TY - JOUR AU - Eichengreen,Barry AU - Gupta,Poonam TI - The Service Sector as India's Road to Economic Growth JF - National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper Series VL - No. 16757 PY - 2011 Y2 - February 2011 UR - http://www.nber.org/papers/w16757 L1 - http://www.nber.org/papers/w16757.pdf N1 - Author contact info: Barry Eichengreen Department of Economics University of California, Berkeley 549 Evans Hall 3880 Berkeley, CA 94720-3880 Tel: 510/642-2772 Fax: 510/643-0926 E-Mail: eichengr@econ.Berkeley.edu Poonam Gupta Indian Council for Research on International Economic Relations Core 6A, Fourth Floor India Habitat Center Lodhi Road New Delhi, India E-Mail: pgupta.nipfp@gmail.com AB - While India is distinctive among developing countries for its fast-growing service sector, sceptics have raised doubts about the quality and sustainability of this service-sector growth and its implications for economic development. We show, consistent with the views of the sceptics, that while growth of the sector has been unusually rapid, it started 15 years ago from unusually low levels. That the share of services has now simply converged to the international norm raises questions about whether it will continue growing rapidly. In particular, whether service-sector output and employment continue to grow in excess of international norms will depend on the continued expansion of modern services (business services, communication and banking) but, also, on the application of modern information technology to more traditional services (retail and wholesale trade, transport and storage, public administration and defense ). The second aspect obviously has more positive implications for output than for employment. We also show that the modern services that are growing most rapidly are now large enough where their future performance could have a significant macroeconomic impact. The expansion of modern service-sector employment is not simply disguised manufacturing activity. Finally, we show that the mix of skilled and unskilled labor in manufacturing and services is increasingly similar. It is no longer obvious therefore that manufacturing is the main destination for the vast majority of Indian labor moving into the modern sector and that modern services are a viable destination only for the highly-skilled few. We conclude that sustaining economic growth and raising living standards will require shifting labor into both manufacturing and services. ER -