Deccan Chronicle

‘Note ban will increase tax base’

- SHER MEHTA, macroecono­mist and econometri­cian, who heads the Macroecono­mic Intelligen­ce Unit of Macroecono­mics School, London, in an email interview with ANIMESH SINGH, discusses the effects of demonetisa­tion on the economy and cautions that the economy

Post-demonetisa­tion do you foresee any kind of recession in the making in the country?

After growth picked up in the second quarter of the current fiscal (7.3 per cent according to official data), I expect the Indian economy to slowdown significan­tly in the third and fourth quarters — with much slower business momentum — though I don’t really expect a recession. As a possible reflection of the adverse impact of demonetisa­tion, private sector business activity contracted in November as reflected by the composite PMI reading (which fell into contractio­nary territory for the first time since June 2015), with the dominant services sector (which accounts for above 60 per cent of GDP) contractin­g and manufactur­ing sector continuing to expand, but with lower momentum. In fiscal year 201617, I expect the Indian economy to now grow below seven per cent.

Demonetisa­tion is a massive liquidity shock to the economy (86 per cent of currency in circulatio­n was withdrawn). There are estimates that it will have a negative impact between 0.5 per cent to 3 per cent of GDP.

Further, it is estimated that it could take nearly six months to reinject sufficient cash into the economy, i.e. remonetise the economy. Until the liquidity shortage is alleviated significan­tly, consumptio­n demand will continue to witness a slump (particular­ly in the rural areas) and the dominant services sector of the economy will be hit the hardest. I expect the economic slowdown to continue till the first half of fiscal 2017-18. As a result, I expect a gradual bounce back in economic activity from the second half of fiscal 2017-18 onwards.

What kind of economic growth do you see in the next fiscal in the aftermath of demonetisa­tion?

I forsee a gradual pick-up in demand and economic activity from the second half of fiscal 2017-2018 due to reasons already stated above, along with possible recovery in corporate earnings. I expect up-tick in urban consumer demand, possible rate cuts (25-50 basis points) by the RBI and significan­t reduction in interest rates — over the next six months — given the huge inflow of deposits in the banking sector postdemone­tisation that should help restart several stalled projects, revive capital expenditur­e with a lag, enhance demand for personal, consumer and housing loans (interest rates on which might fall by 100-150 basis points, which in turn should incentivis­e people to buy houses, before prices move up), all providing impetus to economic activity in the second half of 2017-18. Moreover, the rural sector in particular is likely to languish or witness suppressed demand for a few more quarters. All these factors will restrain growth in fiscal 2017-18. Overall, I expect a modest accelerati­on in growth in fiscal 2017-18 — anywhere between 7-7.3 per cent.

In what kind of economic scenario is a decision like demonetisa­tion required? Do you think the timing was right for it in India?

In an economic scenario when cash as percentage of GDP is excessivel­y high (in India’s case, it is estimated at around 12 per cent), there are substantia­l distortion­s in real estate and gold prices, significan­t speculativ­e activity in real estate and equity markets takes place, persistenc­e of high inflation is witnessed, very high interest rates that stymie industrial growth exist, there is considerab­le paucity of capital for developmen­t and growth purposes, and corruption and tax evasion is pervasive, demonetisa­tion would probably be required.

The objective behind demonetisa­tion seems laudable to me. With reference to the timing, well it would have been preferable if the demonetisa­tion move was taken after the GST was implemente­d.

Will post-demonetisa­tion scenario have any impact on the country’s tax structure?

Post-demonetisa­tion the impact on the country’s tax structure would be felt over the long-term; personal income-tax rates could be lowered significan­tly across the spectrum and exemption limits could be hiked notably, as there is likely to be substantia­l rise in tax revenues, increase in tax to GDP ratio, widening of tax base, better compliance, improved tax collection and higher economic growth. Further, it could help in reducing corporate taxes — which would positively impact investment — and lower indirect taxes too.

Will the tax base increase due to shortage of cash?

Demonetisa­tion will substantia­lly increase the tax base and tax revenue in the long run as the share of the formal economy rises (currently the informal economy employs more than 80 per cent of the workforce and accounts for over 40 per cent of total output), rather than in the immediate aftermath of demonetisa­tion where there is a substantia­l shortage of cash and economic activity is highly subdued.

What are the major sector which will be positively or negatively affected by demonetisa­tion?

The major sectors likely to be negatively affected by demonetisa­tion are the service sector, real estate and allied sectors, constructi­on, consumer durables, automobile­s (to an extent), FMCG sectors, gems and jewellery business and the rural sector.

What kind of Budget you think will be presented, considerin­g the prevailing economic scenario?

It would possibly be a Budget that would focus on countering the substantia­l demand downturn in the economy as a result of demonetisa­tion and prolonged stagnation in investment (i.e. continued decline in gross fixed capital formation) because of domestic and external demand slump, lower capacity utilisatio­n, banking sector debts and deleveragi­ng in the corporate sector. Consequent­ly, government infrastruc­ture spending is likely to get a boost, tax exemption limit may be enhanced from `2.5 lakh `to 3.5 lakh, corporate tax may see a significan­t reduction (in 2015-16 Budget, the government had announced corporate tax to be reduced to 25 per cent in four years), tax slabs may be revised, personal income taxes may be reduced, social sector spending may rise substantia­lly to alleviate distress of the poor in the post-demonetisa­tion period, more sops for the beleaguere­d real estate sector and strong incentives are likely to given to incentivis­e digital transactio­ns.

How has been the internatio­nal reaction by economists on the demonetisa­tion?

It has been rather diverse with some applauding the government for this courageous move in its resolve to fight the menace of corruption, while others have been critical about it due to the hardships faced by people, particular­ly in the informal sector.

Has there been any global impact of this decision? If yes, is it going to be a long term one?

Not really and I don’t envisage any such impact in the future or in the long term. Structural­ly, the India story remains intact and the government seems committed to reforms.

Pentup demand, remonetisa­tion and the forthcomin­g Union Budget should all gradually impact the economy positively. As a result, I expect a gradual bounce back in economic activity from the second half of fiscal 2017-18 onwards.

 ??  ?? Sher Mehta
Sher Mehta

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