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  • Manmohan Singh’s Legacy and Economic Reforms
    Posted on February 13th, 2025 in Exam Details (QP Included)

    • Singh initiated economic reforms in 1991, which he continued during his Prime Ministership.

    • The period 2004-14 saw five key outcomes:

    – Structural change could have led to India becoming a high-income/high-human development index country by 2040s.

    – Rise in savings rate and investment to GDP rate due to macroeconomic policies.

    – Overall growth rate over 2004-14 averaged 7.8% p.a.

    – Growth encompassed all sectors, leading to unprecedented growth in non-farm jobs.

    – Fall in agriculture workers post-2004 led to a tightening of the labour market in rural areas.

    – Rise in real wages due to new non-farm jobs and tightening rural labour market.

    • Growth rate averaged 5.8% per year over the last decade due to policy-induced shocks: demonetisation, the Goods and Services Tax, and national lockdown.

    – Unemployment increased from 2.2% in 2011-12 to a 45-year high of 6.1% in 2017-18.

    – Manufacturing, especially unorganised, took the brunt of job losses.

    – Share of manufacturing in the economy fell since 2015, reaching an all-time low of 13% in 2022.

    – Modi government neglected exports, leading to a four-fold growth in merchandise exports.

    – Wage growth suffered, with the share of regular salaried workers in total employment falling to 20.9%.

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