Business Today

A Balancing Act

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In my letter ( A Lack of Data) in the Business Today pre-Budget special, I had pointed out: “Almost all economists agree what the finance minister ought to do. He should go in for hefty tax cuts to make firms and consumers start spending again, deepen the social security net so that the poor are benefitted, and boost government spending on infrastruc­ture to get the economy going.”

I had also pointed out that the lack of high quality data, post-demonetisa­tion, would make working out the details of this Budget a bit difficult. “The problem is not with what he needs to do. The issue is how much he can do...”

The Budget documents show that Finance Minister Arun Jaitley has been cautious about calculatin­g his revenue assumption­s for next year. He has projected a 17 per cent growth in revenue for the current year. But tax revenue growth of only 12 per cent next year on a GDP growth projected at 11.75 per cent in nominal terms.

Despite the relatively modest revenue growth projection­s, the finance minister managed in large part to do what economists were hoping for. He plans to spend a fair amount on infrastruc­ture ( 25 per cent above last year’s budgeted levels or 11 per cent up if compared with revised estimates. He has allocated as much as he could for rural areas and farmers (roughly 24 per cent increase over the Budget estimates of last year, and 11.6 per cent over revised estimates).

And while he was constraine­d by the revenue projection­s and the fiscal deficit target he has chosen to follow ( 3.2 per cent), he managed some tax giveaways – by reducing personal income tax from 10 per cent to 5 per cent in the `2.5 lakh-`5 lakh bracket) and reducing corporate tax for MSMEs below `50 crore revenues. The tax giveaways, being relatively modest, are unlikely to boost consumptio­n or investment big time. But the rural and agricultur­al allocation­s should increase rural incomes and kickstart rural consumptio­n, especially of FMCG products, quite sharply. The rural and infrastruc­ture proposals should also create enough jobs, though at relatively low levels of income, and mostly absorb the job losses in constructi­on that we have seen in the first six months, and also post-demonetisa­tion.

Will it boost the economy in a big way? In my opinion, the spending on infrastruc­ture and rural areas is very likely to give the GDP growth a boost (unless we have some external shock) to a large extent, but it will not spur private investment in a big way, or for that matter, urban middle class consumptio­n spends. Those, perhaps, will take a longer time to recover. Though, in our cover story, we explore five areas which could still see good opportunit­ies for private investment and entreprene­urs. But given the constraint­s he had to deal with while making this Budget, it is a remarkable balancing act and a very prudent one.

 ??  ?? prosenjit.datta@intoday.com @ProsaicVie­w
prosenjit.datta@intoday.com @ProsaicVie­w
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