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Our Future Depends on Inclusive Growth Management Convention: Trivandrum Management Association February 04 – 05, 2011. Vinod Thomas Director-General and Senior Vice President Independent Evaluation Group World Bank Group. Spotlight on Inclusive Growth.
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Our Future Depends on Inclusive GrowthManagement Convention: Trivandrum Management Association February 04 – 05, 2011 VinodThomas Director-General and Senior Vice President Independent Evaluation Group World Bank Group
Spotlight on Inclusive Growth New York Times Davos, Jan 27, 2011 “India is trying hard not to be forgotten at the World Economic Forum amid a focus on China. The South Asian country has brought the single biggest delegation to Davos, and advertisements with its ‘Inclusive Growth’ slogan could be seen not just in the conference center but on public buses in town.” Indian posters at World Economic Forum
What Is Inclusive Growth? Inclusive growth signals a process by which economic growth is generated and distributed in ways that are broad-based, with the lower-income strata in society sharing in progress.
World Bank Lending and Inclusion? World Bank Lending by Sector for FY 2010 Top Five World Bank Borrowers in FY 2010
Why Does Inclusion Matter? It helps reduce poverty sharply—Brazil, past vs. present It affects social stability and peace— Egypt, Mexico It contributes to growth – Korea, Japan in the 20thCentury It may be essential for high growth to continue—China and India
Falling Poverty Rates in Brazil, India, and China China Brazil India Source: World Bank PovCalNetData
Rising Inequality in India and China Versus Brazil Source: World Bank PovCalNet Data. Note: Zero signifies complete equality and 100 extreme inequality.
Increasing Concentration of Wealth in India Net worth of local Indian billionaires in relation to GDP Source: Forbe.com and World Development Indicators. Cited from M. Walton (2008).
Kerala Is Different -- Or Is It? • India: Imbalance between economic and social development, with the latter lagging behind • Kerala: Imbalance in the opposite direction. With only half the level of per capita income of the richest state Goa, Kerala had the highest human development index. Source: UNDP HDI data 2005.
1. Education and Skills • Access to secondary and higher education remain crucial gaps for India. • Relevance, quality, learning outcomes, and link to skills and jobs are vital for Kerala.
2. Labor and Employment • Must link education, productivity, and jobs • Protectionism, trade and domestic employment • Labor market policies and greater labor mobility within India
3. Agriculture, Industry, and Services • Confronting India’s urban-rural divide is essential to inclusion • Kerala’s challenges in agricultural financing and productivity • Kerala’s crisis in urban infrastructure, congestion, and garbage management
4. Corporate Structure and Finance • Large corporations with global reach are essential. • But they must be part of a competitive Indian economy. • Vigorous entry of small, medium, and large businesses is needed • Reform competition, judiciary, financial, and land policies.
5. Governance and Service Delivery • We need a state that is accountable to citizens • Central government over stretched • Kerala’s example of decentralization —, but how to make it work to benefit citizens?
“We are trying to give a concrete shape to growth with a human face or growth with social justice.” Dr. Manmohan Singh, Prime Minister of India