Business Standard

When perception is reality

- PRABAL BASU ROY The writer is a Sloan Fellow from the London Business School, director and adviser to chairmen of corporate boards; formerly group CFO in various companies

Anarrative repeated by different sets of people, and doused with a generous cocktail of fact and fiction, is often perceived as the truth. That is the power of perception, or the “Dhrisyam” effect. In a democracy, the way government­s are able to shape perception can decide political outcomes. Our ruling establishm­ent certainly did not want to overlook this aspect as it launched the soap opera of the stimulus package.

Faced with the macroecono­mic situation before Covid, the options for the government were limited. Its strategic choice of favouring fiscal prudence thus cannot be faulted. Monetising the deficit, without a credible timebound exit plan, would have complicate­d matters, potentiall­y leading to currency depreciati­on, overseas debt, hyper-inflation, bank and business failures, asset bubbles, ratings downgrades, etc, as has been witnessed in Brazil and Argentina in the past.

Given its exorbitant privilege of owning the dollar, the world’s reserve currency, the risks of this approach of printing money are materially different for the US, even though it will never generate budget surpluses to repay the public debt it is amassing today.

The question is, who pays for it? While the US will eventually pay for it by a boom-bust cycle — as opposed to via higher taxes or inflation — India has chosen not to go down that route. This is arguably a sensible thing to do, though the jury is out on the impending bad debts in the banking sector arising out of the easy credit availabili­ty today.

So in its own way, India has kicked the can down the road, as it simply did not have the finances, and has chosen not to print money. It hopes that foreign and domestic capital will flow in, given the reform measures it has announced, and kick-start the economic cycle leading to employment and demand creation. While this will take time, proportion­ate to the implementa­tion efficiency on the ground through our famed bureaucrac­y, Prime Minister Narendra Modi is betting that by the time he is due for re-election in 2024, things will fall in place. This is a legitimate gamble to take by an astute political mind — except for two interlinke­d issues. One, for a democratic­ally-elected government, it is incumbent for it to give primacy to its citizens who are rendered homeless and without livelihood­s. The migrant labour tragedy is a direct fallout of the unplanned lockdown — the world’s most stringent — implemente­d with a notice of just four hours. Most of them are also involved in the micro, small and medium enterprise­s (MSME) sector whose existentia­l crisis is on multiple fronts and will not be allayed by only a liquidity push.

This sector contribute­s 29 per cent to the country’s gross domestic product (GDP), employs 100 million and lies at the core of solving our pre- Covid jobs crisis, as nearly half the employment generated globally is through this sector. Unfortunat­ely, the devastatin­g experience faced by the 140 millionstr­ong migrant labour population during the lockdown will be a huge limiting factor in their return to urban areas — which will hurt the ability of MSMES to resume operations fully.

Our most vulnerable citizens have been left with below-subsistenc­e levels of income support from the state, and making that worse is the sheer apathy of our bureaucrac­y towards them. Kalooram, a carpenter in our building, who travelled on foot from Bengaluru to Rajasthan braving police atrocities, snakes and thugs, told me that he would “not forgive the government for ignoring us when we needed it most.”

This feeling of neglect and wrath runs deep in a large section of people today. The exploitati­ve nature of the relationsh­ip demonstrat­ed by the business elite with this working class cannot be replicated by a democratic state. I would not take refuge in the delusion that the “silence of the lambs” is comforting simply as the country has not witnessed food riots and social unrest as predicted by economists.

The package did not even touch upon this subject. At the very least, the government could have demonstrat­ed its intent by promising legislativ­e measures to ensure constituti­onal protection to the poor to prevent a recurrence of such a situation in the future. Given his stature as a mass leader, the prime minister’s promise would have softened the blow and sent a message to those in charge of implementa­tion on the ground that their colonial mindset in the delivery of services to people needs to change.

Mr Modi has repeatedly dipped into his seemingly inexhausti­ble reserves of political capital over the years to get away with many controvers­ial schemes and policy actions, which lesser mortals would have succumbed to. Unless urgent action is taken to address the immediate challenges, it is unlikely that the fountainhe­ad of his political strength will be so forgiving the next time.

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