Tuesday, June 16, 2015

Finding the balance - I

"The brain is a wonderful organ; it starts working the moment you get up in the morning and does not stop until you get into the office."
-          Robert Frost (American, 1874-1963)
Word for the day
Unquiet (v)
Agitated; restless; disordered; turbulent
(Source: Dictionary.com)
Malice towards none
When Indian telecom industry will become a utility service from investors' viewpoint?

Finding the balance - I

The current economic model being pursued since economic liberalization started in 1991 is largely a distortion of the classical Keynesian model that advocates a larger role for the private enterprise with active state intervention during extremities of business cycle and argues against higher savings in both private and public sector. The Keynesian model has its genesis in the great depression and mostly found useful during larger economic crisis.
As Chief Minister of Gujarat, the incumbent prime minister appeared an advocate of laissez-faire or free market which entails minimal state intervention even during crisis. He had implemented the model in Gujarat albeit with limited success.
However, as he must have realized by now, considering the present state of socio-economic development of various parts of the country, it is perhaps 10-15years too early to test the laissez-faire model at the pan-India level.
The major challenge before the government therefore is to find a balance between the desirable laissez-faire model and the current variant of Nehruvian socialism model.
From whatever I have heard from the government, it is planning to achieve the balance through (a) reforming institutional framework to promote ease of doing business; (b) materially enhancing physical infrastructure through public investment to improve logistic support for the businesses; and (c) encouraging entrepreneurs to invest in business ventures that will create productive jobs for the burgeoning Indian workforce and improve trade balance of India through export promotion and import substitution.
For executing the plan it has proposed to (a) rationalize social sector spending to save public resources for investment; and (b) liberalize capital controls (FDI rules) to encourage foreign investors to invest in manufacturing facilities and services like insurance, banking, retailing etc.
This strategy has faced opposition from both political class and civil society. Moreover, the government has not been able to make a convincing case about its strategy. The consequent environment of stalemate and mistrust is making financial markets jittery. It is creating doubts in minds of financial investors as to capabilities of the government in successfully achieving the desired balance.
Before I analyze the government positioning and likely outcome, I find it pertinent to note the following views of my favorite central banker Bob McTeer:
"I view the House vote today on trade-promotion authority, a necessary prelude to an important Asian trade deal, as a test of economic literacy. If there is anything most economists that don’t work for labor unions tend to agree on, it is freer trade. However, even if they pass the trade authority and ultimately some sort of trade bill, I’m not sure they will really have passed the economic literacy test for two major reasons.
One reason is that it has become commonplace to burden new deals that are supposed to take advantages of differences among trading partners with provisions “to level the playing field” like environmental, labor, and other measures. Trade is supposed to take advantage of unlevel playing fields, not take place only after all the social engineering has taken place.
The second threat to the literacy tests is the way the proponents and opponents frame the issue. It’s all about jobs. Proponents talk about all the good new jobs that will be created by more exports; opponents talk about all the good jobs lost to imports. Usually each side doesn’t acknowledge the points made on the other side. Everybody talks to their own choir.
I’m a proponent of freer trade, externally and internally, but it’s not a job issue with me. The impact of freer trade—and I say freer rather than free trade because I doubt they will come close to pure free trade—is basically neutral on the number of net new jobs created. More exports will create more domestic jobs; more imports will destroy more domestic jobs. The net result is unknowable, but it is likely to be close to zero because exports and imports tend to move together, not by coincidence, but by causal relationship.
More exports create more domestic income and cause more foreign money to flow into the economy. Both these things will stimulate more imports. More of our imports will stimulate the economies of the exporting economies and send them more of my money, both of which will stimulate more exports to them. Again, it’s impossible to say in advance what will be the net impact on the job count, but it’s likely to be close to zero.
While freer trade doesn’t necessarily create net new jobs, it does make jobs count for more. Protection is inefficient. It means we are using scarce and valuable domestic labor to produce things that we don’t have a comparative advantage in. Freer trade would shift jobs toward our comparative advantage and do the same for our trading partners. The world will experience an extra expansion of income and output because the world’s labor is shifting toward comparative advantage.
A major obstacle to economic literacy on this issue is that when workers lose jobs to imports, it is obvious what is happening and why. The new jobs created by exports are more invisible and aren’t necessarily attributed to exports. Of course, there will be frictions, including some unemployment, in shifting labor toward its comparative advantage. Some politicians probably understand the merits of freer trade, but find it expedient to avoid counter intuitive arguments with their constituents and demagogue instead.
My favorite quotation on the merits of free trade came from Henry George, who pointed out that protectionists want to do to their country in peacetime what the country’s enemies would want to do to it during war time. That is, close its borders to trade." (NCPA)

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