.4)
6
. The period between 2000 and 2002 also witnessed two successive droughts (Table
II.1). These domestic shocks were accompanied by heightened global uncertainties resulting
from the end of a tech boom and the 9/11 attacks (Figure II.5). Moreover, the balance sheets of
the Indian financial system and corporate sector were under-repair during the period. Though
all these factors overshadowed the immediate impact of reforms undertaken by the government
then, they laid the groundwork and prepared the Indian economy structurally to participate in
the Global boom which followed soon after.
Figure II.4: Monthly Foreign Direct
Investment came down (1998)
Figure II.5: Trends in the NASDAQ
Composite index (Dot-Com Bubble crisis)
0
100
200
300
400
500
Apr-97
Jun-97
Aug-97
Oct-97
Dec-97
Feb-98
Apr-98
Jun-98
Aug-98
US$ million
0
100 0
200 0
300 0
400 0
500 0
600 0
Jan -9 8
J ul - 98
Jan -9 9
J ul - 99
Jan -0 0
J ul - 00
Jan -0 1
J ul - 01
Jan -0 2
J ul - 02
Source: RBI Source: FRED
Table II.1: Occurrence, number of people affected and damages
of droughts in India between 2000 and 2002
Date Location Numbers
Apr 2000
Gujarat, Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, Andhra Pradesh,
Orissa, Maharashtra
Affected- 9 crore; Damage-
US$588,000,000
Nov 2000
Mahasamund, Raipur, Kawardha, Rajnandgaon, Durg
districts (Chhattisgarh region)
May 2001 New Delhi, Rajasthan, Gujarat, Orissa 20 deaths
Jul 2002
Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, Punjab, Haryana,
Delhi, Karnataka, Kerala, Nagaland, Orissa, Chhattisgarh,
Himachal Pradesh, Gujarat, Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh,
Tamil Nadu
Affected-30 crore;
Damage- US$910,721,000
Source: Samra, J. S., 2004. “Review and analysis of drought monitoring, declaration and management in
India,”IWMI Working PapersH035617, International Water Management Institute. (https://www.preventionweb.
net/files/1868_VL102135.pdf )
6 Daniel Morrow & Michael Carriere (1999) The economic impacts of the 1998 sanctions on India and Pakistan, The Nonproliferation Review,
6:4,1-16. (https://www.nonproliferation.org/wp-content/uploads/npr/morrow64.pdf)
Page 5
CHAPTER
02
2014-2022 is an important period in the economic history of India. The economy underwent
a gamut of wide-ranging structural and governance reforms that strengthened the
economy’ s fundamentals by enhancing its overall efficiency. With an underlying emphasis
on improving the ease of living and doing business, the reforms were based on the broad
principles of creating public goods, adopting trust-based governance, co-partnering with
the private sector for development, and improving agricultural productivity. Under normal
circumstances, reforms of such scale and relevance would have accelerated economic
growth. However, largely due to the balance sheet stress caused by the credit boom in
the previous years and secondarily due to the one-off global shocks that followed, key
macroeconomic variables such as credit growth, capital formation, and hence economic
growth were adversely impacted during this period. Further, some reforms deliver results
with lagged effects as their diffusion in the economy takes time.
This situation is analogous to the period 1998-2002 when transformative reforms undertaken
by the government had lagged growth returns due to temporary shocks in the economy. Once
these shocks faded, the structural reforms paid growth dividends from 2003. Similarly, in
the present decade, the presence of strong medium-term growth magnets gives us optimism
and hope that once these global shocks of the pandemic and the spike in commodity prices
in 2022 fade away, the Indian economy is well placed to grow faster in the coming decade.
With improved and healthier balance sheets of the banking, non-banking and corporate
sectors, a fresh credit cycle has already begun, evident from the double-digit growth in
bank credit over the past months. Additionally, the economy has started benefiting from
the efficiency gains resulting from greater formalisation, higher financial inclusion, and
economic opportunities created by digital technology-based economic reforms. Thus, India’ s
growth outlook seems better than in the pre-pandemic years, and the Indian economy is
prepared to grow at its potential in the medium term.
