Panagariya, participating in a conference on world trade at Columbia Universityhere,said demographically the labour supply in China was now shrinking and the already high wages there are going to rise even quickly. "This could lead global firms based in China to move out over the next decade and look for better markets."
The leading economist said such a scenario presents an "opportune time" for India.
He said the pace of reforms in India slowed after 2004, with some reversal also taking place during that period.
He said India is now "back into reforms and has opened up quite a bit".
"It is as open as China. Last year, in terms of the volume of foreign investment, India beat China," Panagariya said.
He said there is "no question about it" when asked whether India has been late in opening up.
"India has been about 15 years behind. If you look at all the characteristics of growth, trade, India is about 15 years behind China," he said adding that when reforms were launched in India in 1991, the country was already 12 years behind its Asian rival.
He stressed that openness is a "key policy lever" that leads to high growth in acountry.
He cited the example of China which lifted 700-800 million people out of poverty and became a "super-open" economy which today boasts of merchandise exports of 2.3 trillion dollars alone.
"Most countries don't have that kind of GDP. Openness is a very critical part of the Chinese growth experience and the massive poverty reduction that it brings about," he said.
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