With average incomes lagging even other emerging economies, India has its task cut out.
One way of moving towards higher incomes is to have bigger enterprises, through M&As or strategic expansion, which can give more jobs.
A group of CEOs took on the subject at the Mint-JSA CEO roundtable in Mumbai recently. The honchos of Hindalco Industries, the world's biggest aluminium manufacturer, and JSW Steel, one of the world's biggest steel companies, felt manufacturing would need to play a strong part in India's drive towards its goal.
"Other sectors that will play their role, but manufacturing has to play its role if we have to get to that (target) because it provides steady jobs, a reasonable level of income and, more interestingly, provides jobs in the heartland of the country," said Satish Pai of Hindalco.
He added that mining also was important, and Australia, Canada, the US, Brazil, Argentina, and Chile have done a lot of development through mining, unlike India, where "mining industry is seen through a pretty bad lens. So, players in the industry like us have to make mining socially acceptable, we have to do mining in a clean and sustainable way."
Jayant Acharya of JSW Steel said, relatively speaking, India had a stable political regime and reforms. At current growth rates, the per capita income is likely to double in a decade, but the opportunity is there to take it up 3X.
"If you look at Japan in 1970s, Korea in 1980s, and China in mid-2010s, all have doubled in 10 years or so," Acharya said. "So, (the next) decade will be a very important phase for India's growth."
Esta historia es de la edición December 23, 2024 de Mint New Delhi.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor ? Conectar
Esta historia es de la edición December 23, 2024 de Mint New Delhi.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor? Conectar
Inflation targeting: It should not constrain Indian manufacturing
Monetary policymakers should analyse the price dynamics of the entire basket of items that make up India's national income
We could expect East Asia to spring some surprises in 2025
China, Hong Kong and Vietnam will be under watch for a reason
Full of sound and fury: What the Bard may say of 2024
From central bank actions to Trump's ideas, there was plenty that inspires a Shakespearean look-back
Trump's tariffs will not eliminate the dollar's exorbitant privilege
Exporters to the US may want to shift trade into other currencies but the dollar won't be dethroned
AP split leaves state-backed bondholders high and dry
Investors await payments as Andhra and Telangana dispute AP power bonds post-bifurcation
We must approach tech transformations with due care
How we deal with technology is getting highly complex. It's the reason we must exercise fine judgement
INTERNATIONAL ETFs ARE TRADING AT A PREMIUM: WHAT SHOULD INVESTORS DO?
Most successful investors remain informed, agile, and approach investments strategically
A BONE THIEF IN UKRAINE'S BACKYARD
Ukrainian officials say the Russians continue their efforts to repatriate the remains of Soviet war dead
Simplifying estate planning: The value of expert guidance
Do I need the help of a professional estate planner? Should I opt for a will or trust? Which is effective?
Samsung plans to re-enter ACs market
Samsung is planning to launch over a dozen models of inverter ACs for its 2025 lineup.