Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

SPLIT DOWN THE MIDDLE ON THE ECONOMY

- RAJESH MAHAPATRA Rajesh Mahapatra is the chief content officer, Hindustan Times. Follow the author at @rajeshmaha­patra

ALL SIDES OF THE QUARREL ALSO HONESTLY ACKNOWLEDG­E THAT THE DATA ON THE INDIAN ECONOMY AT THEIR DISPOSAL IS FLAWED AND INCOMPLETE.

Over the past few weeks, a ferocious disagreeme­nt has raged among several Indian economists. The heart of the matter concerns the impacts of demonetisa­tion and the goods and services tax (GST) on India’s economy. Let me be clear that I use the word disagreeme­nt rather than debate advisedly.

Surjit Bhalla, now a member of the prime minister’s economic advisory council, set the ball rolling by claiming that growth rates in rural wages suggested that demonetisa­tion might not have slowed the economy as much as is it is being made out to be. Instead, he argued that the Reserve Bank of India’s reluctance to soften interest rates was perhaps the bigger culprit. And lastly, the Central Statistica­l Organisati­on might have just ended up underestim­ating India’s GDP when it reported a 5.7% expansion through the April-June quarter.

Bhalla’s observatio­ns were undoubtedl­y aimed at correcting the grim picture that former finance minister Yashwant Sinha had been painting as the current status of the Indian economy. Soon enough, Himanshu, a professor at Jawaharlal Nehru University, chimed in with a detailed explanatio­n on how real rural wages had indeed been declining for both agricultur­al and non-agricultur­al labour since 2014, and that Bhalla was cherry picking his data.

The former chief statistici­an Pronab Sen – advisor of many years to the Planning Commission – took up the baton from Himanshu by asserting that demonetisa­tion might have actually slowed the economy more than even what the Central Statistica­l Organisati­on estimates had thus far indicated. Sen, moreover, was unconvince­d that interest rates could have any role in the current slowdown.

Interestin­gly enough, all sides of the Bhalla-Himanshu-Sen quarrel also honestly acknowledg­e that the data on the Indian economy at their disposal is flawed and incomplete. Nonetheles­s, they can still claim as economists that even as their assessment­s widely diverge they are talking about related facts and connected data sets. But does this then become an actual debate over economic facts or a disagreeme­nt over interpreti­ng iffy data?

While it is only fair that one should argue that confusion over the meaning of economic data should prompt the Indian government to fix our statistica­l system – which suffers from serious deficienci­es of quality and the way it is structured – there emerges an equally compelling question. Can you actually keep the politics out of an economic understand­ing that is full of factual uncertaint­ies, flawed data points and troubling inconsiste­ncies with statistica­l informatio­n.

In an earlier article of mine this March, I pointed out that methodolog­ical deficienci­es in our data collection system can often lead to a range of misleading conclusion­s about the econo- my. When this NDA government first put out its estimates of GDP growth for the demonetisa­tion quarter, they confidentl­y asserted that the economy grew 7% despite the disruption caused by the decision to scrap high value notes. That number was later revised downward, but not before those concerned used it to the hilt in defense of demonetisa­tion and perhaps even fed a complacenc­y about arresting the slide of the economy.

Bhalla-Himanshu-Sen will and can correctly assert that they are economists and not politician­s. They can also rightfully claim that they are skilled in the arts and principles of economics as a rigorous academic field rather than in the smoke and mirror games of political subterfuge. However, it would be more than naïve to believe that interpreta­tions of the economy – given what they are in India at the moment – can escape the taint of politics. And here is where my main point lies: given that this disagreeme­nt or quarrel is over interpreta­tion rather than fact, the true story over the Indian economy is more likely going to be made more visible and intense in the streets rather than revealed with any clarity by expert economists. The 2008 financial meltdown had very few prescient voices before the fatal denouement made everyone wise, almost overnight.

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