Panagariya said there was a huge scope for India to improve medical treatment.
Former
NITI
Aayog Vice-Chairman Arvind Panagariya on Monday said India should
bargain hard for the proposed Regional Comprehensive Economic
Partnership (RCEP), but this should not become an excuse for not
clinching the deal.
When
an economy opens up, it has to set its house in order to compete,
which brings the best out of it, he said.
“We
need to be a little more aggressive. Compete with the best in the
world. It brings the best out of you,” Panagariya, professor of
Indian Political Economy at the Columbia University, said at the
US-India Strategic Partnership Forum in New Delhi.
He
was responding to an observation by former foreign secretary Kanwal
Sibal that India needs to bargain hard in RCEP
due to security concerns that go beyond trade. Sibal said China was
pressing for accelerating negotiations for RCEP due to its trade war
with the US. “China wants to dominate RCEP because it is the
biggest economy. It did not play by WTO rules, so will it play by
RCEP rules? Will there be a dispute settlement
mechanism?” he said.
Panagariya sought to dispel the myth that import substitution leads
to less imports. “If you import less, you export less as well. When
India liberalised it imported more, but then it exported more as
well,” he said.
AI
boost to health sector
At
a panel discussion earlier at the same event, Panagariya said there
was a huge scope for India to improve medical treatment by taking
advantage of technical developments such as AI (artificial
intelligence) and data analytics. “With AI, data analytics and all
the technology there, treatments can perhaps be done better (in
India) as we go forward,” he said.
By
taking advantage of the technological changes such as AI and data
analytics, India can bring good treatments almost anywhere in the
country, he added. On the pricing issue in the medical industry, he
said clearly this is being recognised in the trade agreements as
well, citing that in some visible cases, prices have been negotiated
between the companies (exporting and importing).
Panagariya
said the health sector was still evolving and very informal as it was
largely dominated by the private sector and the government’s role
largely had been into setting up medical colleges.
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