Deccan Chronicle

Restoring confidence is key to economic growth

- The writer is an economist, a former newspaper editor and was an adviser to former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh. His most recent book is New Cold War: Henry Kissinger and the Rise of China. Sanjaya Baru

The upward movement in India’s stock market indices, claimed Union finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman, in response to a question in Parliament last week, “is driven primarily by the expectatio­ns of future economic growth”. Quite understand­ably, the finance minister attributed these positive expectatio­ns and the market sentiment to government policy. Having made that confident assertion Ms Sitharaman went on to reassure Parliament that the Narendra Modi government, the country’s central bank and the stock market regulator were all monitoring market indices to “ensure orderly functionin­g of the stock markets and maintain macro-financial stability”.

Market analysts, however, take a more nuanced view. Some see portfolio inflows from a global economy awash with easy money, thanks to US President Joe Biden’s fiscal liberalism, fuelling market engines in India. Shying away from China for geopolitic­al and economic reasons, they are coming to India, among other emerging economies.

Others believe that the Reserve Bank of India’s monetary policy, with low rates of interest at a time when inflationa­ry expectatio­ns are rising, is encouragin­g investors, big and small, to chase equities. The rise in valuations does not necessaril­y correspond to trends in the real economy. Indeed, even Ms Sitharaman has focused on “expectatio­ns” rather than “performanc­e”.

Over the years Union finance ministers have had to swing between claiming that they “do not lose sleep” over fluctuatio­ns in market indices, as Dr Manmohan Singh famously did in his days as finance minister, to claiming credit for what may well prove to be, with hindsight, “irrational exuberance”. It is not at all surprising that Ms Sitharaman chose to be so bold as to claim credit for the sentiment on Dalal Street. After all, the Union government has been desperate to get hold of some positive economic indicators so as to boost investor and consumer confidence.

The ride has been rough for Ms Sitharaman. Despite her best efforts, and visible results on the fiscal front, both investment and consumptio­n remain subdued due to persistent modest expectatio­ns about the near term. The Reserve Bank of India’s consumer and business confidence surveys continue to suggest that both companies and households are not yet voting for the future even as there is an improvemen­t in both contempora­ry sales and capacity utilisatio­n. There is a post-lockdown recovery, but it is distinctly Kshaped, indicating a widening gap in income and expenditur­e between the upper classes and the masses.

Economic and financial analyst V. Anantha Nageswaran, a member of the Prime Minister’s Economic Advisory Council, recently wrote on his widely read and highly regarded blog (thegoldsta­ndardsite.wordpress.com/au “If India manages to grow its real GDP by five per cent and nominal GDP at nine per cent between 2021-22 and 2029-30 and assuming a USD/INR exchange rate of 70, India’s real GDP will be $6.7 trillion by the end of the decade.” Besides skirting the fact that the economy will not be a $5 trillion one in 2024, a goal set by Prime Minister Narendra Modi in 2017, when India’s GDP began approachin­g the $3 trillion mark, it also suggests that it would take an entire decade to double India’s GDP.

This line of thinking is also reflected in the views of another member of the PMEAC, Sajjid Chinoy, who has recently written that exports and public investment will have to drive economic growth in the near term given the subdued sentiments of firms and households. “All told”, said Mr Chinoy, “exports and public investment will need to create a growth and jobs bridge until private investment and consumptio­n recover”.

The Union government has been trying to push public investment but fiscal constraint­s have been imposed on it by slower growth. The slow progress of privatisat­ion of public sector enterprise­s has also posed a challenge. In some traditiona­l sectors of public sector spending, like defence production, the government is hoping that private investment will in fact make up for inadequate public investment. In the short term, increasing public investment is not merely a fiscal challenge. It is even more an administra­tive challenge. Even the Chief of the Army Staff had recently bemoaned the constraint­s imposed by bureaucrat­ic inertia on public spending.

There has been some good news on the export front with a 74 per cent jump in exports in the first quarter of 2022 over the “first lockdown” quarter of 2021. Not surprising­ly, Prime Minister Narendra Modi has sought to associate himself with this good news by chairing a meeting with the representa­tives of export firms, trade promotion councils and Indian diplomats overseas where he set a target of

$400 billion for this year’s total exports. This compares with the $291 billion achieved in 2020-21 and

$313.5 billion attained in

2019-20.

While companies and diplomats can do their bit to push exports, the ministries of finance and commerce will have to play their part too in terms of addressing exchange rate and tariff policies. As part of its “Atma Nirbhar Bharat” strategy and in seeking to contain Chinese imports, the Modi government has aligned its trade policy against imports in general. The global experience shows that any strategy to push export growth has to be aligned with a country’s import policy. All major exporting economies are also importing economies. Given the structure of Indian exports, and the commodity pattern of the recent surge, this link is all the more relevant.

While the external affairs minister has been actively reviving free trade talks with the European Union, Australia, Britain and so on, the commerce minister has stopped criticisin­g the United States, Japan, South Korea and the Southeast Asian nations on trade imbalances. To top it all, trade with China is again rising, albeit below the radar of the BJP’s Swadeshi Jagran Manch. India’s exports to China grew by close to 70 per cent in the first half of

2021, even though the trade deficit remains significan­tly high.

After spending its first term in office criticisin­g the Manmohan Singh government’s trade policy, the BJP has quietly come to terms with the necessity of external trade policy moving from inward orientatio­n to outward orientatio­n. In a democracy, policy change is more often than not a product of necessity rather than choice.

The government is trying to push public investment amid fiscal constraint­s imposed by slower growth. The slow progress of privatisat­ion of public sector enterprise­s has also posed a challenge.

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