Introduction
2.1 Indian economy has undergone a transformative process of New Age reforms in the
last eight years. These diverse policies converge towards improving the economy’s overall
efficiency and lifting its potential growth. To achieve the broader policy goal of unleashing the
productive potential of the economy and its people, the reforms aimed at enhancing the ease of
living and doing business at the fundamental level. The use of technology, in particular digital
technology, undergirds the reforms. The economic energy and positive mindset that the reforms
unleashed would have led to a sharp acceleration in growth but for the balance sheet repair of
INDIA'S MEDIUM-TERM
GROWTH OUTLOOK: WITH
OPTIMISM AND HOPE
25 India's Medium-Term Growth Outlook: With Optimism and Hope
the over-leveraged domestic financial sector (banking & non-banking) and the corporate sector
and secondarily to the one-off global shocks that followed.
2.2 With the impetus of the persistent structural and governance reforms introduced in the
country and strong macroeconomic stability, it is essential to get a handle on the medium-term
growth outlook for India. Will the economy achieve and sustain a steady growth rate once the
one-off shocks recede? This chapter attempts to answer this question and concludes that the
chances of India growing at its potential and for the potential growth itself to be lifted are higher
than it has been in the last two decades. The chapter starts with a brief discussion of the history
of India’s product and capital market reforms over the previous three decades. It further delves
into the overarching philosophy behind the landmark reforms undertaken from 2014 to 2022
and elaborates on the shocks faced by the Indian economy during this period. It concludes with
a discussion on the medium-term growth magnets for India.
Product and Capital Market Reforms
Initiation of the reforms- 1991
2.3 The macroeconomic imbalances of the late 1980s and early 1990s pushed the government
towards introducing the structural reforms of 1991. The high combined deficit of the central
and state governments, elevated inflationary pressures, and large and unsustainable current
account deficit (CAD) led to a balance of payments crisis in the Indian economy.
1
In response
to the situation, trade and investments were liberalised in 1991. Import licensing on almost all
intermediate inputs and capital goods was done away with, and the entry restrictions for firms
were simplified. The new policy encouraged the entry of private sector firms by ending the
public sector monopoly in many sectors and initiating the automatic approval policy for FDI
up to 51 per cent. The exchange rate was made flexible and allowed to depreciate as necessary
to maintain competitiveness. The rupee was made fully convertible on the current account and
partially on the capital account. These reforms had a positive effect on the economy. The real
growth went up from an average of 5.5 per cent during the 1980s to 6.3 per cent from FY93 to
FY2000. Trade liberalisation had a visible effect on external trade as the total goods and services
trade to GDP rose from 17.2 per cent in 1990 to 30.6 per cent in 2000.
2
Continuity in Reforms with a Renewed Impetus
2.4 The product and capital market reforms continued slowly over the decade of the 1990s.
They got a renewed impetus from the government closer to the decade’s end. Investments were
liberalised further to encourage Foreign Direct Investment as a main source of non-debt-creating
capital inflows (Figure II.1). The telecom sector was entirely reformed by the New Telecom
Policy 1999. It was opened for private sector participation with a strengthened regulatory regime
(TRAI). The reforms separated the licensing and policy functions of the government from that of
an operator (BSNL). These reforms were a cornerstone for the IT sector boom in India and had
widespread spillover benefits to other sectors of the economy. The policy on disinvestment and
privatisation also gathered steam during this period. The government set up a dedicated Ministry
to take this agenda forward. It sold equity stakes in some CPSEs and privatised companies such
as Maruti Udyog, Hindustan Zinc, Bharat Aluminum, and Videsh Sanchar Nigam Limited.
