Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

‘Income disparity shows uneven growth recovery’

- Press Trust of India feedback@livemint.com

NEW DELHI: Former Reserve Bank of India (RBI) Governor D Subbarao has expressed concerns over “extreme unevenness” in economic recovery and “sharpening inequaliti­es” between upper income segments and lower income households in the country, cautioning that the trend will hit growth prospects going forward.

Terming the uneven recovery “morally wrong and politicall­y corrosive”, he said liquidity in the domestic market and foreign fund inflows are leading to soaring of prices of stocks and other assets despite disruption­s due to Covid pandemic.

“The economy contracted last year, for the first time in four decades, by as much as 7.3%. That was less deep than we had first feared but still deep enough to have caused distress to millions of families in the informal sector. There was expectatio­n of a sharp recovery this year but those expectatio­ns are now tempered by the impact of the second wave,” Subbarao said.

The RBI too reduced its growth forecast for the current fiscal by one percentage point, from 10.5% to 9.5%, he said adding that even 9.5% growth might seem impressive but note that this is coming on a very low base of last year.

“Even if we clock this growth rate, the output during this fiscal 2021/22 will still be less than the output two years ago before the pandemic hit us,” the former RBI chief said.

Expressing concerns, Subbarao said that while the majority of people have lost jobs and saw reduction in their income, the wealth of some rich individual­s have increased during the pandemic period.

“The positive wealth effect of the upper income segments juxtaposed with the negative income effects of the lower income houses tells a story of a very uneven recovery and sharpening inequaliti­es,” he said.

Explaining further, he said the booming market is in fact “symptomati­c of the extreme unevenness of this recovery”.

The domestic liquidity coupled with foreign inflows is fuelling stock prices as also prices of other assets, he said. “Who benefits from this? People who have investable surpluses.” “Contrast that with the findings of a study by the Azim Premji University that the one year of pandemic has pushed 230 million people into poverty with a 15% increase in poverty rate in rural India and a 20% surge in urban India,” he said citing the findings of a study.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India