Business Standard

Govt weighs fiscal push for growth

- ARUP ROYCHOUDHU­RY

The government is considerin­g increased spending in order to revive the economy and is open to allowing the fiscal deficit to widen beyond its target for the year. A stimulus package in the range of ~40,00050,000 crore is being discussed in the government, though these figures could not be immediatel­y confirmed.

Back-of-the-envelope calculatio­ns show that a ~40,000-crore increase in capital spending could lead to a fiscal deficit of 3.5 per cent of the gross domestic product, against the Budget estimate of 3.2 per cent. Assuming the budgeted total revenue figure for 2017-18 remains constant, for each additional spending of ~10,000 crore, the fiscal deficit as a percentage of GDP roughly increases by a little less than 0.1 per cent.

A senior government official said a final view would be taken by Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Finance Minister Arun Jaitley soon.

Earlier this week, Jaitley held a series of meetings with Commerce Minister Suresh Prabhu, Railway Minister Piyush Goyal, NITI Aayog Vice-Chairman Rajiv Kumar and officials fromthe finance, commerce and railway ministries.

The meetings, Business Standard has learnt, discussed raising resources to finance capital spending beyond the ~3.10 lakh crore budgeted for 201718 through higher borrowing or disinvestm­ent receipts. Officials say that though it is too early to be sure, there are indication­s that there may be indirect tax revenue shortfall in the first year of the implementa­tion of the goods and services tax. The meetings also discussed whether Air India’s disinvestm­ent could be completed in 201718 and whether the Centre should borrow more from the market. The gross borrowing target for 2017-18 is ~5.8 lakh crore and the disinvestm­ent target is ~72,500 crore, the highest ever. But earlier indication­s from the Centre were that Air India’s lengthy privatisat­ion process would not be completed this year. Besides, non-fiscal stimulus measures, including more infrastruc­ture bonds and bonds to recapitali­se banks, were on the agenda. “Various options to recapitali­se banks were discussed. These could be through raising money from the debt market or by the Centre diluting its stake in banks. Privatisat­ion of more state-owned banks is under discussion,” an official said.

The measures to kickstart growth will be presented to Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

An expert committee on FRBM (fiscal responsibi­lity and budget management) had recommende­d bringing down the fiscal deficit to 2.5 per cent by 2023, and also cap the debt to GDP ratio at 60 per cent. However, the dissent note in the FRBM report had observed that mindlessly sticking to numerical targets can make a slowdown worse.

The Centre’s capital spending estimate for 2017-18 is 25 per cent higher than the ~2.47 lakh crore target of 2016-17 and 11 per cent higher than the revised estimate of ~2.80 lakh crore.

The fiscal deficit in AprilJuly was ~5.05 lakh crore, about 92 per cent of the 201718 budget estimate of ~5.46 lakh crore. This is due to frontloadi­ng of expenditur­e because the Finance Bill 2017 was passed before the beginning of the fiscal year.

GDP growth in April-June declined to 5.7 per cent due to demonetisa­tion and destocking by companies before the implementa­tion of the goods and services tax (GST). GDP growth is down from 7.9 per cent in April-June 2016-17.

Growth in manufactur­ing declined to 1.2 per cent during the quarter from 5.3 per cent in January-March. Mining and quarrying contracted 0.7 per cent after growing 6.4 per cent in the previous quarter. Agricultur­e growth lost pace at 2.3 per cent, against 5.2 per cent in the previous quarter.

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