1 History of Reserve bank of India-V olume IV (https://www.rbi.org.in/scripts/RHvol-4.aspx)
2 Arvind Panagariya, 2004. “India in the 1980’s and 1990’s: A Triumph of Reforms,”IMF Working Papers2004/043, International Monetary
Fund. (https://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/wp/2004/wp0443.pdf )
26 Economic Survey 2022-23
Figure II.1: Foreign Direct Investment to India- Increased after the
impetus to investment liberalisation in 2000-2003
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
FY96
FY97
FY98
FY99
FY00
FY01
FY02
FY03
FY04
FY05
FY06
FY07
FY08
FY09
US $ billion
Source: RBI
2.5 This period also marked the launch of the then largest infrastructure project of independent
India, the ‘Golden Quadrilateral’. The project brought significant economic benefits to the country
through enhanced connectivity, improved industrial activity, trade, and economic growth.
3
Alongside this, structural policies were formulated to address the macroeconomic imbalances.
The Fiscal Responsibility and Budget Management (FRBM) Act was passed to address the
historic highs of the combined Gross fiscal deficit of the Government (Figure II.2). The banking
system, which had accumulated bad debts during the period of economic resurgence after the
1991 reforms, was supported through the deregulation of interest rates and the enactment of the
SARFAESI Act 2002. Interest rates were deregulated to promote competition amongst banks,
provide more banking options to depositors, and strengthen monetary policy transmission.
4
The
SARFAESI Act allowed banks and financial institutions to recover their dues by proceeding
against the secured assets of the borrower/guarantor without the intervention of the court/
tribunals.
5
Both these reforms improved the credit situation in the economy (Figure II.3).
Figure II.2: Gross Fiscal Deficit (centre and
states combined) (% of GDP)
Figure II.3: Growth in Non-Food Credit by
Scheduled Commercial Banks
Post
FRBM
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
FY88
FY90
FY92
FY94
FY96
FY98
FY00
FY02
FY04
FY06
FY08
Per cent of GDP
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
FY97
FY00
FY03
FY06
FY09
FY12
FY15
FY18
FY21
Per cent
Source: RBI Source: RBI
3 Ghani, Ejaz & Grover, Arti & Kerr, William. (2012). Highway to Success: The Impact of the Golden Quadrilateral Project for the Location
and Performance of Indian Manufacturing. The Economic Journal. (https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/ecoj.12207)
4 Reserve Bank of India RBI, 2011. “Deregulation of Savings Bank Deposit Interest Rate: A Discussion Paper,”Working Papersid:3959,
eSocialSciences. (https://rbidocs.rbi.org.in/rdocs/Content/PDFs/DPS270411F.pdf )
5 Vinod Kumar, & Rajiv Khosla. (2017). IMPLEMENTATION AND IMPACT OF SARFAESI ACT 2002.International Education and Research
Journal (IERJ),3(5). (http://ierj.in/journal/index.php/ierj/article/view/863/869); https://pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=1578808
27 India's Medium-Term Growth Outlook: With Optimism and Hope
One-Off Shocks Overshadowed The Reforms of 1998-2002
2.6 The period of these reforms also witnessed a series of domestic and global shocks, which
subdued investor confidence. The sanctions imposed by the US on India after India’s nuclear
test led to a sharp decline in capital flows to India during the months following the nuclear tests
(Figure II.4)
6
. The period between 2000 and 2002 also witnessed two successive droughts (Table
II.1). These domestic shocks were accompanied by heightened global uncertainties resulting
from the end of a tech boom and the 9/11 attacks (Figure II.5). Moreover, the balance sheets of
the Indian financial system and corporate sector were under-repair during the period. Though
all these factors overshadowed the immediate impact of reforms undertaken by the government
then, they laid the groundwork and prepared the Indian economy structurally to participate in
the Global boom which followed soon after.
