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ADB concern over mounting inequalities in Asia | Developing Asia's rapid growth in recent years gave rise to a widening rich-poor divide that threatens to undermine the region's growth and stability, but governments can address the problem via shifts in spending priorities,
the Asian Development Bank said. Asian Development Bank Deputy Country Director
for India, Narhari Rao, who launched the Asian Development Outlook 2012 here today
said this report summarizes the macroeconomic trends globally and also in Asia
and it also looks at individual countries. " The publication also has one theme
chapter, which is really looking at an issue that is affecting the region as a
whole. And this year's theme chapter is on inequalities in Asia because it's been
observed that whilst Asia has grown very rapidly but rapid growth has led to rising
inequalities," said Narhari Rao. In its Asian Development Outlook 2012 report,
the bank said if inequality in the region had remained stable over the past two
decades, growth over the years would have lifted 240 million people more out of
poverty, the equivalent of 6.5 percent of developing Asia 's population in 2010.
" India is another economy which has had to face the impact if global economic
downturn and simultaneously in India , several macroeconomic strings have built
up. The government is trying to address them. The growth forecasts both of the
government and of the Asian Development outlook for India are considerably lower
than what they were last year," said Narhari Rao. "So, we are in that phase when
adjustment is taking place and as India adjusts to the new global economic realities
it will be at least sustaining and may be marginally increasing its growth rate,"
added Rao. Senior Economist of Asian Development Bank, Abhijit Sen Gupta, said
that the growth model in India is driven by domestic demand. "The good thing about
the Asian growth experience is that bulk of the growth has been driven by domestic
demand. Private consumption in most economies continues to play an important part
and its contribution to growth is quite high," said Gupta. The region's emerging
economies were set to cool this year before rebounding in 2013, fuelled by strong
domestic demand, with risks coming from slackening trade flows owing to continued
uncertainties in the euro zone. "In 2013, the prospects are slightly brighter;
overall the growth rate is estimated to be about 1.7 percent with an improvement
in the growth rate for both United States and the Eurozone. But within Asia also
there is significant divergences in the pattern of growth rate," said Gupta.
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