The historical roots of India’s service-led development: a sectoral analysis of Anglo-Indian productivity differences, 1870–2000

The historical roots of India’s service-led development: a sectoral analysis of Anglo-Indian productivity differences, 1870–2000
Original hosted in "OpenScout", contributed by Social Updater on 19/01/2015
India fell further behind the UK in terms of GDP per capita and overall labour productivity between the 1870s and the 1970s, but has been catching-up since. This paper offers a sectoral analysis of these trends. Comparative India/UK labour productivity in agriculture has declined continuously, and agriculture still accounts for around two-thirds of employment in India. Agriculture thus played a key role in India’s falling behind and has subsequently slowed down the process of catching up. Although there have been substantial fluctuations in comparative India/UK labour productivity in industry, this sector has exhibited no long run trend. The only sector to exhibit an upward trend in comparative India/UK labour productivity is services. India’s recent emergence as a dynamic service-led economy thus appears to have long historical roots. Although India has been characterised by relatively low levels of physical and human capital formation overall, its education provision has historically been unusually skewed towards secondary and tertiary levels. This has provided a limited supply of high productivity workers who have been employed predominantly in services.
Tags: DS Asia
Rating: -/5
Views: 4127
Resource type: Educational Object
Languages:
Copyright: Yes

Comments

There are no Comments yet. Be the first to Post a Comment

In order to be able to post a comment you have to be logged in to the portal. You can login or register a new account by pressing the "Login" button at the top right corner.