Business Standard

Demand-supply shock debate divides economists GROWTH STORY

- ISHAN BAKSHI

Economic activity was disrupted in the past year due to demonetisa­tion and the goods and services tax (GST). But the jury is still out on how the two shocks affected the economy.

Was demonetisa­tion a demand-side shock to the system or were both supplyside shocks? If the latter holds true, is a consumptio­n-oriented fiscal stimulus the appropriat­e policy response? Questions such as these continue to bother economists.

The November 2016 decision to demonetise ~500 and ~1,000 notes effectivel­y withdrew 86 per cent of the currency in circulatio­n. This was a demandside shock to the economy, and dealt a severe blow to hopes of a consumptio­noriented recovery. Private consumptio­n held up initially, growing at 11.1 per cent in Q3FY17, but subsequent­ly slid to 7.3 per cent in Q4FY17.

But some experts contend that demonetisa­tion wasn’t only a demandside shock to the system.

Pronab Sen, former chief statistici­an, says: “By virtually killing of credit from informal sources of finance, demonetisa­tion was both a supply- and demandside shock for the informal sector. For the corporate sector, though, it was a demand-side shock.”

Madan Sabnavis, chief economist at CARE, says: “While demonetisa­tion was a demand shock, it was a supply shock for the MSMEs (micro, small and medium enterprise­s).”

Some economists have argued the rise in imports during this period can be attributed to a fall in production due to the disruption caused by demonetisa­tion to domestic supply chains. Data show non-oil non-gold imports grew 6.3 per cent in Q3FY17, rising to 9.7 per cent in Q4.

But the demonetisa­tion-induced demand shock to the system should have dissipated as remonetisa­tion gathered steam. Reserve Bank of India (RBI) data show currency with public picked up from ~12.6 lakh crore at the end of Q4FY17 to ~14.9 lakh crore at the end of Q2FY18. But private consumptio­n growth slid to 6.7 per cent in Q1FY18 and further to 6.5 per cent in Q2FY18.

What explains this? During this period, the economy faced another disruption — the GST. In Q1FY18, companies cut production and de-stocked inventorie­s. Manufactur­ing growth plunged to a mere 1.2 per cent in Q1FY18. (% y-o-y)

“GST is a supply-side shock for corporate as well as the informal sector,” says Sen. “It has also caused massive disruption in trade.”

The GDP data show trade, hotels and transport grew at 9.9 per cent in Q2FY18, down from 11.1 per cent in Q1. Further non-oil non-gold imports grew 26 per cent in Q1FY18 and 17.3 per cent in Q2FY18, suggesting that higher imports helped replace the production disruption­s in domestic supply chains.

Now, experts say these twin supplyside shocks have affected demand via employment. Companies, especially the MSMEs, cut production; employment fell; this reduced aggregate demand, offsetting the push to demand from remonetisa­tion.

“To the extent that demonetisa­tion restricted household demand, remonetisa­tion would have reduced the demand shock,” says Sabnavis. “But the supply-side disruption­s due to demonetisa­tion, and aggravated by the GST, would have reduced employment and lowered demand, that is unlikely to have come back.”

Another way to see the persisting demand shock to the system is to look at GDP deflator.

“The deflator for this segment (trade, hotels, transport and communicat­ion services) has been declining for three quarters (from 5.0 per cent to 2.1 per cent), which is contributi­ng to higher real growth,” says Soumya Kanti Ghosh, group chief economic advisor at State Bank of India. “This is also the case for the financing, insurance, real estate & profession­al services sectors, where deflator has declined from 7.3 per cent in Q4 FY17 to 2.6 per cent in Q2 FY18. This indicates demand is still a laggard in the system.”

So, in this situation, what is the appropriat­e policy response? While some argue the government desist from any kind of stimulus, others argue in favour of it.

“Countercyc­lical policy might just be the required medicine,” says Ghosh, on account of the low level of demand in the system.

“The government’s response should be to boost employment in the informal sector,” says Sen. “The focus should be on programmes such as rural roads, housing, minor irrigation projects which encourage labour intensive work.”

Sabnavis says a fiscal stimulus is a short-term measure to boost growth. “Will have to wait for the economy to adjust to a new equilibriu­m,” he adds.

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