Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Boosting demand key for economic revival

PRIORITIES Crucial to ensure there is no slowdown in investment, in order to drive growth

- Roshan Kishore letters@hindustant­imes.com letters@hindustant­imes.com

n What will be the Covid-19 pandemic’s impact on India? The Reserve Bank of India expects the Indian economy to contract in the current fiscal year. But given the recent release of GDP numbers for the quarter ending March 2020, a big-picture analysis may be needed. In a three-part data journalism series, HT attempts to do exactly that. The first part, which appeared in the edition dated June 6, looked at the economic situation before the pandemic. The second part, which appeared yesterday, looked at the immediate effects of the crisis and their macroecono­mic consequenc­es. The third part will argue that the existing policy response might not be enough.

On 12 May, in an address to the nation, Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced an economic package worth 10% of India’s GDP. Finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman announced the details of the package in press conference­s over the next five days. The package does amount to over ₹20 lakh crore. But the actual fiscal spending involved is much lower. In fact, two-thirds of the package is focused on credit infusion programmes. These include guarantees by the government and provision of additional liquidity by the Reserve Bank of India. The package also announced major steps to deregulate agricultur­e markets.

The lack of fiscal push surprised not just commentato­rs but even markets. A research note by Pranjul Bhandari, Chief India economist at HSBC Securities and Capital Markets says that “while markets were expecting a more demand-side stimulus...a large part of the attention has been towards medium-term supply side measures”.

What should be the objective of an economic package during this pandemic? It depends on the economic situation before the pandemic. If the economy was in good shape, it should focus on restoring the status quo. However this is not the case with India. As pointed out in the first part of this series, the Indian economy was caught in one of its worst ever decelerati­on phases before the pandemic. So, just getting the economy to where it was immediatel­y before the pandemic, difficult as it is, is not going to be enough.

Part I of this series argued that India was facing a demand driven slowdown before the pandemic. Part II argued how loss of incomes due to reverse migration could squeeze rural incomes and demand. So, supply side measures such as easing credit supply are unlikely to help boost the economy, although some businesses may benefit from it.

As for the emphasis on reforms, a key component of the package that was announced, not all of these will increase demand. Reforms generally improve the ease of doing business, and thus make an economy more attractive for investment.

The failure of corporate taxes reforms announced last year to boost investment activity is a classic example of how something aimed at improving the business environmen­t may not result in sustained demand.

Where does demand come from? In a modern economy, it comes from three sources: domestic consumptio­n, exports and investment. Imports represent negative demand, as local purchasing power is diverted towards foreign goods. India enjoyed a good export growth phase until the 2008 financial crisis. The performanc­e has been disappoint­ing post-2008. With the multilater­al trading regime in jeopardy, rise of protection­ism and trade wars and shock of the pandemic, exports are unlikely to revive anytime soon. Another factor which will prevent an export surge is India’s inability to join any major mega regional trade treaty. The inability of exports to boost growth like they did in the pre-2008 period is a structural shock to the Indian economy.

This leaves domestic consumptio­n. Private Final Consumptio­n Expenditur­e has had a share of almost 60% of India’s GDP in the recent period. India’s private spending is very unequal in nature. An analysis of 2011-12 NSSO data (latest available figures) shows that almost half of it came from the top 20% of the population.

The NSSO numbers probably underestim­ate India’s income inequality. An analysis of income tax data shows that 90% of income taxes in India came from the top 5% of the 50 million who even file income tax returns. India’s workforce is more than 400 million strong.

So, what can be done to boost consumptio­n demand? The consumptio­n of the rich could actually go down rather than increase. A Mint column by Niranjan Rajadyaksh­a explained why this could happen due to the pandemic’s economic pain. “Precaution­ary savings tend to rise under conditions of income uncertaint­y. People who have lived through a storm understand the importance of setting some money aside for rainy days”, the column said. “There is thus a strong likelihood that the income uncertaint­y people are experienci­ng right now will nudge Indian households to increase precaution­ary savings at least for the next few years. And this psychologi­cal switch may persist even after the Indian economy recovers momentum” it adds. Given the fact that India’s private consumptio­n is skewed towards the rich, any cutback in consumptio­n demand will make economic revival even more difficult. As the column argues, easier credit provisioni­ng might not help in this case.

