Paving the Path to 8% Growth

Introduction

India aspires to achieve developed nation status by 2047, marking its centenary of independence.
To reach this milestone, the country must maintain an annual GDP growth rate of 8% or higher over the coming decades. This is a formidable ambition, especially in light of how rarely such high, sustained growth has been achieved globally.

Global Context: Historical and Comparative Perspective

·       Global Precedents: Only a handful of nations—China, South Korea, Singapore, and Hong Kong—have successfully maintained growth rates exceeding 8% over a 25-year period.

·       India’s Track Record:

o   Between 2001–02 and 2023–24, India averaged a GDP growth rate of 6.3%.

o   When excluding the pandemic years, the average rises slightly to 6.7%.

o   This demonstrates a noticeable shortfall from the 8% growth benchmark India aims to achieve.

Key Challenges to Sustained High Growth

1.     Structural Inefficiencies: Fundamental reforms across sectors such as agriculture, labour, land, and energy are essential to unlock higher growth.

2.     Geopolitical Risks: Global tensions, shifting trade alliances, and supply chain disruptions create external uncertainties that can impact India’s growth trajectory.

3.     Federal Constraints: Several growth-critical reforms fall under state jurisdiction, necessitating greater alignment and cooperation between the Union and state governments.

Strategic Opportunities: India’s Growth Enablers

·       Global Supply Chain Shifts: As international businesses diversify away from China, India has a chance to position itself as a global manufacturing hub.

·       Demographic Edge: India’s youthful workforce, if effectively trained and employed, can serve as a long-term driver of productivity and growth.

·       Post-COVID Reform Momentum: The economic rebound after the pandemic highlights India''s ability to implement structural reforms and drive investment-led recovery.

CII’s Five-Point Agenda to Achieve 8% Growth

Institutionalizing Reform Through Federal Consensus

·       Need for Alignment: Many transformative reforms involve areas under state or concurrent jurisdiction.

·       Successful Example: The GST Council facilitated the smooth implementation of indirect tax reforms via cooperative federalism.

·       Proposed Action: Establish reform councils or an empowered group of secretaries under the Cabinet Secretary. Institutionalize these mechanisms in the Union Budget 2025–26 to drive productivity-enhancing reforms across sectors.

Accelerating Public Sector Disinvestment and Asset Monetization

·       Revenue Generation Potential: Reducing government ownership in 80 listed PSUs to 51% could generate ₹10.3 lakh crore, as estimated by CII.

·       Case in Point: The successful privatization of Air India demonstrates that such transitions are both feasible and impactful.

·       Recommendations:

o   Form a dedicated task force including private-sector experts to oversee disinvestment.

o   Create a Disinvestment Fund to: Reduce public debt and Invest in rural development and social infrastructure.

o   Launch the second phase of the National Monetisation Pipeline (NMP 2.0), building on the 2021–2025 initiative.

Creating a Sovereign Wealth Fund for Strategic Global Investments

·       Purpose: To safeguard India’s economic interests and mitigate geopolitical uncertainties.

·       Focus Sectors: Overseas investments in ports, logistics, cutting-edge technology, and critical minerals.

·       Funding Strategy: Use proceeds from public sector disinvestment to seed the fund.

Expanding Irrigation Infrastructure to Reduce Monsoon Dependency

·       Present Challenge: A significant portion of Indian agriculture still depends heavily on rainfall, leading to unpredictable food output and price instability.

·       Target: Increase irrigation coverage to 80% of gross cropped area by 2030.

·       Expected Benefits: Enhanced agricultural productivity; Lower vulnerability to food inflation; Greater climate resilience and income security for farmers.

Deepening Ease of Doing Business (EoDB) Reforms

·       Progress Made: While India’s ranking has improved, further reforms are needed to consolidate investor trust.

·       Ensure the full functionality of the National Single Window System to streamline regulatory approvals.

·       Fast-track the Jan Vishwas Bill 2.0 to decriminalize business compliance.

·       Implement the four labour codes to modernize workforce regulations and boost industrial relations.

Conclusion

Sustaining long-term GDP growth above 8% is not merely an economic objective—it represents a transformative national agenda. Achieving this goal requires strategic, well-sequenced reforms in fiscal management, federal governance, infrastructure, and ease of doing business.
The Confederation of Indian Industry (CII)’s five-point blueprint provides a practical, actionable roadmap to unlock India’s untapped potential and steer the country towards its 2047 development vision.



POSTED ON 09-08-2025 BY ADMIN
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