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NITI Aayog’s vice-chairman Mr. Arvind Panagariya on Friday exuded confidence that India could be an $8-trillion economy within next 15 years or even less if it continues with growth-enabling policies.

"The prospects for our economy to become the third largest one in the world in less than 15 years are excellent today," Mr. Panagariya said while delivering the 6th R.K. Talwar memorial lecture on 'Growth, Poverty and Economic Trans-formation', organized by the Indian Institute of Banking & Finance.

Mr. Raj Kumar Talwar was one of the most successful Chairmen of the SBI. He led the bank from 1969 to 1976.

The World Bank and the IMF as well as many analysts have predicted that the country would become the third largest economy after China and the US with a GDP of $10 trillion by 2030.

"Our savings rate remains nearly 30 percent of the GDP and has prospects to rise above 35 percent, a level reached in 2007-08. We have a young population so that labor shortages will not be an impediment to growth," Mr. Panagariya said, adding our very low per-capita income leaves us far away from the global technology frontier.

Describing the late Mr. Talwar as "the rarest of rare officers that we have ever produced," he said the late banker was so "spotless in his personal and professional life that even an all-powerful Emergency-era government, determined to remove him from office for refusing to do its unjust bidding, could not muster enough courage to do so.

"Even after a CBI inquiry and a legislative amendment later, the then government could only bring itself to asking Mr. Talwar to take a leave of absence for the last 13 months of his tenure," he recalled.

Stating that only the higher growth can lead to poverty reduction, he said during the first three decades, the economy grew at a snail's pace with per-capita income rising just 50 percent by 1980-81. In the following decade, there was some acceleration with another 50 percent added to the original per-capita income by 1990-91.

The 1990s saw further acceleration, adding full 100 percent over the 1950-51 income. The fastest gain came in the new millennium, however, with full 300 percent added to the original per-capita income. Movements in poverty mirrored these movements in per-capita income, he said.

With extremely low initial per-capita income, slow growth meant that per-capita income remained low and no perceptible assault on poverty could be done, he argued.

"Once growth picked up, however, per-capita income rose and poverty too began to recede. The sharper the rise in incomes the sharper was the decline in poverty.

Poverty fell more sharply in rural areas thereby partially bridging the gap in poverty between the two regions. The association between growth and decline in poverty is unmistakable," he con-cluded.

(Source – Assorted with the Inputs from PTI)

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