Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

A blueprint to finance higher public spending

The government should confront difficult choices using the key principles of public finance

- KARTHIK MURALIDHAR­AN Karthik Muralidhar­an is the Tata Chancellor’s Professor of Economics at UC San Diego The views expressed are personal

It becomes clearer by the day that the lockdown to contain the spread of the coronaviru­s disease (Covid-19) is creating enormous stress on every part of the economy, including public finances. The need for public expenditur­e to address the crisis has increased, but revenues are down. Given this, how should we finance the additional spending? Broadly, there are four options before the government: Cut other expenditur­e, increase revenues, increase borrowing, or print money to monetise debt. All these options are painful and are costly in their own way. But as the government confronts these difficult choices, it would do well to consider four key principles of public finance.

The first is that the costs of each of the options may increase non-linearly, and so the optimal approach may be a judicious combinatio­n of all four options. The second is to minimise frictions across tiers of national, state, and local government­s and take a consolidat­ed view on the best policy actions. The third is to ensure that shortterm actions do not jeopardise longerterm fundamenta­ls and also enable structural reforms that will put the country on a stronger economic trajectory. The fourth is to not let financing concerns impede essential investment­s to support public health and the economy.

Based on these principles, there are a few implementa­ble ideas that the government can use to help fund its response. On expenditur­e, one simple idea is to change the structure of public employee pay so that all allowances other than basic pay are linked to government tax revenues. In good times, public employee pay will be higher, and in difficult times, the reduced payroll provides an automatic macro-fiscal stabiliser. It may also create an important symbolic link between public employee pay and state and national economic performanc­e, which is missing right now. Over time, once the principle of variable pay for public employees is in place, it may be possible to link it to measures of department and individual performanc­e which has been shown to meaningful­ly increase effort and productivi­ty of public employees.

On revenues, there is substantia­l scope to increase property tax rates and collection­s by local bodies. The central government can incentivis­e these payments by making property taxes deductible from taxable income. This has several advantages. First, property taxes are less likely to dampen economic activity since they are based on immovable investment­s.

Second, urban areas contribute the most to GDP and tax revenue, but have been hit hardest by the pandemic and lockdown. This then becomes a form of central government support that disproport­ionately benefits urban areas. Third, it does not cost the central government much (since property tax collection­s are very low), but makes the extent of benefits to states and local government­s conditiona­l on implementi­ng overdue property tax reforms.

Third, the government should issue debt with a commitment that these funds will be used primarily to invest in strengthen­ing health systems. Increasing debt per se is not a problem if used to finance a public investment that has a positive net present social rate of return. The problem is that bond markets do not trust that government­s will finance productive investment­s. Consequent­ly, breaching deficit targets and borrowing more is often penalised with higher interest rates. Ringfencin­g any additional Covid-19-related debt to focus primarily on health systems investment will reduce the likelihood of a bond market interest penalty. According to one estimate, each week of the full lockdown has cost nearly ~2 lakh crore. Thus, the public returns to health investment­s that enable even a partial release of the lockdown are likely to be very high.

Fourth, it is best to avoid discussion of monetising the debt. Even talk of debt monetisati­on will raise inflationa­ry expectatio­ns, divert domestic savings to unproducti­ve assets like gold, raise bond yields, and jeopardise India’s hard-won inflation credibilit­y in recent years. At this point, we do not know if the crisis will be deflationa­ry (through demand contractio­n) or inflationa­ry (through supply chain disruption­s). So it is best to wait. Importantl­y, this does not preclude the Reserve Bank of India from directly purchasing government debt. As long as there is a commitment from the government to paying it back (and markets believe that the debt can be paid back), this approach allows fiscal stimulus without jeopardisi­ng inflation credibilit­y. If inflation stays very low, then a modest amount of monetisati­on of debt may make sense over time.

Finally, it is critical to recognise that states are at the frontline of the battle against the virus, both for securing public health and for protecting the vulnerable. But they do not have the policy instrument­s needed to respond fully. Consistent with first principles of public finance, the central government should lead on financing this war, and state government­s should lead on-field implementa­tion (including designing locally appropriat­e mitigation measures).

Further, it is essential for the central government to communicat­e not just policies, but also the principles and broader thinking behind the pandemic response. Citizens, state government­s, and market actors make decisions based on expectatio­ns. And in these uncertain times, greater clarity on policy will be critical to minimising the economic and health costs of this crisis.

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