Globalisation and the Indian Economy
๐ Globalisation
- ๐ Globalisation is the process of integration/inter-connection between different countries.
- ๐ข MNCs (multinational companies) play a major role in the globalisation process.
- ๐ Encourages free flow of trade, capital, and human resources across borders.
- ๐บ๏ธ Due to globalisation, boundaries between countries have almost vanished.
๐ถ Levels of Globalisation
- ๐ Markets: Producers/sellers from abroad can enter the Indian market; Indians can enter international markets.
- ๐ผ Investment: Foreign entrepreneurs can invest in India; Indian entrepreneurs can invest abroad.
- ๐ท Labour mobility: Indian workers can move abroad for better jobs; foreign workers can come to India.
โ๏ธ Reasons for Globalisation
- ๐ข Rapid technological advancement in transport: Goods move worldwide faster and at lower cost.
- ๐ก Growth of telecom, computers, and the internet: Instant information access and communication from remote locations.
๐ป Role of IT in Globalisation
- ๐ Encourages global communication at minimal cost.
- ๐งฉ Connects markets.
- ๐ธ Enables instant transfer of money across countries.
- ๐ง Helps establish customer service centres.
- ๐๏ธ Fast data/information transfer.
๐ช Liberalisation
Liberalisation = lessening/removal of government regulations and restrictions to encourage economic development. In other words, removing barriers set by the government.
๐ In 1991, the Government of India decided to lift unnecessary restrictions such as industrial licensing, import licensing, price controls, etc.
๐ง Trade Barriers
- Trade barriers are restrictions put by the government on trade (e.g., a tax on imports).
๐ฎ๐ณ After independence, India imposed many barriers on foreign trade and investment because:
- ๐๏ธ Basic industries needed huge investment beyond private capacity; developed under the public sector.
- ๐งญ Government wanted to control critical industries to mobilise resources for development across sectors.
- โ๏ธ Private sector could operate but under controls/rules/laws to prevent concentration of resources/wealth in few hands.
Goal of the mixed economy strategy: reduce poverty, income/wealth inequalities, and unemployment, and promote economic growth with social justice.
๐งญ Steps Taken Under Liberalisation
- ๐ญ All industries (except three) exempted from industrial licensing.
- ๐ Industries are free to expand/produce in response to market demand.
- ๐ ๏ธ Producers can import machinery & raw materials from other countries.
- ๐ฐ๏ธ Industries can import advanced technologies without restriction.
๐ข Privatisation
Privatisation is a component of liberalisation. It means allowing the private sector to set up industries previously reserved for the public sector.
๐ช Steps Taken
- ๐ท๏ธ Number of industries reserved for the public sector reduced to 2.
- ๐๏ธ Public sector can enter core industries such as iron & steel, electricity, communication, transportation, shipbuilding, etc.
- ๐ณ Government started disinvestment in loss-making public sector enterprises.
- ๐ Private sector freed from many restrictions: licensing, permissions to import raw materials, price regulations, and investment limits.
