Theme bank, fact bank, quotable lines, and a model essay on whether growth and equity can coexist, for the CAPF essay
Economy essays at CAPF level are not about modelling; they are about judgement. The marker wants to see whether you grasp the tension between growth and fairness, and whether you can take a stand without either chest-thumping or pessimism. Draw facts from poverty unemployment and inclusive growth and Index.
The standard worry about economic development is that growth and equity pull in opposite directions, that a country must first let some get rich before the benefits trickle down, and that an obsession with fairness slows the engine that creates wealth in the first place. India's own experience offers a more hopeful and more demanding answer: growth and equity can coexist, but only if the state deliberately builds the bridge between them. They do not meet by accident.
The case that they can coexist rests on what growth makes possible. Since the reforms of 1991, India's economy has expanded many times over, and that expansion lifted hundreds of millions out of poverty; by official estimates and multidimensional poverty measures, the share of Indians in acute deprivation has fallen sharply over the past two decades. Growth widened the tax base and the fiscal room that funds schools, hospitals, roads, and welfare. Equity, in turn, feeds growth: a healthier, better-schooled, more financially included population is more productive. The Jan Dhan accounts that brought tens of crores of citizens into the banking system, and the direct benefit transfers built on the Aadhaar and mobile platform, show how inclusion and efficiency can advance together rather than at each other's expense.
The instruments of inclusive growth are now familiar. The Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act of 2005 guarantees rural wage work; the public distribution system and the National Food Security Act of 2013 underpin food security; missions for housing, sanitation, and cooking gas target the gaps that pure growth leaves behind. The idea is not to slow growth but to shape it, so that the pattern of growth, where it happens and who it employs, itself reduces inequality rather than widening it.
The counter-view is sobering and must be faced. Growth in India has been uneven: prosperous regions and the skilled have raced ahead while others lag, agriculture still supports a large share of the workforce on a small share of output, and the creation of good jobs has not kept pace with the number of young people entering the labour market. Inequality of wealth has risen even as poverty has fallen. Critics rightly warn that headline growth figures can mask distress, and that subsidies poorly targeted can waste resources without reaching the poorest. None of this is an argument against growth; it is an argument against assuming that growth alone will deliver justice.
On balance, the two can coexist, but coexistence is a policy choice, not a natural law. A state that invests in human capital, that designs welfare to reach the genuinely needy, and that spreads opportunity across regions and groups can grow fast and grow fair at the same time. The demographic dividend, India's large young population, is the test: if the young are educated, skilled, and employed, growth and equity reinforce one another; if they are not, the dividend curdles into discontent that becomes a security problem too. Development, properly understood, is not the pursuit of wealth alone but the steady widening of the circle of those who share in it.