THE KERALA TRADE PARADOX: High Human Development, Low Export Performance A Critical Analysis of Structural, Institutional, and Policy Determinants
Abhilash S
MPRA Paper from University Library of Munich, Germany
Abstract:
Kerala consistently ranks among the top Indian states on human development indices, yet its merchandise export performance remains weak. In 2024–25, Kerala's total merchandise exports stood at USD 4.77 billion—fifteenth among Indian states with a 1.09 per cent share of national exports and an export-to-GSDP ratio of approximately 3.5 per cent, among the lowest of any major state. This paper examines the structural, institutional, and policy determinants of this paradox using a descriptive-analytical framework drawing on four primary datasets: FIEO state export profiles, DGCI&S commodity-wise and district-level trade data, STPI IT export statistics, and India's aggregate trade data for 2025–26. The analysis reveals that Kerala's export weakness reflects: (a) extreme geographic concentration, with Ernakulam district accounting for 60.25 per cent of all exports (computed HHI = 0.39); (b) a commodity basket trapped in low-value-added primary products, with marine products and spices comprising 31 per cent of exports; (c) a negligible IT services export base at 0.77 per cent of the national total despite pioneering IT park infrastructure; (d) distortionary effects of petroleum re-exports on headline figures; and (e) macroeconomic dynamics consistent with the Dutch disease framework as applied to remittance-receiving sub-national economies. The paper situates these findings within the theoretical literature on human capital–trade linkages, spatial agglomeration, and remittance-induced structural distortions, and offers policy recommendations for Kerala's trade deepening.
Keywords: Kerala; exports; human development paradox; state-level trade; IT exports; Dutch disease; remittances; spatial concentration; India (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: F14 F24 O15 O18 R12 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2026-03-29
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