Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Big stimulus, move to revive demand need of the hour, says Nobel laureate

- Aurangzeb Naqshbandi and Rajeev Jayaswal letters@hindustant­imes.com ■

NEWDELHI: India needs a big stimulus package, bigger than the one it announced in March to revive the economy which is hurting from the Covid-19 outbreak and the lockdown enforced to combat it , Nobel laureate Abhijit Banerjee said on Tuesday , adding that the emphasis should be on generating demand.

One way to do this would be to just put money in the hands of consumers, he added.

Banerjee, 59, who shared the 2019 Nobel prize for economics with his wife Esther Duflo and Michael Kremer for an “experiment­al approach to alleviatin­g global poverty,” cited the examples of countries that have unveiled sizeable stimulus packages to boost their economies.

“That’s the reason a lot of us have been saying that we need a stimulus package,” Banerjee said in a video conversati­on with Congress leader Rahul Gandhi. “That’s what the US is doing, Japan is doing, Europe is doing.”

NEWDELHI: India needs a big stimulus package, bigger than the one it announced in March to revive the economy which is hurting from the coronaviru­s disease and the lockdown enforced to combat it , Nobel laureate Abhijit Banerjee said on Tuesday , adding that the emphasis should be on generating demand.

One way to do this would be to just put money in the hands of consumers, he added.

Banerjee, 59, who shared the 2019 Nobel prize for economics with his wife Esther Duflo and Michael Kremer for an “experiment­al approach to alleviatin­g global poverty,” cited the examples of countries that have unveiled sizeable stimulus packages to boost their economies.

“That’s the reason a lot of us have been saying that we need a stimulus package,” Banerjee said in a video conversati­on with Congress leader Rahul Gandhi. “That’s what the US is doing, Japan is doing, Europe is doing. We really haven’t decided on a large enough stimulus package. We are still talking about 1% of GDP [gross domestic product]. The United States has gone for 10% of GDP.”

On March 26, the National Democratic Alliance government announced a ₹1.7 lakh crore relief package under the Prime Minister Garib Kalyan Yojana (PMGKY), which is around 0.8% of India’s GDP, to ease economic distress and make sure food and cash reach the poor.

Industrial houses are waiting for a bigger package of about ₹16 lakh crore to stimulate demand and resuscitat­e economic growth, which the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) has predicted will decelerate to 1.9% this fiscal year, the slowest pace in three decades.

In his conversati­on with Gandhi, Banerjee said that the government should go beyond a moratorium on debt payments which the Reserve Bank of India announced last month; it could consider cancelling payments in this quarter and take care of them itself for small enterprise­s.

But an economic revival also needs more than that, he said, adding that money should be put in the hands of the people to generate demand, say ₹10,000 each. “It is not clear that targeting the MSME sector is the right channel. It is more [about] reviving demand,” he said, adding that delivering money straight to consumers to spend would achieve the objective.

The conversati­on is the second in a series that Gandhi is holding with global thought leaders and experts on the impact of Covid-19 on the economy and possible solutions. The first was with former Reserve Bank of India (RBI) governor Raghuram Rajan on Thursday.

Banerjee told Gandhi that it is important to revive demand without obsessing about targeting the right beneficiar­ies. “Nothing bad will happen if we give money to the bottom 60%. But to give direct cash transfer to only poorer people is debatable,” he said.

Rajan told Gandhi on April 30 that the government should transfer cash directly to the poor and supply food through the public distributi­on system (PDS) to as many people as possible to help them tide over the impact of the coronaviru­s disease. He had estimated that the effort would cost the exchequer ₹65,000 crore..

Banerjee said the government must ensure social security for all in need, either by allowing portabilit­y of ration cards, or simply the use of the Aadhaar number irrespecti­ve of one’s location, or even temporary ration cards, an idea he suggested in an Op-Ed he wrote with Raghuram Rajan and Amartya Sen.

“Anybody who wants one, get a temporary ration card -- lasts for three months for now and maybe renewed for another three months, if necessary... I think we have enough stock (of food). I think we can keep going for a while...,” he said.

On lifting the lockdown, extended until May 17, Banerjee called for caution.

“You can’t take out the lockdown when a lot of people are getting sick. We need to be aware of the disease’s path before taking a decision on lifting the lockdown,” he added.

Banerjee also suggested that the Centre give state government­s money to chalk out their own initiative­s to reach a wider section of the people and not think about some of the money getting wasted.

A spokespers­on of the finance ministry declined to comment on the issue.

Meanwhile, G Kishan Reddy, minister of state for home, said in a tweet, “Nobel laureate Abhijit Banerjee enlightens the Congress & it’s pseudo intellectu­al leaders, including Mr @RahulGandh­i, by supporting #PMGKY, PMJDY [Pradhan Mantri Jan-Dhan Yojana] among others & the efforts of Hon PM @narendramo­di ji.”

 ?? YOUTUBE ?? ■
A screengrab of the video conference between Congress leader Rahul Gandhi (left) and Nobel laureate Abhijit Banerjee.
YOUTUBE ■ A screengrab of the video conference between Congress leader Rahul Gandhi (left) and Nobel laureate Abhijit Banerjee.

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