Pakistan's GDP growth projected to 'recover slightly' in FY23: ADB - Minute  Mirror

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India's Economy Has Outpaced Pakistan's Handily since Partition in 1947 – Politics Explains Why
By Surupa Gupta
Professor of Political Science and International Affairs
University of Mary
Washington

 

India and Pakistan inherited the same economic legacy of  underinvestment and neglect  from Britain when they  became independent states following the Partition  in August 1947. Their colonial economies were among the  poorest in the world .

For both nations, independence almost immediately led to strong growth and fueled significant gains in education, health care and other areas of development. But it was Pakistan that saw  faster growth rates  during the first four decades or so, while India lagged behind.

Something began to change around the 1990s as their roles reversed and India  vaulted ahead of Pakistan , eventually becoming the  world’s third-biggest economy by purchasing power  and the “I” in BRICS – an acronym referring to a  bloc of five key emerging market  countries.

What accounts for India’s growth spurt?

As a  scholar of international political economy , I believe India’s stronger embrace of democracy – at the same time that Pakistan experienced frequent military dictatorships and changes in government – has a lot to do with it.

 

A colonial inheritance

From 1857 to 1947,  Britain ruled directly  over most of the territory that became the independent states of India and Pakistan.

Economic growth under British rule was minimal , averaging just 0.9% a year from 1900 to 1947. This happened largely because the colonial Indian economy was mostly agricultural, and yet the  British made little investment  in improving farm productivity.

Additionally, Great Britain made limited investments in the well-being of the people of India, notably by  underfunding their education and health care . As a result, colonial India had one of the lowest literacy rates in the world  at about 17% , and life expectancy  was in the mid-30s . Britain’s neglect of the plight of Indians is perhaps best illustrated by the  1943 famine in Bengal in eastern India , in which over 1.5 million people died as result of policy failure.

 

Post-independence growth, led by Pakistan

Britain decided to give up  its “jewel in the crown” and partition the region into Hindu-dominated India and Muslim Pakistan after facing mounting pressure from the local population and a growing nationalist movement.

This led to one of the  largest forced migrations  of the 20th century: Nearly 9 million Hindus and Sikhs moved into India and about 5 million Muslims to a geographically separated East and West Pakistan over the next two decades. An estimated 1 million people died amid mass violence.

Economic growth, however, took off, with  both new   countries growing  at 3% to 4% in the first decade or so of independence as the respective governments invested more into their economies. But soon, differences emerged.

While both economies were largely state controlled,  India’s government curtailed exports  and adopted a protectionist trading policy in the 1960s that limited growth.

Pakistan, on the other hand,  benefited from significant trade  from its East Pakistan region. The newly created Pakistan was geographically separated by India – on one side of it was West and the other side East Pakistan. Each was carved out by the British due to its Muslim majority. Pakistan  lost its growth engine  in 1971, when East Pakistan became Bangladesh following a war of independence.

Pakistan also  received billions of dollars in military aid  from the US. Fellow oil-rich Muslim countries in the Middle East have also  given aid to Pakistan . As a result, Pakistan’s growth accelerated to about 6% a year from 1961 to 1980, compared with 4% for India.

 

India vaults ahead

The growth script flipped in the 1990s, with  India growing at a 6% rate  over the next 30 years, outpacing Pakistan’s 4%.

What explains the role reversal? Economics and politics both played a part.

Pakistan has long relied on external sources of funding more than India has,  receiving $73 billion in foreign aid  from 1960 to 2002. And even today, it  frequently relies on institutions  such as the International Monetary Fund for crisis lending and on foreign governments like China for aid and infrastructure development.

The aid has allowed Pakistan to postpone  much-needed but painful reforms , such as expanding the tax base and addressing energy and infrastructure problems, while the loans have saddled the country with a large debt. Such reforms, in my view, would have put Pakistan on a more sustainable growth path and encouraged more foreign investment.

While  India also got a fair amount  of support from  international aid groups and a few countries  such as the US earlier in its existence, it never depended upon it – and has relied less on it in recent decades. In addition, in 1991,  India liberalized trade , lowered tariffs, made it easier for domestic companies to operate and grow, and opened the door to more foreign investment. – The Conversation

 

 

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