India Can Hit 7.5% Growth With 30% Savings Rate, Says CEA Nageswaran

Chief Economic Advisor V. Anantha Nageswaran asserts that India can achieve robust economic growth of around 7.5% even with a savings rate of 30%, provided reforms continue to improve capital efficiency and reduce investment costs. He emphasized the need for infrastructure development, deregulation, and process reforms to lower the Incremental Capital Output Ratio (ICOR) and attract global value chains. Nageswaran addressed concerns on FDI, noting that while net inflows appear soft due to global factors and profit repatriation, India's long-term attractiveness remains intact. He also argued that outcomes in public spending on health and education are more critical than the headline expenditure figures.

Key Points: CEA: Capital Efficiency Key for Growth, Not Just Savings Rate

  • Focus on capital efficiency over savings volume
  • Need for stable tax policies & better logistics
  • Quality of expenditure matters more than quantum
  • Short-term factors affecting net FDI
  • Outcomes in health & education trump spending
3 min read

Improved capital efficiency will lead to robust growth even with 30% saving rate: CEA Nageswaran

CEA V. Anantha Nageswaran says policy reforms to boost capital efficiency can drive robust GDP growth for India even with a 30% savings rate.

"With a 30% savings rate, India can still reach around 7.5% real GDP growth if capital efficiency improves. - V. Anantha Nageswaran"

By Rajesh Singh, New Delhi, January 30

Chief Economic Advisor V. Anantha Nageswaran on Friday said India can achieve robust economic growth even with a savings rate of around 30 per cent, provided policy reforms continue to improve capital efficiency and reduce costs of investment.

In an exclusive interview with ANI, responding to a question on how India can meet the ambitious growth targets of Viksit Bharat with a relatively modest savings rate, Nageswaran said growth depends not just on the volume of investment but also on how efficiently capital is used.

He stressed the importance of infrastructure development, deregulation, ease of doing business, and process reforms to lower the Incremental Capital Output Ratio (ICOR). "With a 30% savings rate, India can still reach around 7.5% real GDP growth if capital efficiency improves," he said.

While acknowledging the strong performance of the services sector, the CEA said manufacturing continues to require focused attention.

"To attract global value chains, there is a need for stable and predictable tax policies, simpler processes, better logistics, last-mile connectivity, affordable power, access to land, smoother approval mechanisms, and a strong talent ecosystem. We have been working on all these areas and need to continue to do so," he said.

When asked whether the Centre would recommend a specific percentage of GDP for states to spend on such measures, Nageswaran said no such quantitative target was being proposed.

"States already operate within fiscal deficit and debt parameters. The focus should be on the quality of expenditure rather than just the quantum."

He also cautioned about unintended behavioral effects of unconditional cash transfers, particularly on labour availability.

Addressing concerns over the rupee's depreciation despite low domestic inflation, Nageswaran said, "India remains a capital-importing country. When capital flows are weaker, the currency inevitably feels the impact. That is what we are seeing."

On Foreign Direct Investment (FDI), the CEA noted that while net FDI inflows appear weak, gross FDI into India is actually rising. He attributed the softness in net figures to global factors, profit repatriation from older investments, geopolitical uncertainties, and increased outward direct investment (ODI) by Indian companies seeking to access overseas markets.

"These are short-term factors. India's long-term attractiveness remains intact," he said while expressing confidence that as global uncertainties ease, net FDI inflows would improve and the need for Indian firms to invest abroad would also moderate.

Speaking on the question around quality of education in the schools remains a concern, and what policies are required improve the school dropout rates, CEA said, "India has largely addressed the issue of school enrolment. Dropout rates are influenced by social, cultural, and economic factors. Rising household incomes could reduce the pressure on families to withdraw children from school for work."

He also highlighted the role of better teaching methods, nutritious meals, and engaging curricula in retaining students and improving learning outcomes.

Responding to criticism that India spends a relatively low share of GDP on public health and education, Nageswaran said combined spending by the Centre and states is higher than commonly perceived. More importantly, he argued that outcomes matter more than headline spending numbers.

"Outlays do not automatically translate into outcomes. If we can achieve the same or better results with lower spending by reducing leakages and improving efficiency, then the amount spent alone should not be the sole measure of success."

- ANI

Share this article:

Reader Comments

P
Priyanka N
I appreciate the honesty about education and health. Enrolment is one thing, but quality is another. My children's government school still lacks basic facilities. Outcomes over outlays sounds good, but we need to see it on the ground.
A
Aman W
The point about "last-mile connectivity" and affordable power is crucial for small industries in tier-2 and 3 cities. If they get reliable infrastructure, it will create jobs locally and reduce migration to metros. Hope the states act on this.
S
Sarah B
As someone who follows global economics, it's refreshing to see an advisor who doesn't just parrot "increase savings/investment". The ICOR focus is technically sound. The caution on unconditional cash transfers is also important - incentives matter.
K
Karthik V
Good explanation on the rupee and FDI. Media often shows only the net FDI number and creates panic. The fact that gross FDI is rising and Indian companies are investing abroad shows confidence in our own economy. Long-term view is needed.
N
Nidhi U
While I agree with the efficiency argument, I respectfully disagree on the health/education spending. "Lower spending with better results" is an ideal, but our public systems are chronically underfunded. You need adequate funds first to then talk about stopping leakages. More investment is still needed.
M
Michael C

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50