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UN/ESCAP Bangkok 30 September 2009 Nepal’s Binding Constraints to Growth Bishwambher Pyakuryal Professor of Economics Tribhuvan University I. Introduction Sequencing of Nepal’s political changes: first democratic movement in early 1990; second peoples’ movement in 2006, and declaration of Federal Democratic Republican State on Wednesday, May 28, 2008. Overemphasis of political restructuring has overshadowed the need for economic restructuring. ADB, DFID, and ILO-supported initiative in diagnosing growth constraints and identifying opportunities in Nepal is just completed. 1 II. Issues for assessing growth constraints Inability to produce export products and failure to maintain real exchange rate regime with IC • The gross foreign exchange reserves ↑ Rs. 212.6 billion (US$ 3.1 billion) compared to Rs. 165.1 billion in mid-July 2007 • The workers’ remittances rose by 42.5 per cent (Rs. 142.7 billion) by contributing to 17.4% to the GDP. Its contribution in gross foreign exchange reserves is approximately 33 per cent. • Such growth is encouraging but not sufficient to replace Nepal's dependency on foreign loan. II. Issues for assessing growth constraints Contd. Cost Competitiveness Indicators Table 1: Index of Cost Competitiveness Indicators of Nine Asian Countries, 1999 COUNTRY LABOR COST PER WORKER (A) VALUE ADDED PER WORKER (B) UNIT LABOR COST (C) Nepal 100 100 100 India 130 205 81 China 180 271 72 Bangladesh 110 130 90 Indonesia 120 276 87 Thailand 480 390 94 Sri Lanka 160 195 105 Malaysia 960 909 93 Philippines 600 742 93 Note: A = average labor cost per worker manufacturing, B = value added per unit of labor, C = labor cost per unit of output manufacturing according to the internationally accepted definition of the U.S. Department of Commerce. 2 II. Issues for assessing growth constraints Contd. Deteriorating trade & diversion of foreign exchange reserve • The ratio of merchandise trade deficit to GDP is 20.0% (Rs. 165.3 billion) • Trade deficit w/India is 64 per cent of the total merchandise trade (Rs. 105.9 billion) • Import upsurge from India is 24.7% against just 3.5% from other countries • Increased import and purchase of IC worth 70,602.53 million by selling US$ II. Issues for assessing growth constraints Contd. Increasing debt liability, and cut back in public sector investment • The country is experiencing a diversion of resources from productive sectors and fulfilling the terms of increasing debt liability • The budgetary allocation shows a cut back on public sector investment and inadequate infrastructure development to attract potential investors • The low infrastructure expenditure can be said as the single most important macro constraint on Nepal's economy. 3 III. Reason for identifying growth constraints Nepal government has adopted expansionary fiscal policy in the budget 2009/10. First, there is a need to reconcile between inflationary economic forces and expansionary fiscal policy. Secondly, this situation necessitates diagnosing growth constraints and possibilities for increasing future investments. IV. Selected Growth Constraints • It is advisable to find out the likely constraints for growth before making investment decisions. • If Nepal’s infrastructure is a constraint to growth, then we need to find out what infrastructure e.g. power, transportation, telecommunications etc. are relatively important constraints to growth? 4 IV. Selected Growth Constraints….Contd (a) Low investment rate • In 1995, Nepal’s investment rate (25.2%) was very close to India (26.2%). Bangladesh (19.1%), Pakistan (18.5%) and Sri Lanka (24.2%) were lagging behind Nepal. But, since 2007, only Pakistan is lagging behind Nepal. IV. Selected Growth Constraints….Contd Fig1: Investment Rate of Nepal from 1975-2006 (% of GDP) 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 Investment Rate (% of GDP) Source: Economic Surveys, MOF 5 IV. Selected Growth Constraints….Contd (b) Low domestic savings rate • Domestic Saving Rate is lowest in South Asia and it is almost one third of Bhutan. The highest Gross Domestic Saving was in 2000 (15.17 percent of GDP). • It is interesting to note that GNI per capita increased by more than fifty percent from the year 1995 to 2006 (WDI, 2008) but Gross Domestic Saving decreased from 14.8 percent in 1995 to 9.4 percent in 2006 indicating the fact that low domestic saving rate is one of the major constraints for growth. IV. Selected Growth Constraints….Contd Fig 2: Gross Domestic Saving 1975-2006 (% of GDP) 16 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 Gross Domestic Saving (% of GDP) GDP: Gross Domestic Product Source: Economic Survey (various