National Income..
National Income..
National Income..
Manufacturing industries
Other services
Estimates of India’s National
Income: British India
Year Total income Per capita Estimated by Coverage
(INR crore) income
(INR)
1867–68 340 20 Dadabhoy Naoroji For most of British India
1882 530 27 Baring-Barbour For British India
1895 880 39.5 F. J. Atkinson ---do---
1897–98 670 30 Curzon ---do---
1898–99 430 18 W. Digby ---do---
1910–14 1770 58.5 Vakil and Muranjan For the whole of India
1913–14 1210 44 Wadia and Joshi For British India
1921 2600 107 Findlay Shirras ---do---
1921–22 2360 74 Shah and Khambatta For the whole of India
1925–29 2300 78 V. K. R. V. Rao For British India
1931–32 1690 62 ---do--- ---do---
945–46 2810 82.5 R. C. Desai For the whole of India
1945–46 6230 198 Ministry of Commerce For British India
Estimates of India’s National
Income: Post-independence
Indian national income estimates have been based
upon four sets of statistical services:
Estimates of national income published in 1956 with
base year.
Special Features of the 1980–
81 Series
Adopts a twin approach to compile national income
estimates
Estimates of domestic production by industrial
origin
Estimates of factor payments using the income
approach
Contains data on and methods of estimating
forestry including firewood, unregistered and
decentralized textiles sector, katcha construction
work and such diverse areas of domestic industrial
production
Difficulties Involved in the
Measurement of National Income
Existence of a large non-monetised sector
Paradox in assigning incomes
Exclusion of illegal activities
Unreliability of statistical data
Changing values of parameters used
National income estimates are only approximation
Non-maintenance of accounts by producers
Lack of occupational differentiations
Lack of scientific data
Characteristics of the Indian
Economy
Meagre Increase in Real National Income
Structural Changes in the Indian Economy
Declining Share of the Public Sector
Distribution of Income
Capital Formation and Savings in India
Limitations of National Income
Estimation in India
The existence of a large non-monetized sector
Lack of data concerning the income of small
producers and household enterprises
Absence of data on income distribution
Unreported illegal income
Determinants of National
Income
Natural resources
The quality of people in general, and labour in
particular
Capital
Organization
Social and political structure
Causes of India’s Low National
Income
Economic Causes
Too much dependence all agriculture
Political Causes
Social Causes
Remedies to Improve India’s
National Income
Strengthening the agricultural base
Speeding up industrial development and
encouraging diversification
Developing an orderly and extensive network of
transport and communication system
Mobilizing the saving potential of the country and
making the savings available to trade and industry
Spreading free and compulsory education
National Income and
Economic Welfare
Economic welfare is a general sense of well-being
people experience which they earn and spend what
they earn on goods and services.
It is normally assumed that if the size of national
income is increased, economic welfare is also
increased and vice versa.
This generalization is not true in some cases.
National Income and
Economic Welfare
When there is a wrong priority of goods produced
When the incomes reflect wrong facilities
When the workers are overworked
When income is generated under unhealthy
conditions
When there is no increase in real incomes
When there is an improper and uneven distribution
If income is earned at the cost of leisure
Causes of Inequalities of
National Income Distribution
Acquired inequalities
Differences in intellect and physique
Differences in sex
Inheritance of property
Inborn inequalities
Inequalities due to work
for labour
Steps Taken by the Government
to Reduce Inequalities
The Minimum Wages Act 1948
Social security schemes
Free education, free medical and maternity aid,
old-age pensions, sickness and accident
compensations, provident fund schemes
Heavy tax on very high incomes
Tax on articles of luxury and other duties such as
death duty, estate duty, etc.
Uses of National Income Data
For measuring economic welfare
For measuring per capita incomes
For measuring the standard of living
For comparisons over a time-period
For measuring the savings-investment ratios
For international comparisons
For knowing sectoral compositions
For economic forecasting
For knowing the income distribution
For economic planning
For correcting regional imbalances
For studying product-components