This leaves investment as a driver of growth. Demand for capital goods is a derived demand. Unless businesses see future growth in domestic demand or exports, they will not invest. This is exactly what has been happening in India.

What does this entail for Indian economy’s prospects? The concept of paradox of thrift developed by John Maynard Keynes, is important here. It says that if everybody were to start saving more in an economy, aggregate demand would go down. This will lead to lower incomes. Because savings are a fraction of income, collective savings will go down as well.

So what should be done? A democratic­ally elected government cannot force individual­s to make consumptio­n or saving decisions. However, there is merit in focusing on the bottom 80% of the population. A large part of this struggles to make ends meet. It can hardly save if even if it wants to. NSSO data shows that at least half of India’s population spent half of its budget on food. This is in keeping with the 40% weight of food in India’s retail inflation basket. The primacy of food in household budgets is also the biggest political economy fault line in India. A rise in food prices hurts the poor. A squeeze hurts farmers. Government­s juggle this balance.

However, this need not be a zero sum game. An expansion of the current food security programme could benefit both farmers and consumers. One such way could be allowing employment of MGNREGS workers in private agricultur­al activity. This can be rolled out almost immediatel­y. The paddy cultivatio­n season will start in weeks.

Another area where things can be changed in the medium to long term is health and education services. In India, even the poor spend beyond their means on private education and healthcare. An improvemen­t and expansion

TABLE 1

DETAILS OF GOVERNMENT PACKAGE

Announceme­nt

Increase in MGNREGS budgetary allocation Viability gap funding for social infrastruc­ture Agricultur­e & Allied Activities

Migrant and farmers

MSME, NBFCS etc.

Welfare & Health

RBI

Total

CHART 1

100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 1

HALF OF CONSUMPTIO­N SPENDING COMES FROM TOP 20% 2 3 in public services could change this trend.

Investment in food security, health, education etc. is generally seen as a resource diversion from physical infrastruc­ture which directly promotes growth. There might have been some merit in this argument in India as long as the consuming classes consume. In the absence of any incentive to – the package announced by the government has little by way of putting more money in the hands of people – this is a perverse argument. 4

400 81 1,500 3,100 5,946 1,928 8,016 5

400 81 30 160 168 1,296 6 State spending in the food economy and social sector, even with stagnant or slightly lower wages, could free up a greater amount for spending by the poor in the non-farm economy. It could just be an extra pair of slippers or a bicycle.

This series draws from the author’s work at the Centre for Advanced Studies of India at University of Pennsylvan­ia as a visiting fellow. It is in the process of being developed as a working paper. 7

0.2 0.04 0.7 1.5 2.9 0.9 8

0.2 0.04 0.01 0.1 0.1 0.6 9 10

For the first two parts of this series, scan the QR code above and access the story on the website of Hindustan Times.

NEWDELHI: Asserting that coronaviru­s is a “new agent” about which not everything is known, the government on Sunday defended the timing of imposition of the lockdown and rejected as “baseless” media reports expressing concerns that it did not take inputs from technical experts while drawing up its Covid-19 strategy.

The government also said it is “fine-tuning” its strategy based on emerging knowledge and experience on the ground.

In a statement, the health ministry asserted that the decision on the lockdown was taken due to the rapid escalation of Covid-19 cases.

“The doubling rate of cases had dropped to a low level, pointing toward a dangerous trajectory of high case load and high mortality, as experience­d by many western countries. The possibilit­y that our health systems could soon be overwhelme­d with Covid-19 patients seemed to be real,” the ministry said.

There was a unanimous consensus on the lockdown among all state government­s, it said.

The government has already shared informatio­n on the impact of the lockdown and other restrictio­ns to avert lakhs of infections and thousands of deaths, the ministry said.

“This virus is a new agent, not everything is known about it as yet. Government is fine-tuning the strategy based on emerging knowledge and experience on the ground,” the statement said.

About reports in a section of the media expressing concern about the government excluding the views of technical experts, the statement said, “These apprehensi­ons and allegation­s are unfounded and baseless. The government is constantly in consultati­on with experts for technical and strategic inputs, scientific ideas and domain-specific guidance to address the Covid-19 pandemic.”

Decile Class

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India