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In the Comfort Zone
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Recent forecasts back up the picture of Indian economic resiliency. One from Citibank in September analyzed the likely impact of a U.S. recession on Asia's two giants. The bank estimated that its 2008 GDP growth forecast for China would fall from the 11 percent level to 8.5 percent, whereas India's would dip about half that amount, from 9.4 to 8.1 percent. A new study by the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development concluded that, by further liberalizing its labor markets, India could push its sustainable growth rate above 10 percent by 2011. Pai Panandikar, president of the the RPG Foundation, a prominent economic think tank in Mumbai, wrote last week that a U.S. recession would hit goods exporters hardest, while driving American companies to cut costs with further use of Indian software and technology services. "It is possible that the growth of merchandise exports may dip, but the [demand for] service climb," he argues.
What comes next in the resilient India story? Ironically, it could be a manufacturing boom akin to China's in the 1990s. India's huge domestic market, ultralow average wages and potential as an export platform to the Middle East, Africa, and Europe are attracting interest like never before, as manufacturers seek to limit their vulnerability to future political or economics changes in China. A handful of foreign carmakers such as Ford, General Motors, Hyundai and Suzuki have already opened plants, aiming to service customers abroad, as well as India's own large and rapidly growing domestic market for small cars. Lucrative Korean electronics and white-goods ventures already dominate the local market. In a new survey of more than 300 global manufacturing companies released last week, European consultancy Capgemini found "very keen interest" in India as a manufacturing base, says Roy Lenders, the report's author, who predicts that "India could challenge China as the manufacturing center of the world in the next three to five years." Such a shift would soak up millions of surplus rural workers, thereby widening the country's already formidable consumer base. "Thinking of China as a benchmark for successful development is still very strong in India," says Shankar Acharya, an economist with the Indian Council for Research on International Economic Relations. China has been growing much faster than India, for much longer. But the eventual lesson of this period of global uncertainty may be that India should just build on its own strengths, not worry about China's.
© 2007
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