issues), MOF 6 IV. Selected Growth Constraints….Contd • Although there is deficit trade balance, current account surplus is maintained ‘cause of large amount of workers remittance, which increased by 23.9 percent annually from 1991-2006. • From the year 2000-2006, remittance was 75 percent of trade balance and 89 percent of saving-investment gap. For two consecutive years from 2000, remittance exceeded the savinginvestment gap. • It indicates that saving is not a problem for Nepalese economy. But decline in remittance inflow may seriously affect the economy. (c) Investment Constraints (i) Labor and Technology • Nepal’s total factor productivity growth rate is about fifty percent of India, which has contributed negatively. Table 2: Total Factor Productivity- Nepal Vs India Period Growth Rate Nepal Growth Rate Adjusted Growth Rate India Growth Rate Adjusted 1980-1984 0.57 1.34 0.58 0.57 1985-1989 1.24 1.47 2.63 2.64 1990-1994 2.27 0.14 2.01 2.02 1995-1999 0.14 0.64 2.90 2.90 19802000 1.11 0.91 2.08 2.08 Source: APO Note: Growth rate adjusted for business fluctuations 7 (c) Investment Constraints….contd • Nepalese manufacturing sector is dependent on India for skilled labor. ILO study reports that manufacturing sector hires about 15 percent of total skilled labor force from India. • Similarly, Nepal's position in the Labor related regulation is also poor in comparison to other south Asian countries. Table 3: Comparison of Labor-Related Regulations with Regional Countries Difficulty of Rigidity of Hiring Index hours Index Afghanistan 0 Bangladesh 44 Bhutan 0 India 0 Maldives 0 Nepal 67 Pakistan 78 Sri Lanka 0 Firing costs Rigidity of Non‐wage Difficulty of Employment Labor Cost (% (weeks of wages) of salalry) firing Index Index 40 30 23 0 0 20 40 35 0 104 0 20 7 1 10 20 70 30 17 56 0 0 0 0 9 20 70 52 10 90 20 30 43 11 90 20 60 27 15 169 Investment Constraints……contd. ii. Infrastructure • Infrastructure in Nepal is one of the poorest and Road density is smallest in the region. • Road density is least in Midwestern region. Population to road ratio is highest in Western Development Region. In other words, in this region more people use fewer roads. • Distribution of road network is highly unequal. More than fifty per cent of the total road network is concentrated in Terai. See Table 4 and Fig. 3 below: 8 Investment Constraints……contd. Table 4: Road Network in Three Geographic Regions Region Mountain Total Length of Roads (Km) Population Influenced Per Km. of Road (Nos.) Road Density (Km./100 sq.Km) 742 2274.743 1.431962 Hill 7590 1350.608 12.38719 Tarai 8504 1318.492 24.9978 Source: Calculated from DoR, 2006 Investment Constraints……contd. Fig 3: Road Network in Three Geographic Regions Source: Calculated from DoR, 2006 9 Investment Constraints……contd. Figure 4: Density of the total road network (Km.roads / square Km. land area)-2003* Source: IRF World Road Statistics *Data for India and Afghanistan corresponds to 2002 and 2004respectively Investment Constraints……contd. • Nepal study shows that if transportation time is reduced by fifty per cent, then it may result in higher income through the increased fertilizer use and yield (MoICS, 2004). • Other important constraint is electricity tariff, which is one of the highest in South Asia. 10 Investment Constraints……contd. Figure 5: Electricity Tariff ($/KWh, 2000) Bangladesh 0.041 0.065 Pakistan Sri Lanka 0.079 India 0.043 Nepal 0.093 Source: MOICS, 2004 Investment Constraints……contd. • • The overall infrastructure situation for attracting investment is very dismal. Expensive and irregular electricity, small and low quality road network, expensive and deficient transportation are some of the examples. Infrastructure quality score shown in the Figure 6 reveals that Nepal, in fact, has the poorest infrastructure in comparison to other South Asian neighboring countries. Highest possible score is seven out of which Nepal secures only 1.9. Nepal's position with this score is 119 out of 125 countries in the world. 11 Investment Constraints……contd. • • Both quality and expenditure for infrastructure is very low. Nepal spends < 1% of total GDP on infrastructure against 4.8 percent of India. Study shows that Nepal needs to invest US$ 3.44 billion (12.22 percent of GDP) for the period of 2008-2012 in order to achieve eight per cent growth rate. Fig 6: Infrastructure Quality Score of South Asian Countries Infrastructure Quality Score Bangladesh 2.3 India Nepal 3.3 1.9 Pakistan Srilanka 3.4 3 http://siteresources.worldbank.org/INTEXPCOMNET/Resources/2.01_Overall_Infra structure_Quality.pdf Investment Constraints……contd. • In terms of telecommunications, Nepal has lowest number of telephone subscriber per 100 people in South Asia. Fixed line and mobile phone subscribers (per 100 people) in 2006 remained at 5.9244 for Nepal. It was 18.6356 in India; 36.6930 in Sri Lanka; 24.9911 in Pakistan and 12.9911 in Bangladesh. • Although Nepal ranks lowest in the region in terms of subscriber per 100 people, study shows telephone doesn’t seem to be a constraint to investment and growth. 