Liberalization
Liberalization
INTRODUCTION:
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Foriegn invetment was very difficult to come into India due to a
bureaucratic framework. After the start of the economic
liberalization, India started getting huge capital inflows and it
has emerged as the 2nd fastest growing country in the world.
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The new neo-liberal policies included opening for international
trade and investment, deregulation, initiation of privatization,
tax reforms, and inflation-controlling measures.
Thus, unlike the reforms of 1966 and 1985 that were carried out
by the majority Congress governments, the reforms of 1991
carried out by a minority government proved sustainable world.
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Indian government coalitions have been advised to continue
liberalisation. India grows at slower pace than China, which has
been liberalising its economy since 1978.
PRE-LIBERALIZATION :
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The protective regime controlled not only entry into industry and
capacity expansion but also technology, output mix and import
content. Due to high tariffs before the liberalization period, most
Indians firms enjoyed protection of some kind or the other. Free
imports were not forthcoming.
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roughly 3 weeks of essential imports, India was only
weeks way from defaulting on its external balance of
payment obligations. The caretaker government in India
headed by Prime Minister Chandra Sekhar’s, immediate
response was to secure an emergency loan of $2.2 billion
from the International Monetary Fund by pledging 67 tons
of India's gold reserves as collateral.The Reserve Bank of
India had to airlift 47 tons of gold to the Bank of England
and 20 tons of gold to the Union Bank of Switzerland to
raise $600 million.
LIBERALISATION:
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It includes abolition of those economic policies,rules,
regulations, administrative controls and procedures which
impede economic development.In other words economic
liberalisation is a new economy policy of promoting market
determine determined economic decisions rather than
bureaucratic arbitrary economic decisions.
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Freedom for expansion and production.
Tax Reforms.
Initiation of Privatization.
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Liberalisation policies in India had a modest beginning in the
late 1960s to remedy the foreign exchange and fiscal problems
faced by the economy. The relative merit of the market as
opposed to state directed development began gaining support
onaccount of three problems facing the economy from the late
1960s.The first was the prolonged stagnation in the industrial
sector .
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C Goldar 1990:603^ Until 1991 there was no one official policy
statement setting out explicitly what the new economic policy
was and what it intended to achieve. The novelty of the policy
was perceived only when changes in policy and procedures
relating to industrial licensing, exchange rate policy, import
policy along with some observations about the need for
rationalising and simplifying the systems of fiscal and
administrative procedures were pieced together, (policies that
are directed at the industrial sector can be classified into two
categories:
(a) domestic,.Iiberaiisation
DOMESTIC LIBERALISATION
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To translate these objectives into policy terms, the government
formulated the following measures to facilitate capacity and
output expansion and to remove procedural impediments to
investment and growth of firms.
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In August 1988, the government announced that the broadband
mg facility would be available for companies that came under
the purview of the MRTP and FERA in Appendix A. and would
be subject to export obligations in respect of non— Appendix A
companies.
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• Opening up the Public Sector: Areas that were earlier
under the exclusive purview of the public sector were
gradually opened up to the private sector. The policies of
broadbanding, re-endorsement of capacity and the
prescription of MES were part of the earlier liberalization
packages before the large-scale delicensing in the NILP
C19911made them redundant.
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IMPACT OF LIBERALIZATION ON INDIAN ECONOMY:
Development of Infrastructure.
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Identity at World Level
Increase in Employment
On agriculture
On education
On money market
On human resources
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On life styles
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LIBERALISATION CAN BE DIVIDED AS FOLLOWING:-
Components of
liberalisation
Industrial
in
liberalisation Fiscal
liberalisation
Financial
Trade
liberalisation
liberalisation
INDUSTRIAL LIBERALIZATION:
The list of industries reserved solely for the public sector --which used to
cover 18 industries, including iron and steel.
Heavy plant and machinery, telecommunications and telecom
equipment, minerals, oil, mining, air transport services and electricity
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generation and distribution --has been drastically reduced to three:
defense aircrafts and warships, atomic energy generation, and railway
transport.
The policy now allows 100 percent foreign ownership in a large number
of industries and majority ownership in all except banks, insurance
companies, telecommunications and airlines.
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Procedures for obtaining permission were greatly simplified by listing
industries that are eligible for automatic approval up to specified levels of
foreign equity (100 percent, 74 percent and 51 percent).
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• Major measures initiated as a part of the liberalization and
globalization strategy in the early nineties included the following:
TRADE LIBERALIZATION:
‘Trade liberalisation' is the term for the process whereby a country opens
up its markets to international trade i.e. reduces the taxes (known as
tariffs) and other limits (such as quotas) on goods coming in and out. It
also often comes alongside increased rights for investors, pressures to
privatize as well as imposed regulatory changes to comply with
international standards.
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Import licensing was abolished relatively early for capital goods and
intermediates which became freely importable in 1993, simultaneously
with the switch to a flexible exchange rate regime.
Although India’s tariff levels are significantly lower than in 1991, they
remain among the highest in the developing world because most other
developing countries have also reduced tariffs in this period. The
weighted average import duty in China and southeast Asia is currently
about half the Indian level.
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