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Vijay Joshi, an Indian economist based at

Oxford University, argues in his latest book,

India’s Long Road:The Search for Prosperity

, that far

deeper reforms are needed.

8

‘In the domestic

arena, progress remains to be made in many

areas such as public-sector ownership, banking

reforms, rules governing bankruptcy and exit,

infrastructure provision, employment creation

and delivery of public services,’ he writes. ‘These

involve substantive matters in which “reform by

Even so, India is now well into a new phase of

its existence.Already the largest democracy by

population, the country is set to overtake China as

the world’s most populous nation by about 2024,

according to forecasts by the UN.

3

As the country

in the G20 with the poorest populace, poorer than

China’s, there is huge potential for catch-up growth.

Among recent reforms are a long-awaited

overhaul of India’s bankruptcy law and the

introduction of a national goods and sales tax to

replace a tangle of state levies,

4

the latter move

hailed by the OECD as a ‘landmark’ that would

‘lift all boats’.

5

Foreign investment has increased,

albeit from a low base,

6

and work continues on

the ambitious International North-South

Transport Corridor, India’s answer to China’s

Belt and Road Initiative.

Meanwhile, New Delhi has begun to use a

state-of-the-art biometric ID card system,

known as Aadhaar, to map Indians financially,

including their bank accounts and expenditures.

With more than 1.1 billion enrolled members

already, it has been described by theWorld Bank

as the world’s most sophisticated ID programme

and an example for other countries to follow.

7

Despite these positives, Modi has yet to win

over many doubters.Those who hoped that he

would be a free-market champion, sweeping

away bureaucracy and restrictions on labour, land

and capital, have been disappointed.

GROWTH AGENDA

Prime Minister

Narendra Modi

(above); the

International North-

South Transport

Corridor (below)

18

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THE INVESTOR

Sources: 1 oecd.org, February 2017; 2 bloomberg.com, March 2017; 3 United Nations Department of Economic and SocialAffairs,

World Population Prospects:The 2017 Revision, June 2017

; 4 cnbc.com, July 2017; 5 oecd.org, February 2017; 6 United Nations Conference onTrade and

Development,

World Investment Report 2017

,

Country fact sheet: India

, June 2017; 7 qz.com, March 2017; 8 global.oup.com,April 2017; 9 research-doc.credit-suisse.com, July 2013; 10 in.reuters.com,August 2017; 11 indiaonlinepages.com,August 2017; 12 bbc.co.uk, May 2005