Govt must continue reforms to revive demand, says Das
NEWDELHI: Reserve Bank of India (RBI) governor Shaktikanta Das on Monday said the government will have to use structural reforms to revive demand and support the sagging economy, and green shoots of the recovery visible now need to be sustained to pull India out of its worst slowdown in 11 years.
In an interview with PTI ,he said the fallout of the outbreak of coronavirus in China needs to be closely monitored by “every policymaker” to tailor a swift response.
While finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman’s Union Budget for 2020-21 and recent steps have created a facilitating ecosystem for reviving demand and consumption, it is necessary to undertake land and labour reforms, bring efficiencies in agri marketing and focus on skill development, he said.
Das said RBI saw an imminent slowdown in growth early in 2019 and used the space that was opened up by the moderation in inflation to cut interest rates on five consecutive occasions.
He cited global trade and business uncertainties together with sluggish domestic demand leading to lower capacity utilisation at factories and twin balance sheet crisis of rising non-performing assets (NPAS) or bad loans on the one hand, and heavily indebted corporates on the other, for the slowdown in the economy.
“There are certain positive evidences visible ... things slightly picking up but we have to wait and see whether these positive trends are sustaining themselves and we have to see how durable they are,” he said.
He refused to say if the growth slowing down to 4.5% in July-september was the bottom of the pit that the economy can see. “As I have said there are evidences of positive developments. But we have to see how durable are these positive developments before we pass a judgment that from here on it is an upward trajectory.”
“By and large, if you look at our projection which we have given, things should start improving in the next financial year. For next financial year, we have projected 6% of GDP (gross domestic product) growth against 5% for the fiscal that ends in March.”
The GDP growth in Octoberdecember is expected to drop below its previous quarter rate of 4.5% despite a slight recovery in industrial production and positive manufacturing PMI. Das, a career bureaucrat who was appointed RBI governor after the sudden exit of Urjit Patel, said he would refrain from characterising current slowdown as structural or cyclical.
“My response to such questions is that the response to the current situation has to be both countercyclical as well as structural that I have said earlier also. So, there is a need for countercyclical responses, which I think the Budget has attempted to respond through counter-cyclical measures.
“There are structural aspects also which needs to be undertaken. Some of these things have been mentioned in the budget. So, we look forward to more such structural changes,” he said.
While Sitharaman thinks the slowdown is cyclical, others such as former finance minister P Chidambaram believe it is structural arising from the way the Modi government has handled the economy.
Structural reforms, Das said, should be in “agricultural marketing to make the supply chain and the value chain” more efficient.
On the impact of coronavirus on growth, he said, “the chief of IMF has already voiced her concern about the impact of coronavirus at the global level. So, therefore, every major economy today will have to be very careful and closely monitoring it.”