If India has to make a serious global impact, it should aim for a sustained GDP growth of 8 per cent.
This can be achieved through a higher national savings rate, greater spending on infrastructure, faster growth of trade and higher foreign direct investment, according to Martin Wolf, associate editor and chief economics commentator, Financial Times, London.
Wolf said India had made rapid economic strides in the last decade, but failed to take advantage of the opportunities afforded by the globalising world economy.
"As a result, India's real income per head has grown at just two-thirds of China's rate." According to him, the services sector, especially the software segment, is doing just fine and does not need any mentoring.
"What is required is increased growth in the manufacturing and industrial sectors, which is critical to the gradual urbanisation of the country." During 1990-2002, while China's GDP grew at a scorching 9.7 per cent, India's rose at 5.8 per cent.
China's growth was pumped up by a ferocious 12.6 per cent growth in industry (6 per cent for India), nearly 12 per cent growth in manufacturing (6.6 per cent for India), 3.9 per cent in agriculture (2.7 per cent for India) and 8.8 per cent in services (7.9 per cent for India).
He said the biggest priorities for the new government were the reallocation of often wasteful public sector spending, substantial reduction in fiscal deficit, and faster integration into the world economy.
"This would rapidly transform the prospects of the Indian people and the place of India in the world." Concurring with Prime Minister-designate Manmohan Singh's seminal work on Indian exports, done as part of his doctoral work at Oxford in 1954,