IANS | 20 Feb, 2024
India can become the third-largest economy in the world in four or
five years but increasing the per capita income and elimination of
poverty is also important, noted economist and former Reserve Bank of
India (RBI) Governor Dr C. Rangarajan said.
Rangarajan, the
current Chairman of the Madras School of Economics, said India can grow
to become the third-largest economy in the world quickly as the secular
growth of developed economies will be slow.
"They have reached a stage where their growth will be slow," he added.
Rangarajan
said how India eliminates poverty and increases the per capita income
are also important. He said the per capita income of Indians has to grow
by about five times to reach the per capita income of those in the
developed economies.
On India overtaking the UK to become the
fifth-largest economy in the world, he said that India and the UK cannot
be compared as their sizes are vastly different.
According to him, in the next four/five years, India may become the third largest economy but the goals should be different.
Rangarajan
was responding to the media questions after launching the five-year
Fellow Programme in Management (FMP) of business school Great Lakes
Institute of Management.
Launching the FMP, he said higher
educational institutions should increase their stock of knowledge apart
from disseminating knowledge and that is where research comes into
picture.
Rangarajan recalled that it was he who had fathered the
Fellow programme at the Indian Institute of Management-Ahmedabad several
years ago. He also cautioned about the problems in such research
programmes like the number of students will be low and the courses
cannot be taught in a normal manner.
He also suggested that the
Great Lakes Institute to introduce the research programme on all the
disciplines and not just to the marketing stream.
Agreeing with
the distinguished economist, Dr.Suresh Ramanathan, Dean and Principal,
Great Lakes Institute, said the role of building a knowledge base also
falls on the shoulders of the academia.
He said what the industry now practices globally emanated from the researchers in the educational institutions.
"Putting
India on the global research map is important. We are proud to launch a
programme that is truly benchmarked to global standards and will draw
upon a network of highly accomplished scholars globally which will lead
to highly impactful research,” Ramanathan added.