The answer to the problems of high inflation and slowing growth, and low farm incomes, would lie in addressing the basic reforms that India is still to attempt -- like labour laws, says T N Ninan.
Delivering the third Business Standard lecture on Thursday night, Raghuram Rajan provided an interesting insight into the reason for high inflation in India.
The professor of finance at Chicago, who is also an adviser to the prime minister, argued that productivity growth in Indian agriculture had been poor, so rural incomes were not growing fast enough.
In its effort to deal with this, the government was pumping subsidies and income transfers into the countryside, to put money in people's pockets -- which the recipients were spending.
Since this expenditure was not matched by productivity growth, it was causing inflation.
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Raghuram G Rajan, Professor of Finance at the University of Chicago's Booth School of Business and former chief economist of IMF.
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