The third myth: The idea of unquenchable Indian domestic demand. We had several years in which demand appeared to be solidly supporting growth. But this was a product of populist policy that (temporarily) supported income growth, household credit expansion, and positive supply side shocks thanks to a structural reduction in food and fuel inflation. None of these three factors are sustainable. Sustainable demand growth without an increase in either overall productivity or factor utilisation is difficult to envisage. The unspoken hope was that demand would keep climbing till capacity utilisation in the private sector passed some (unknown) threshold, at which the investment engine was to start up again. But it seems even if that was possible, the demand push has broken down short of such a point. The private sector is certainly credit- constrained, but nor is it feeling the need to borrow in order to finance investment projects that have suddenly become attractive. The problem here is that there has been far too much overconfidence about the size and composition of the Indian consumer economy. An economy at our level of development cannot depend merely on domestic demand to pull investment and growth up. The only true interpretation of China’s growth miracle — and that of the rest of East Asia before it — is that it emerged from coupling domestic supply responses to global, instead of domestic, demand. In other words, India has to be a trading nation. Perhaps the government is right to want to protect aspects of domestic industry from the effects of trade. But, if so, its project from day one should have been to make the case that Indian development requires access to world markets alongside some reasonable and temporary protections for its infant industries. Unfortunately, it instead has fallen in love with the notion of Indian industry servicing domestic demand, and the rest of the world be damned. Naturally, this means that overcapacity will continue to plague the Indian private sector, given the impossibility of isolated and sustained demand growth.