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    Golbalization and Environment in India

    Marjit, Sugata; Yu, Eden | September 2018
    Abstract
    India embarked on a path of liberal economic reform in the 1990s after years of nurturing an intensively regulated and controlled economic environment that was loosened slightly in the mid-1980s. The most important and critical segments of this reform were trade and foreign investment. India has felt the impact of globalization through increased prosperity, partly triggered by increasing trade volumes, investment, and growth. The theme of this article is to make readers aware of the impact of international trade and foreign direct investment (FDI) on climate change with special reference to India’s economy. Scholarly work on trade, FDI, and the environment in India with rich theoretical insight and solid empirical evidence is scarce. However, there is a good amount of work on general environmental issues. Our hypothesis is that trade liberalization has not directly or substantially affected carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions. However, it has probably had greater effects through its impact on gross domestic product (GDP). In other words, we impress upon readers that the direct impact of trade and FDI on environmental conditions is less of an issue compared with the indirect effects through the positive impact on GDP growth and resultant prosperity. We also emphasize that enforcing regulations is a complex task given corruption, informal markets, and the inability of citizens to cooperate and form effective lobbies. Preliminary calculations using data from the World Bank show that GDP has a direct, proportional relationship with the extent of CO2 emissions in India, and the relationship is even stronger after the introduction of the liberalization policy in the 1990s. However, trade seems to have an inversely proportional relationship, consistent with the view that Indian imports are mostly manufactured items that may involve polluting production process and are currently being produced outside India. We believe more specific research is needed to assess the overall environmental impact of patterns of production and consumption. Recent scientific analysis focuses on better scientific measures of the damage and impact of climate change and its effect on inequality. Clearly, warmer regions around the globe, including India and many developing Asian countries, will be affected more than their northern counterparts due to global warming. In fact, recent estimates show that climate change has increased inequality in the United States between the north and the south. Patterns of production are generally induced by the conditions of global trade and investment and by physical infrastructural support and local resources. India and the People’s Republic of China (PRC), the two largest countries in Asia, have very different GDP compositions. This poses the question of whether excessive industrialization coupled with the usual transboundary and climate concerns make the PRC more vulnerable than India, which thrives on service sector growth and in turn benefits from the low pollution content of growth. This also calls for serious exploration of green accounting and the preparation of databases with better environmental indicators. It will be worthwhile to explore the effect of liberalization on other climatic aspects, such as water pollution and land salinity, with the help of large scientific databases. But the fact remains that only through trade can countries replace the local production of pollution intensive goods with imports and reduce CO2 emissions. Countries that can replace the production of pollution intensive goods by imports will reduce CO2 emissions on this count. The growth effect, however, will go the other way. Countries with different trade patterns may suffer on both counts. India is possibly a mixed case and more detailed analysis is needed to examine the hypothesis.
    Citation
    Marjit, Sugata; Yu, Eden. 2018. Golbalization and Environment in India. © Asian Development Bank Institute. http://hdl.handle.net/11540/8868.
    Keywords
    Work Environment
    Urban Environment
    Social Environment
    Regulatory Environments
    Marine Environment
    International Environmental Relations
    Institutional Environment Assessment
    Global Environment
    Environmental Sustainability
    Environmental Strategy
    Environmental Services
    Environmental Resources
    Environmental Management and Planning
    Environmental Issues
    Environmental Guidelines
    Environmental Effects
    Environment and Pollution Prevention
    Trade Flows
    Trade And Development
    Food Security And Trade
    Trade Volume
    Trade Potential
    Trade Flows
    External Trade
    Industrial policy
    New technology
    Innovations
    Industry
    Export policy
    Import policy
    Trade Unions
    Environmental Control
    Environmental Technology
    Land Development
    Forestry Development
    Fishery Development
    Environmental Statistics
    Environmental Planning
    Environmental Management
    Environmental Education
    Environmental Capacity
    Pollution Control
    Nature Protection
    Environmental Conservation
    Regional development bank
    Trade development
    Import volume
    Export volume
    Tariff negotiations
    Regional integration
    Trade regulations
    Air quality indexes
    Ecological risk assessment
    Environmental impact evaluation
    Analysis of environmental impact
    Environmental toxicology
    Health risk assessment
    Rain and rainfall
    Acid precipitation
    Ozone-depleting substance mitigation
    Greenhouse gas mitigation
    Prevention of pollution
    Air quality
    Air quality management
    Pollution
    Labor and globalization
    Labor policy
    Regional trading blocs
    Foreign trade and employment
    Developing countries
    Industrial priorities
    Technological innovation
    Technology transfer
    Foreign trade regulation
    Industrial relations
    Trade-unions
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    Citable URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/11540/8868
    Metadata
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    Author
    Marjit, Sugata
    Yu, Eden
    Theme
    Environment
    Trade
    Labor Migration
     
    Copyright 2016-2021 Asian Development Bank Institute, except as explicitly marked otherwise
    Copyright 2016-2021 Asian Development Bank Institute, except as explicitly marked otherwise