"Protection only in return for performance, productivity, international competitiveness": CEA Nageswaran on key lessons learnt from East Asian economies
New Delhi, June 14
Chief Economic Advisor Dr V Anantha Nageswaran, on Saturday, highlighted the key lessons India can draw from the economic models of East Asian countries like China, South Korea and Vietnam.
Speaking exclusively to ANI, CEA Nageswaran highlighted the core success formula of East Asian economies that included China, South Korea, and Vietnam.
Chief Economic Advisor (CEA) said, "One of the important things that those East Asian economies that you mentioned, including the newcomer Vietnam into the club, I think what they did right is...not only supported the domestic industry, but demanded performance from them. If the performance was not forthcoming, you may say, what does the performance? It is basically productivity, being able to export and being internationally competitive. If that was not delivered by the industry, the government withdrew support."
He stressed that government support in those economies was always conditional and never unconditional, adding, "So they never offered them subsidies, lower interest rate loans, concessional loans, et cetera, or land for starting businesses without demanding something in return."
He acknowledged other important factors, such as education/skills development, land reforms, but said the key takeaway for India today is conditional protection.
"So that is the most important lesson we can learn from them, apart from other lessons like investing in human capital, land reforms, etc., which they did. But in today's context, on industrial policy, if you want, what is that one lesson? I would say it is about protection only in return for performance, productivity and international competitiveness. That is the one lesson we should learn from them," he added.
When asked if India is trying to replicate the success stories of China, South Korea and Vietnam models, the CEA said, "We missed the bus when it comes to manufacturing because in the 60s to 90s, we did not invest in infrastructure, and we laid a lot of emphasis on small-scale industries, reservation for small-scale industries. And only from the 1990s, we started to fix some of these things."
He added, "And by the way, people say our manufacturing has not grown. That's not true. Manufacturing share of GDP has remained constant, which means it has grown in line with GDP. So it is not that it has grown faster than services. It has grown in line with GDP so that, as a share of GDP in constant prices, the share of manufacturing has remained at between 17 and 18%. So it has grown in tandem with GDP."
— ANI
Reader Comments
Interesting perspective, but we need to be careful. Conditional protection can work well in export-focused economies like South Korea and Vietnam, but our domestic market is massive. We should also think about MSMEs and small manufacturers who can't compete globally overnight. Maybe a phased approach with clear benchmarks would work better than cutting support immediately. Just my two paise.
The CEA is spot on! We can't keep giving subsidies without accountability. Look at Vietnam - they started later than us but are now a manufacturing hub because they demanded results from protected industries. Our 'Make in India' needs more teeth. But we need better infrastructure first - the man himself acknowledged we missed that bus from 60s to 90s. Let's fix the basics before moving to conditional protection. 😅
As an economist watching India closely, I think this is a refreshingly honest take. Many developing countries got stuck in protectionist cycles. The East Asian model worked because it paired temporary protection with strict performance criteria. But India's federal structure and political economy makes implementation tricky - states will resist if support to local industries is withdrawn. Still, good to see such candid analysis from a CEA. 👍
Great points but here's the challenge - how do you measure 'performance' for different sectors? Pharma vs. electronics vs. textiles all have different competitiveness metrics. Also, our labor laws and compliance costs are much higher than East Asian countries even today. Before asking industry to compete globally, make the playing field level first. Conditional protection is good, but with realistic benchmarks. Kya bolte ho? 🤔
M We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.