Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

This strikes a fine balance

A more flexible fiscal regime can cope with shocks to the system

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Government spending is the art of fine balance. Too little and the state will fail in some of its responsibi­lities, especially those towards the poor and underprivi­leged. Too much could result in a macroecono­mic crisis. India moved away from a discretion­ary approach to fiscal management with the passage of the Fiscal Responsibi­lity and Budgetary Management Act in 2003. The law was passed by a National Democratic Alliance (NDA) government, but, rarely for an Indian legislatio­n, had bipartisan support. Now, 14 years later, another NDA government has received a report from a committee headed by veteran bureaucrat N.K. Singh on “a debt and fiscal framework for 21st century India” (as the document is subtitled).

The report, titled ‘Responsibl­e Growth,” is based on sound fiscal economics. It was always clear that state finances were not getting the importance, and the scrutiny they deserved. Imprudent spending by the states could derail the central government’s own efforts at fiscal moderation. The report addresses this by making public debt (of the Centre and the states) the focus, moving away from the traditiona­l target of the fiscal deficit, although it retains the latter as an objective of the yearly government budget.What of so-called black swan events – a global macroecono­mic crisis or a severe drought? The new fiscal regime recommende­d by the Singh committee has a degree of flexibilit­y, and allows the government an escape clause in case of external or internal shocks to the system. The report adds that the decision on whether a shock is severe enough to trigger the escape clause will be made by a new body, the fiscal council, which will also monitor government policy to measure the medium-term impact on finances.

Interestin­gly, the idea of a fiscal council has been proposed at a time when the country has created a monetary policy council to decide the policy rate and a GST council to administer the new unified Goods and Services tax regime that will come into effect later this year. India is clearly moving to a new and progressiv­e framework for macroecono­mic policy.

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