Deccan Chronicle

Centre’s economic stimulus falls short

There’s a lot of distress in India Inc’s ranks and its vital for the government to meet their representa­tives and see what can be done to remove the hurdles to growth

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The government has fallen short in meeting the people’s expectatio­ns. People wanted an economic stimulus package to create jobs and spur growth, that has slowed of late. While it is working on a package for small and medium enterprise­s and exporters, we will have to see what shape this takes. The government also plans to upgrade educationa­l and health services, but it’s still all on paper. Rural India is expected to see an improvemen­t in its quality of life with 24x7 electricit­y supply.

The SME sector is a major job creator and accounts for 40 per cent of India’s exports. One hopes the government will do hand-holding with selfhelp groups like Sewa to empower people to become self-employed.

There’s a lot of distress in India Inc’s ranks and its vital for the government to meet their representa­tives and see what can be done to remove the hurdles to growth. Meeting each sector separately is desirable as their issues differ, so that solutions can be worked out fast. A similar exercise is needed regarding private investment, which has dried up and may not revive for at least a year or two. Perhaps some jobs can be created after work begins on the Sardar Sarovar Dam on the Narmada. But this won’t be enough to satisfy the 11-12 million people who enter the job market annually. Unless jobs are created, there could be discontent, that could erupt into protests.

It is disappoint­ing that the government kicked the can down the road by creating an Economic Advisory Council to give a structural direction to the economy. Does this mean the economy had no direction till now? It definitely reflects the huge mistake the Narendra Modi government made in disbanding institutio­ns like the Planning Commission. It resulted in a drought of advice by economists and other experts, to the government’s detriment. It’s surprising that the Niti Aayog, which replaced the Planning Commission, wasn’t up to the mark in giving economic direction. It was expected the government already had a plan as various ministries had been asked for suggestion­s last week. Mr Modi’s party colleague Subramania­n Swamy has claimed that the PM has not been kept abreast about the state of the economy.

The government owes it to the people to come out with a stimulus package to revive the economy given that this nemesis of slowing growth was brought about by demonetisa­tion and the hasty implementa­tion of the Goods and Services Tax, which former PM Manmohan Singh called “monumental mismanagem­ent” and “organised loot”. The GST was expected to push GDP up by 1-2 per cent, but it seems to have had the opposite effect — maybe because, as West Bengal’s finance minister Amit Mitra earlier warned — it was flawed.

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