Business Standard

CEA: Covid has created deflationa­ry conditions

- PRESS TRUST OF INDIA

Ruling out any impact of stimulus on the price situation, Chief Economic Advisor K V Subramania­n on Thursday said the Covid-19 pandemic has severely dented the demand for non-essential or discretion­ary goods, creating deflationa­ry conditions.

He also said that a good part of the ~20 lakh crore stimulus package is designed in a manner that the fiscal deficit remains under control.

“Covid has a significan­t deflationa­ry impact because demand especially for nonessenti­al or discretion­ary goods and services will go down significan­tly. Therefore, it is unlikely that there would be too much inflationa­ry impact through fiscal deficit or stimulus package,” Subramania­n told in an interview.

The proposed stimulus package will generate demand by infusing liquidity into the system and thus perk up the economy, the CEA said.

“A good part of stimulus is

utilising leverage to deliver...while at the same time ensuring that the fiscs remain actually under control,” he said.

Last week, the government raised its market borrowing programme by a whopping 54 per cent of the Budget estimate to ~12 trillion for the current fiscal to fund a comprehens­ive stimulus package of ~20 trillion to fight the Covid-19 crisis.

According to some estimates, ~4.2 trillion additional borrowing by the government will push the fiscal deficit to 5.8 per cent of the GDP in FY21 as against the budget target of 3.5 per cent. With regards to proposed structural reforms, Subramania­n said Prime Minister Narendra Modi in his recent address touched some important aspects like land, labour, laws and liquidity.

“Land and labour are really factor market reforms because these are factor inputs that really affect the cost of doing business and you have seen a lot of changes on these recently at state level,” he said.

Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, and Gujarat have announced fundamenta­l labour reforms and other states are also in line to follow up, he said, adding, Karnataka had just gone ahead and changed the regulation on acquisitio­n of land for business.

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