Introduction To Economic Environment
Introduction To Economic Environment
Economic
Environment
ECONOMIC ENVIRONMENT
P R O F. R U D R A S E N S A R M A
INDIAN INSTITUTE OF MANAGEMENT KOZHIKODE
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Learning objectives
oOverview of the course
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Course contact
Faculty:
◦ Dr. Rudra Sensarma
◦ Office: room #3, faculty block 3
◦ Email: [email protected]
◦ Web: www.iimk.ac.in/faculty/rsensarma; www.rudrasensarma.info
◦ @RudraSensarma
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How this course will be delivered
8 sessions x 2.5 hrs per session = 20 hours
• Go through the previous day’s material and the scheduled
reading before coming to class
• Classroom learning will go beyond the textbook so read widely
Exams, quizzes
• 4 quizzes (best 2 x 10% = 20%)*
• 1 end-term exam (50%)
*
Subject to unfolding public health situation
Project (30%)
• Group submission – a report & a reflective log
• Groups and topics (see vc)
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The whole of science is nothing more than the
refinement of everyday thinking.
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Macroeconomics & business
management
Macroeconomic
policy objective
Sustained
growth in Price
GDP stability
Macroeconomic
policy tools
Fiscal Monetary
policy policy
Government
expenditure, Policy rates,
taxes Liquidity
Demand, Inflation, Costs,
Interest rates, Exchange rates,
Wages etc.
BUSINESS
Economic Environment
MANAGEMENT
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Why should you care?
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What is this course about?
Macro-
economic
theory
Economic
Environment
Current
issues of the
Indian
economy
Contemporary issues in
macroeconomics
Macroeconomics, the study of the economy as a whole, addresses
many topical issues
• What government policies
might help to bring a
country out of a recession?
• What is the implication of
periodically released GDP,
IIP, CPI etc. data?
• How do the union budget
announcements affect
output & employment?
• What is the impact of
monetary policy decisions on
the economy & business?
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Contemporary issues in
macroeconomics
Macroeconomics, the study of the economy as a whole, addresses
many topical issues
• Why are some countries
rich & others poor?
• Can the poor countries catch
up with the rich countries?
• What policies can make
India a developed nation?
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Course Contents
Session Module Topic
1 Introduction to India’s Economic Environment: Past, Present
Economic and Emerging Challenges
Environment
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Course Contents (contd..)
Session Module Topic
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Evolution of the World Economy
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Gandhian Economics
oVillage economy
oEach village should be self-reliant in all
necessities of life
oFood, clothing, clean water, sanitation,
housing, education etc.
o Elinor Ostrom (1990): Governing the Commons
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•A substantial public
sector with state
interventions and
regulations in order to
protect indigenous
industries.
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‘Nehruvian Model’ (1947-1991)
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First and Second Five Year Plans
(1951-61)
First Five Year Plan (1951-56) Second Five Year Plan (1956-61)
Harrod-Domar Model P C Mahalanobis Model
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1961-1991
•Food Crisis
• Neglect of agriculture
• Famines
• Wars with China and Pakistan
•Green revolution (M S Swaminathan)
•White revolution (Operation flood)
•Bank nationalization (1969, 1980)
•Light reforms in 1980s
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Economic Crisis and Reforms
(1990-91)
•Stabilization policy (IMF): fiscal correction, liberalization of trade &
exchange rate
•Structural reforms (World Bank): reforms of industrial policy, public sector
•Liberalisation: Industrial delicensing
•Privatisation: Divestment of public sector units
•Globalisation: Trade reforms, floating exchange rate, FDI
P. V. Narasimha Rao & Manmohan Singh
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Significant policy decisions in the
post reforms era
•Statutory status to SEBI in 1992
•Liberalization of FDI caps in retail, insurance, defence, infrastructure
•Strategic sale of PSUs
•NREGS, 2006
•Insolvency & Bankruptcy Code, 2016
•Demonetization, 2016
•Goods & Services Tax, 2017
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Indian Economy at a Glance
•GDP is $2.9 trillion Population = 1.3 billion, Workforce
= 500 million
•GDP growth rate 5%
Largest employers are agriculture
•Inflation = 7.6% and textiles
•2% share in world exports Retail market worth $600 billion
•19th largest exporter and 13th growing at 12%
largest importer Fiscal deficit = 3.8%, Public debt =
•Current Account Deficit = 1% of GDP 70% of GDP
Market capitalisation = 70% of GDP
•Central bank reserves = $470 bn
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Why is India’s growth slowing?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tboPF8w-554
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Next…
National Income Accounting
◦ Measurement of GDP
◦ Real Versus Nominal GDP
◦ Limitations of GDP
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