Type | Journal Article - Dancing with Giants: China, India, and the Global Economy |
Title | Partially awakened giants: uneven growth in China and India |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2006 |
Page numbers | 157-188 |
URL | http://siteresources.worldbank.org/INTCHIINDGLOECO/Resources/CE_ch06pp.157-188_FINAL.pdf |
Abstract | The emergence of China and India on the global economic stage has understandably been the subject of much discussion in international media, business and policy circles. The nearly 9 percent annual rate of real per-capita GDP growth that China has averaged over the last quarter century is unprecedented. And with an average growth rate of GDP per-capita of nearly 4 percent per annum since 1981, India’s “takeoff” seems less than spectacular only in comparison with China’s. In both countries, this growth has been accompanied by substantial—in the case of China, dramatic—reductions in the aggregate incidence of absolute poverty measured in terms of income or consumption. Figure 6.1 displays these two trends for the two countries over the period from 1981 to 2001.1 The headcount rates of poverty are calculated on as comparable a basis as is currently feasible with the data available. The poverty line is the World Bank’s dollar-a-day global standard of about $32.74 per month at 1993 Purchasing Power Parity. China started this period with the higher poverty rate, but soon overtook India. However, concerns are being expressed about the distributional impacts of the growth processes in both countries. The domestic debate about growth-promoting reforms has become increasingly contentious. It is widely felt that the gains from growth have been spread too unevenly, with some segments of the population left behind in relative and even absolute terms. This unevenness has shown up as rising income inequality by conventional measures in both countries. These developments in turn have led some to question the sustainability of growth. What is one to make of this? In what ways has growth been uneven? Are the data suggesting rising inequality to be believed? If so, should the fact that segments of the population appear to have been left behind (at least in relative terms) be of concern? And does this pose a risk to the sustainability of growth and poverty reduction? This paper tries to shed some light on these questions. While of undeniable interest in both countries, these questions also merit attention elsewhere because the impact that the rise of China and India is going to have on the rest of the world—a topic that has received enormous attention in the press over recent years—depends very much on whether these two giants are able to sustain the growth rates they have achieved over the last quarter century. And that in turn hinges on whether the concerns about the unevenness of the growth thus far are legitimate and whether that unevenness poses a risk to future growth |
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