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growth of service sector in india after post independence era... dipanjan roy
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Growth of Services Sector in INDIA in the post liberalization era
CENTRE FOR MANAGEMENT STUDIESMBA @BURDWAN UNIVERSITY
DIPANJAN ROYSOMENATH BANERJEEKAZI MONJUR KADERSUBHOJIT SIL
Overview and Recent Developments
India seen in last 10 odd years as the emerging professional services hub of the world India’s competitive edge in professional
services is compared with China’s prowess as a low cost global manufacturing hub
the services sector scenario in India is complex characterized by uneven development in
different types of services and across regions
Overview and Recent Developments
Viewed from a global perspective- growing importance of the services sector within the Indian economy is not exceptional India is a large emerging economy - extremely
heterogeneous - possesses an advanced industrial and human capital base relative to other developing countries
Services as a share of GDP over time
1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005
India
30
35
40
45
50
55
60
65
70
75
80
Se r vice s as % o f GDP
The Evolution of the Sectors Compared..
Percent GDPAgriculture Industry Services
1960 58 15 281980 38 24 381990 33 27 412000 24 27 49
Services: Before and after Liberalization Before liberalization Services was the residual sector drawing
refugees from agriculture Between 1996 and 2005- the triple impact of India’s external
liberalization, domestic economic reforms and the rise of a global market for skilled services facilitated by information technology makes itself felt, share of services in India’s GDP grew from just over 40% to about 54%.
Rapid growth of services in the economy, esp. in the external sector- also facilitated by the fact services enterprises required lesser capital for start-up - less dependent on the India’s relatively poor infrastructure than manufacturing. China, which has a far higher proportion of its economy in
manufacturing, and has emerged as the global hub for labor intensive manufacturing, has much better infrastructure than India. China’s better infrastructure facilitated entrepreneurship in the manufacturing sector.
Employment Share of Services
% Share of NationalEmploymment in Services
1965 18.11980 18.91990 24.42000 23.5
Growth of Services
An important feature of India’s growth - skewed towards services -described as jobless growth
Share of agriculture in the Indian economy declined rapidly
Share of employment in agriculture has remained the same- increasing share of services in the GDP has not been accompanied by services claiming a larger share of employment in the decade of the 1990’s
Growth in Services
growth in output in services in India in recent times has mostly come from the rapid development of skill intensive services in the IT and professional services segments- oriented towards the external market large proportion of services in India are a part of the informal
economy and the official employment figures might understate the actual size of the services workforce
there is a lot of cross-over between services and agriculture sector laborers, i.e. many workers spend part of the year as agricultural workers and the rest of the year working in some service job such as informal retail and construction work
There has been some debate on the repercussions of this skill biased development of service sector jobs
Regional Dimension
% Share of National GDP % share Agriculture % share Manufacturing % Share Services % Profess ional ServicesMaharashtra 13.80% 7.53% 15.89% 15.65% 14.55%Andhra Pradesh 9.59% 11.04% 8.45% 9.35% 11.71%Uttar P radesh 9.63% 14.57% 7.44% 8.33% 8.67%Tamil Nadu 7.85% 4.29% 8.27% 9.12% 8.60%W est Bengal 8.15% 9.48% 6.29% 8.17% 7.10%Karnataka 5.55% 4.60% 6.09% 5.77% 6.91%Gujarat 6.69% 6.12% 11.83% 5.43% 5.66%Rajasthan 4.47% 5.12% 4.27% 4.28% 5.39%Kerala 4.20% 3.00% 2.58% 5.14% 4.38%Delhi 3.62% 0.16% 1.92% 5.47% 4.29%Madhya Pradesh 4.46% 5.85% 4.59% 3.88% 3.64%Bihar 2.63% 4.17% 0.37% 2.69% 3.60%Orissa 2.35% 3.64% 1.96% 1.95% 2.31%Punjab 3.71% 5.99% 3.30% 2.93% 2.31%Assam 1.96% 2.72% 1.92% 1.68% 2.23%
Trends and Composition
Service Sector Output in 2006 (billions of Rupees)Total National Output (GDP) 26045E lectric ity ,Gas and W ater Supply 574Construc tion 1775Trade (W holesale and Retail)* 3698Hotels and Resturants* 350Transport (other than Railways) 1398Storage 17.7Communication 1030Bank ing and Insurance 1594
Trends and Composition
Growth in Services Uneven Star performer has been professional services that
include IT and IT enabled services (ITES) Services that serve as crucial inputs to workings of the
national economy (as support for agriculture and industry) have not developed as fast as hoped
Trends and Composition
Communication, construction and trade (wholesale and retail) showed some of the fastest growth rates in this period- average growth of IT and ITES sector in the same period was around 25%, comparable to the high rates logged by communication services.
Banking and insurance, electricity, gas and water supply and storage have shown relatively slower growth trajectories Deregulation and domestic reforms in certain
sectors have been more dynamic than others-communication and transport have seen greater degree of positive reforms than banking and insurance, electricity supply etc.
Trends and Composition
Se cto r al Gr o w th in Se r vice s in In d ia
-10.00%
-5.00%
0.00%
5.00%
10.00%
15.00%
20.00%
25.00%
2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006
Elec tr ic ity ,Gas and Water Supply Cons truc tion Trade (Wholesale and Retail)*
Hotels and Res turants * Transport (other than Railw ays ) Storage
Communication Banking and Insurance
Sector-shares -2000-2006
0.00%
2.00%
4.00%
6.00%
8.00%
10.00%
12.00%
14.00%
16.00%
Service Sector share in GDP: 2000 and 2006
2000 2006
IT and ITES Sector
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006
T otal IT and IT E S Output IT and IT E S E xpor ts
Importance of this Sector
India’s boom in services export-almost entirely attributable to the IT and ITES sectors India has emerged as a prolific exporter of IT
and ITES services in recent years IT and ITES exports grew by 485% between
2000 and 2006-output of IT and ITES grew by 339% in the same period
Destination is US folLowed by EU
India's IT and ITES Exports
India’s services export boom took off around 1997 has continued to grow despite the Asian currency
crisis that affected the other major service exporters. India’s services destination was primarily the US and it was geared towards the Y2K related IT work, the demand for which remained independent of the Asian crisis.
India’s growth dipped after 2000 as the demand for IT work post Y2K slowed down and the internet based IT bubble burst in the US-took off again around 2002 as the ITES sector matured Indian companies stated becoming trusted partners
of major US and EU based IT sector companies
By 2004 India was displaying far higher growth rates in terms of services exports compared to the world average and that of China. India’s share of the world’s export market for
services has also increased rapidly in the recent years
Service Imports
Services Imports
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006
Service Imports
Over the last 15 odd years India has become an increasingly important importer of services, above and beyond the import of services related to transport and travel that every economy has to import
India now imports a large variety of services such as banking, education, technical consulting etc.
India accounted for less than 0.3% of the world share of services imports in 1990 In 2006 India accounts for more than 3% of the
world’s imports of services net of travel and transportation, more than any other emerging economy.
Position and Trajectory of India's Service ExportsIf one traces India’s increasing RCA over the last 17 years studies reveal that India overtook all the major emerging market economies in terms of RCA in services right from the mid to late 90’s.