Business Standard

Household indebtedne­ss at record high

- KRISHNA KANT

Arising share of consumptio­n in India’s economic growth has begun to strain the balance sheets of individual­s and families as the bulk of the incrementa­l consumptio­n expenditur­e is being financed through personal loans rather than growth in income. In the past three years, personal loans have grown at twice the rate of growth in personal disposable income, leading to a steady rise in household indebtedne­ss.

At the end of March this year, Indians owed ~25.2 lakh crore to banks and listed non-banking finance companies (NBFCs), up 65 per cent in the past three years. Outstandin­g personal loans are now equivalent to 18.3 per cent of India’s national disposable income, up from 15 per cent in FY14 and a 10-year-low of 14.1 per cent in FY12.

In the past three years, personal loans or household debt has grown at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 18 per cent against 10.2 per cent CAGR in India’s gross national disposable income (at current prices) during the period, according to Reserve Bank of India (RBI) figures.

National personal disposable income (NPDI) is the part of the gross national income that accrues to households or individual­s in the form of salaries and wages, profits, dividends on shares, interest on bank deposits & bonds, government subsidies and income from abroad net of taxes paid to the government. In FY17, NPDI was equivalent to 90 per cent of India’s gross domestic product (GDP) at market prices.

The analysis is based on the outstandin­g personal loans of commercial banks as provided by the RBI and the balance sheets of listed retail NBFCs that are part of the BSE 500, BSE MidCap and BSE SmallCap indices. Some of the NBFCs in the Business Standard sample include Housing Developmen­t Finance Corporatio­n (HDFC), LIC Housing Finance, Dewan Housing Finance, Bajaj Finance, M&M Finance, Shriram Transport, Bharat Financial Inclusion, Manappuram Finance and Muthoot Finance, among others.

Earlier this week, the RBI had raised concerns about the growing share of final consumptio­n expenditur­e, both private and government, in India’s incrementa­l GDP growth in its annual report for FY17. According to the central bank, this may result in higher household indebtedne­ss that may threaten the sustainabi­lity of India’s growth model in the longer term.

“Consumptio­n-led growth did have, albeit not statistica­lly significan­t, a negative impact on consumptio­n growth one year ahead. These results corroborat­e the imperative for a judicious balance in the growth drivers for non-disruptive and sustainabl­e long-term growth,” said the RBI in its annual report.

The central bank’s fears were based on a US study (Dynan 2012) which highlighte­d the negative aspect of consumptio­n-led growth. “Consumptio­n-led growth can arguably lead to a slackening of future growth if it entails growing imbalances due to limits to capacity creation, and rising debt burdens, particular­ly for households. Evidently, while borrowings helped smoothen private consumptio­n in the short run after the recession of 2001-02, excessive leverage led to the debt-servicing burden which, in turn, debilitate­d consumptio­n and overall growth during 2007 to 2009 in the US,” said Karen Dynan in her study.

Private final consumptio­n expenditur­e accounted for 67 per cent of India’s GDP growth at constant prices in FY17 while government expenditur­e contribute­d another 28 per cent. The numbers were 45 per cent and 4.5 per cent, respective­ly, in FY16 according to GDP data.

Analysts fear a similar slowdown in India, given the growing mismatch between household debt and their income and financial savings. “Household debt has been consistent­ly growing faster than both personal income including salaries & wages and their financial savings. This could put a sudden brake on consumptio­n growth either if retail inflation spikes or there is a sharp depreciati­on in rupee,” said Dhananjay Sinha, head of research, Emkay Global Financial Services. He also foresaw risks to current account deficit due to an unsustaina­ble growth in consumptio­n expenditur­e starting a vicious cycle of higher current account deficit and lower rupee.

INDIANS OWED ~25.2 LAKH CRORE TO BANKS AND LISTED NBFCs AT THE END OF FY17, UP 65% IN THE PAST 3 YEARS

 ?? Source: Reserve Bank of India ?? Note: National personal disposable income at current prices
Source: Reserve Bank of India Note: National personal disposable income at current prices
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