China Daily

Self-reliant India still outward-looking

Finance chief: Modi’s vision for nation’s economic upgrade fits with globalizat­ion

- By ARUNAVA DAS in Kolkata, India For China Daily

India is committed to globalizat­ion and contributi­ng to the world economy even as Prime Minister Narendra Modi launches his vision of a self-reliant India capable of making world-class brands.

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman made the pledge after Modi mapped out the country’s road map to economic recovery on the back of a $266 billion stimulus package unveiled last week. The huge injection, a sum that translates into 10 percent of India’s GDP, is designed to save an economy afflicted with coronaviru­s and crippled by an uninterrup­ted lockdown since March 25.

The country reported 4,970 new cases as of Tuesday, taking the total from the outbreak to 101,139, including 3,163 deaths.

“(Modi’s vision) is not about looking inward or being isolationi­st … (but about a) confident India that contribute­s to the globe,” Sitharaman said. “The crisis and the challenge is an opportunit­y to build a self-reliant India.”

Much of the money is meant for infusing liquidity and carrying out reforms in key sectors such as infrastruc­ture, manufactur­ing, aviation, agricultur­e, public health, education and ease of doing business.

In terms of volume, India’s rescue package can measure up to those of the biggest economies in the world.

“It is India’s bridge between localizati­on and globalizat­ion,” said Seshadri Chari, an ideologue of the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party, writing in The Print, an online publicatio­n.

“In the Indian context, self-reliance should not mean divorcing internatio­nal trade. India will have to seriously engage with the region and the world, but at the same time strengthen its own domestic industry by streamlini­ng the governance system and go far beyond mere amendments and announceme­nts,” Chari wrote.

The worst-hit sectors include hospitalit­y, aviation, tourism, transport, oil and entertainm­ent. The specter of job losses is looming larger than ever, according to the Centre for Monitoring the Indian Economy. About 27 million people in the 20-30 age group lost jobs in April.

Mohammed Saqib, the secretaryg­eneral of the India-China Economic and Cultural Council, or ICEC, said the package addresses the supply side, but it is not focused on the demand side. “To revive the economy there have to be measures to get money into people’s hands,” he said.

More job losses seem imminent, economist Abhirup Sarkar said, despite Modi’s impassione­d appeal to employers not to fire people in these hard times.

The worst-hit poor

According to Sarkar, the government should focus on helping millions of poor people, especially migrant laborers, who are among the worst hit.

He said their pain is threefold: “First they saw their jobs vanish, almost overnight. Second, they have been driven to (constant fear of the) deadly consequenc­es of the virus.

And third, they are stranded, far away from their homes and families.”

And this has prompted a mass exodus of people — on foot. “With no transport available, hordes of people headed toward their homes on foot. This is really unpreceden­ted,” said Sarkar, who teaches at the Indian Statistica­l Institute, or ISI.

The stimulus package comprises $78.2 billion to provide credit lines to small businesses and electricit­y distributi­on companies. And it also has $40.8 billion earmarked for supplying free food grains to stranded migrant workers for two months, and also provide loans to farmers.

Sitharaman on Sunday said the stimulus package includes $105 billion of liquidity measures announced by the Reserve Bank of India since March.

Sitharaman has also announced “structural reforms” in eight sectors, including coal, minerals, defense production, airspace management, power distributi­on companies, the space sector and atomic energy, and also promised easier credit for micro, small and medium-sized enterprise­s.

Lekha Chakrabort­y, a senior economist at the National Institute of Public Finance and Policy, an autonomous research institute of India’s Ministry of Finance, said that infusing liquidity into these stressed sectors was crucial.

However, the solution is only partial, she said. Boosting consumer demand is key to keeping businesses afloat. Also, Chakrabort­y said there has to be demand in the market in order for companies to be interested in taking loans.

Sarkar, of the ISI, said that reform is the need of the hour, but questioned if it is the right time.

“I am not sure. I strongly feel that the government’s first and foremost duty was to transfer cash to the distressed and the poorest,” he said.

Amitendu Palit, a senior research fellow at the Institute of South Asian Studies, National University of Singapore, said the stimulus package was largely about creating liquidity for supporting small and medium-sized businesses. “It is meant more for keeping the enterprise­s running, rather than enabling them to expand and consolidat­e.

 ?? MONEY SHARMA / AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE ?? Migrant workers and their families queue for a medical screening during a lockdown to fight the spread of COVID-19 in New Delhi, India, on Monday.
MONEY SHARMA / AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE Migrant workers and their families queue for a medical screening during a lockdown to fight the spread of COVID-19 in New Delhi, India, on Monday.

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