12 Investment Constraints……contd. iii. Political Stability and Governance • Governance indicator, as published by World Bank is deteriorating. It may be due to frequent change in government during last one and half decade. Table 6: Governance Indicators for Nepal, Percentile Rank (0-100) Governance Indicators Voice and Accountability Political Stability Government Effectiveness Regulatory Quality Rule of Law 1996 1998 2000 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 Region Avg. 15.4 22.6 28 46.4 42.3 43.3 24.5 25.5 18.3 13.9 26.9 23.6 14.4 6.7 5.3 2.9 1.4 2.9 2.9 19.3 36 36 40.8 37 34.1 22.3 15.2 21.8 21.8 36.5 22.9 31.7 28.3 31.7 33.2 31.2 25.9 26.3 26.7 31.9 51.4 52.9 44.8 42.4 37.1 32.4 23.8 33.3 31 38.3 Investment Constraints……contd. • Similarly frequent bandh is deteriorating smooth functioning of business sector. Figure 7: Number of Days of Bandh (Excluding Indefinite Bandh) City District Region Country 36 24 21 13 2 4 Total May April March 2 June 3 February December 5 32 January, 2008 November 45 3 October May April, 2007 21 13 5 2 August 4 1 9 September 7 July 8 June 9 Source: Various News Papers Note: This chart doesn't include Bandh called for indefinite period. District: One district Region: Two or more district City: City or part of highway in one district e.g. Bhairahawa-Sunauli highway 13 Investment Constraints……contd. Fig 8: Share of Bandh for City to Country (Excluding Indefinite Country 5% City 25% Region 42% District 28% Source: Various News Papers (V) Conclusion & Recommendations • Overall macroeconomic positions look OK. The challenge is to sustain growth against the existing constraints of poor infrastructure, underperformance of agriculture, inadequate skills and technology and unsatisfactory corporate and political governance. • Major task is to ensure equity to make growth inclusive. • The Heritage Foundation's Index of Economic Freedom uses relatively objective scoring system to rate countries on a 1-to-5 (good-to-poor) scale, under a series of headings. • Nepal rates poorly on investment-related indicators: capital flows and foreign investment (4, high barriers), property rights (4, low-level of protection), and regulation (4, bureaucratic delays, inefficiency, and pervasive corruption), contributing to an overall score of 3.5. 14 (V) Conclusion & Recommendations….contd • Review shows, investors demand the revision of the rigid Labor Act, 1992 to avoid labor market rigidity. Other equally important acts such as Bankruptcy and Mergers Act should be enacted without further delay to reduce investor's risk. • It is important for the government and private sector to find out the reasons why increased FDI has not been very significant in the growth of Nepalese GDP in absolute as well as in the relative sense (http://ideas.repec.org). (V) Conclusion & Recommendations….contd • The value of Nepal’s new Human Empowerment Index (HEI) is 0.463 (including social, economic and political indicators into a composite index of empowerment). The economic empowerment is lowest at 0.337, which reflects the low level of income, limited access to productive assets and lack of gainful employment opportunities (Nepal HDR, 2004). • Gross domestic savings rate in Nepal is low but total savings rate is higher than investment rate indicating the possibility of generating additional resources for investment. 15 (V) Conclusion & Recommendations….contd • Banks are holding more funds than they are required to, however, investment in larger infrastructure projects suffers as there is a limited access to international financial markets. • The survey of foreign affiliates in Nepal shows that majority of the projects with capital participation from developed countries are small-scale projects with individual investors. There is a predominance of JVIs even when 100 per cent equity ownership is allowed. This is the area to be investigated. (V) Conclusion & Recommendations….contd • The draft Industrial Policy, 2002; Industrial Development Perspective Plan: Vision 2020 and Foreign Investment Policy, 2002 are relatively better designed. In the revised policies, provision for enhancing NRN’s involvement in Nepal’s development initiatives be ensured. • The new government should get rid of weaker administrative practices and conservative attitudes towards business. 16