Syllabus: GS2/Governance; GS3/Economy
Context
- The recent announcement of Google’s largest AI data centre outside California being set up in Andhra Pradesh triggered India’s transition into a competitive federal economy, where States actively support global investment through policy, governance, and infrastructure advantages.
About Competitive Federalism
- It refers to a governance model where States compete with each other to attract investment, improve service delivery, and enhance development outcomes.
- It promotes healthy rivalry among States to outperform each other on key metrics, unlike cooperative federalism, which emphasizes collaboration between the Centre and States.
Past Landscapes: Reforms and Gradual Transformation
- Pre-1991 Landscape: For decades after Independence, investment allocation flowed top-down from New Delhi. States competed not on merit but on access to central power corridors. Capital formation was shaped by:
- Licensing and quota systems;
- Bureaucratic discretion;
- Political patronage determining industrial geography;
- Liberalisation in 1991 dismantled licensing and partially decentralised economic power. However, meaningful competition took time because:
- Public enterprises still dominated;
- State bureaucracies were slow to modernise;
- Investment decisions remained Union Centric;
- By the 2010s, States became the primary engines of investment mobilisation, aligning with trends highlighted in World Bank (2023) and OECD (2021) territorial competitiveness studies.
Rise of Competitive Federalism
- The Concept of Competitive Federalism gained momentum after the formation of NITI Aayog, which replaced the Planning Commission in 2015.
- NITI Aayog’s mandate includes fostering competitive federalism through transparent rankings, performance indices, and policy parameters.
- States Competing on Competence: Today, investment rivalry centres on policy predictability, infrastructure quality, skilled labour pools, streamlined clearances, and governance credibility.
- It aligns with NITI Aayog (2022) and IDFC Institute (2019) findings showing widening performance divergence among States in business climate metrics.
How States Are Competing?
- NITI Aayog has launched several indices to benchmark State performance:
- School Education Quality Index;
- State Health Index;
- Composite Water Management Index;
- Sustainable Development Goals Index;
- India Innovation Index;
- Export Competitiveness Index;
- These rankings are based on quantitative, objective criteria, encouraging States to improve governance and service delivery.
- Even districts are ranked under the Aspirational Districts Programme, creating competition at sub-State levels.
- Examples of Competitive Federalism:
- Google’s AI centre: Andhra Pradesh vs Tamil Nadu vs Karnataka;
- Foxconn’s electronics hubs: bids from Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, Karnataka;
- Vedanta–Foxconn semiconductor venture: Maharashtra vs Gujarat;
- EV manufacturing: Tamil Nadu vs Telangana;
- These contests indicate India’s entry into the model observed in OECD federations, as described in Brookings (2020) and UNESCAP (2022).
Benefits of Competitive Federalism
- Improved Governance and Service Delivery: States compete to enhance education, health, infrastructure, and digital services.
- NITI Aayog’s performance indices incentivize reforms and transparency.
- Investment Attraction: States pitch themselves to global investors with tailored policies and branding.
- Policy Innovation: States experiment with localized solutions—like Telangana’s T-Hub for startups or Kerala’s health model—which can be scaled nationally.
- Empowerment and Accountability: Decentralized competition shifts power closer to citizens, making governments more responsive and accountable.
- According to DPIIT (2024), such competition has accelerated policy harmonisation across States.
Risks of Competitive Federalism
- Widening Regional Inequality: Wealthier States with better infrastructure and human capital attract more investment, leaving poorer States behind.
- It can exacerbate socio-economic divides.
- Policy Fragmentation: Excessive competition may lead to inconsistent regulations across States, complicating business operations and national coherence.
- Fiscal Imbalance: The Centre retains significant financial power, limiting States’ ability to compete effectively.
- Demand to shift items from the Concurrent List to the State List reflect this concern.
- Excessive subsidies can strain State finances (RBI 2023);
- Weakening of Cooperative Mechanisms: Overemphasis on competition can reduce cooperation in centrally coordinated programs — GST Council, disaster management, health surveillance, etc.
- Short-Termism: Political cycles may push States toward populist measures for quick wins rather than sustainable development.
Way Forward: India’s New Federal Compact
- From Permission to Persuasion: In three decades, India has moved from permission-based investment to persuasion-based competition.
- It is possible because Delhi-driven industrial policy is shifted to State-centric investment strategy.
- State leaders now pitch directly to CEOs rather than ministries, backed by data and clear value propositions.
- Why Every State’s Win Is a Win for India: When one State secures a major investment:
- Skill ecosystems grow;
- Industrial clusters deepen;
- Supply chains expand beyond borders;
- Overall national competitiveness rises;
- Examples like Andhra Pradesh’s EoDB performance, Tamil Nadu’s workforce, Gujarat’s infrastructure, Punjab’s enterprise culture, Uttar Pradesh’s scale, Jharkhand’s minerals — creates a federation of opportunities.
| Daily Mains Practice Question [Q] Discuss how competitive federalism is transforming India’s investment landscape. Analyze the role of State-level initiatives, and policy innovation in attracting domestic and foreign investment. |
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