Mar30
2009
 

The Long Run Growth Prospects of the Indian Economy

Surjit S BhallaMarch 30, 2009
 
It is an honour and privilege to be asked to deliver the first Khusro memorial lecture. For an aspiring policy wonk, Dr. Khusro’s career has been a model.
 
Jan06
2009
 

Indian Economic Growth 1950-2008: Facts & Beliefs, Puzzles & Policies

Surjit S BhallaJanuary 6, 2009
 

It is fair to state that Montek has been involved in Indian macro policy making since its inception. He joined the Finance Ministry in 1978 at a time when macro economic policy making was virtually non-existent in India.

 
May07
2007
 

Second Among Equals: The Middle Class Kingdoms of India and China

Surjit S BhallaMay 7, 2007
 

Though the last piece to be written, “acknowledgements”, actually contains information about the most essential ingredient of a book: why did the person write it? My first India China comparison was written as a journalist piece about 20 years ago, and in that match-up, India definitely came out second, and definitely not equal to China.

 
Sep30
2005
 

War against global poverty - raise the standard

Surjit S BhallaSeptember 30, 2005
 
This article argues for an increase in the international poverty line from $1.08 a day to $1.75 a day. It also examines the need for more aid and concludes that aid in the last decade has been in considerable excess of that needed for poverty elimination.
 
Sep30
2005
 

Unemployment and Wages in India - Ideology, Reforms, Evidence

Surjit S BhallaSeptember 30, 2005
 
This paper examines the pattern of unemployment and wage growth in India for the last twenty five years. The paper uses the NSSO data on employment, unemployment and wages to examine some controversial propositions e.g. that despite economic reforms, unemployment rates increased or that the 1990s were characterized by “jobless” growth, or that the introduction of reforms in the 1990s led to a sharp deceleration in the rate of growth of agricultural wages. This examination leads to results at a wide variance with the conventional wisdom. Rather than a large slowdown as claimed by several recent studies, real wage growth in the 1990s nearly doubled its earlier pace. Unemployment rates were found to be stable for the 1990s and to have sharply come down by 2003. Employment growth did slow down in the 1990s, but this appears to have been in response to a sharp slowdown in the growth of the potential labor force i.e. the growth in the number of people in the labor force age group, 15-59 years. Thus, instead of a job scarce economy, one strong conclusion of this paper is that India is transitioning from a labor surplus economy to one with lesser surpluses and emerging labor scarcities.
 
 
The Long Run Growth Prospects of the Indian Economy It is an honour and privilege to be asked to deliver the first Khusro memorial
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