New Delhi: India, China, and Indonesia will be three of the five economies with the world’s largest working-age populations among G20 countries by 2030. This highlights the fact that the world might be seeing the economic geography shifting toward Eastern nations, McKinsey said in its Driving Sustainable and Inclusive Growth in G20 Economies report on Saturday.
China and India continue to be the core growth engines for the G20, but other nations score better on inclusion and sustainability. European countries, Japan and Korea are well advanced on a range of indicators from life expectancy to share of population with bank accounts. On sustainability, while emerging economies have the lowest per capita carbon emissions, countries in Europe have the lowest ratio of CO2 emissions to GDP.
Economic Empowerment
The McKinsey report talks about bringing a large part of the world’s population above the line of economic empowerment to score better on metrics such as growth, inclusion and sustainability. The line of economic empowerment is, however, different from the World Bank’s extreme poverty line.
“The concept of economic empowerment described in this research involves ensuring that everyone has the means to access the full range of basics,” McKinsey said.
The World Bank estimates the extreme poverty line to be at $2.15 per person per day. However, McKinsey quotes other studies which state that in emerging economies on purchasing power parity terms, at $12 per person per day people can meet their basic needs and start to achieve discretionary spending powers. This is also the point where the risk of falling back into poverty is reduced.
For advanced economies, adjusting for their higher cost of living, the line of economic empowerment is $47 per person per day.
On an overall basis, more than half of the population in G20 economies, or 2.6 billion people, live under the line of economic empowerment, the report said. This includes 100 million people living in extreme poverty, 2.2 billion people living under the line of economic empowerment in emerging economies and about 300 million people in advanced economies.
India scores as an exemplar in eight programmes:
Financial And Digital Inclusion: India’s initiatives through Jan Dhan accounts, Aadhaar and mobile-popularly known as the JAM trinity-have improved financial inclusion and increased transparency in the delivery of government subsidies.
Affordable Housing: Targeted government programmes for lower and middle-income group housing have pushed affordability.
Vaccination: India’s efforts through the CoWin portal helped build a holistic vaccination ecosystem.
Healthcare: Apollo Hospitals’ omnichannel end-to-end healthcare system boosts quality, affordability and accessibility of healthcare systems.
Nutritional Crops: India’s latest initiatives to increase awareness and production of millets domestically and globally will improve production of high nutrition crops.
Renewables Push: India’s expansion of its solar footprint through the government and achieving over 60 GW solar capacity in 12 years, from 10 MW, were identified as an exemplar for power.
Cleanliness: The waste management system transformation by Indore Municipal Corporation was an exemplar for circularity initiatives by cities around G20 economies.