OECD Trade Policy Papers
This series is designed to make available to a wider readership selected trade policy studies prepared for use within the OECD.
NB. No. 1 to No. 139 were released under the previous series title OECD Trade Policy Working Papers.
- ISSN: 18166873 (online)
- https://doi.org/10.1787/18166873
India's Trade Integration, Realising the Potential
This study examines economic implications of India’s trade and trade policy reforms during the
period from 1990 to 2007. It first describes India’s economic growth and the composition and performance
of its trade at the product and broad sector level. Next, recent reforms and the current trade policy stance
are assessed and recommendations for further policy reforms are discussed. The impact of India’s openness
on its total factor productivity is also addressed. The analysis shows that India has gone a long way in
reducing its tariffs on non-agricultural products as well as selected non-tariff barriers and that this had a
positive impact on the economy. Nevertheless, moderate to high protection still persists and adds to the
hurdles faced by Indian enterprises. Overall, India’s pattern of specialisation is still affected by the pre-
1990s policies; while certain services have recently performed very well, their high reliance on skilled
labour and capital means they can only address a small portion of the Indian jobless growth problem.
India’s endowment structure and the recent services-dominated export profile suggest that it needs to
improve conditions for the development of its manufacturing sector, with a particular emphasis—at this
stage—on labour-intensive activities. The remaining goods and services trade barriers combine with
domestic red tape, infrastructure bottlenecks and factor markets rigidities that restrict new entry and
competition to keep India’s competitiveness, particularly in agriculture and manufacturing, at relatively
low levels. In an effort to offset the remaining protection, India has developed a complex system of duty
exemption schemes, special investment and establishment rules and special economic zones (SEZs) that provide incentives particularly to exporting firms. The paper argues that, while such a policy can have
important demonstration effects, across-the-board reduction of trade and business barriers could have more
beneficial economy-wide and export effects.
Keywords: productivity, services trade barriers, special economic zones, India, tariffs, revealed comparative advantage, manufacturing, trade, services
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