Figure II.4: Monthly Foreign Direct
Investment came down (1998)
Figure II.5: Trends in the NASDAQ
Composite index (Dot-Com Bubble crisis)
0
100
200
300
400
500
Apr-97
Jun-97
Aug-97
Oct-97
Dec-97
Feb-98
Apr-98
Jun-98
Aug-98
US$ million
0
100 0
200 0
300 0
400 0
500 0
600 0
Jan -9 8
J ul - 98
Jan -9 9
J ul - 99
Jan -0 0
J ul - 00
Jan -0 1
J ul - 01
Jan -0 2
J ul - 02
Source: RBI Source: FRED
Table II.1: Occurrence, number of people affected and damages
of droughts in India between 2000 and 2002
Date Location Numbers
Apr 2000
Gujarat, Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, Andhra Pradesh,
Orissa, Maharashtra
Affected- 9 crore; Damage-
US$588,000,000
Nov 2000
Mahasamund, Raipur, Kawardha, Rajnandgaon, Durg
districts (Chhattisgarh region)
May 2001 New Delhi, Rajasthan, Gujarat, Orissa 20 deaths
Jul 2002
Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, Punjab, Haryana,
Delhi, Karnataka, Kerala, Nagaland, Orissa, Chhattisgarh,
Himachal Pradesh, Gujarat, Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh,
Tamil Nadu
Affected-30 crore;
Damage- US$910,721,000
Source: Samra, J. S., 2004. “Review and analysis of drought monitoring, declaration and management in
India,”IWMI Working PapersH035617, International Water Management Institute. (https://www.preventionweb.
net/files/1868_VL102135.pdf )
6 Daniel Morrow & Michael Carriere (1999) The economic impacts of the 1998 sanctions on India and Pakistan, The Nonproliferation Review,
6:4,1-16. (https://www.nonproliferation.org/wp-content/uploads/npr/morrow64.pdf)
28 Economic Survey 2022-23
India’s Participation in The Global Boom of 2003-08
2.7 The growth dividends from the reforms of 1998-2002 were realised once these one-
off shocks dissipated. The years of structural reforms had prepared the Indian economy to
contribute to global growth and also benefit from it. While the global growth averaged 4.8
per cent during 2003-2008, the Indian economy grew at more than 8 per cent on average. The
economic growth during the period was supported by strong capital inflows (Figure II.1), which
indicated favourable domestic and external factors. Some of these included sustained momentum
in domestic economic activity, better corporate performance, a conducive investment climate,
positive sentiments for India as a preferred investment destination, and encouraging global
liquidity conditions/ interest rates.
7
This combination of structural economic reforms with their
lagged effect on economic growth has parallels to what is unfolding in the Indian economy
presently.
Reforms for New India-Sabka Saath Sabka Vikaas
2.8 The reforms undertaken before 2014 primarily catered to product and capital market space.
They were necessary and continued post-2014 as well. The government, however, imparted a
new dimension to these reforms in the last eight years. With an underlying emphasis on enhancing
the ease of living and doing business and improving economic efficiency, the reforms are well
placed to lift the economy’s potential growth. The broad principles behind the reforms were
creating public goods, adopting trust-based governance, co-partnering with the private sector
for development, and improving agricultural productivity (Figure II.6). This approach reflects
a paradigm shift in the growth and development strategy of the government, with the emphasis
shifted towards building partnerships amongst various stakeholders in the development process,
where each contributes to and reaps the development benefits (Sabka Saath, Sabka Vikaas).
Figure II.6: Underlying framework for Reforms for a new India
Enhancing productive potential of economy and its people
Efficient resource allocation
Creating public goods
Trust-based
governance
Agricultural
productivity
Private sector
participation
Ease of doing
business + Ease of
Living
2.9 While the reforms undertaken in the post-2014 period have multiple socioeconomic
benefits for the economy, this chapter focuses on the growth-centric aspects of these reforms.
7 Mohan, Rakesh, (2008), Capital flows to India, p. 235-263 in Settlements, Bank for International eds., Financial globalisation and emerging
market capital flows, vol. 44, Bank for International Settlements, (https://www.bis.org/publ/bppdf/bispap44m.pdf)
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