The Asian Age

Instead of booster shot, FM hints at future relief

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Chief economic adviser Krishnamur­thy V. Subramania­n on Thursday said that the Covid-19 pandemic has severely dented the demand for non-essential goods, creating deflationa­ry conditions. Deflation was something that India has never witnessed and is considered worse than benign inflation for the growth of the economy. During a deflationa­ry period, when the prices are falling, consumers postpone the purchase of non-essential items in anticipati­on of low prices. The fall in demand would force entreprene­urs to curtail supply, resulting in job losses. Such kind of consumer behaviour would be disastrous especially when the fear of coronaviru­s has pushed several sectors like tourism, hospitalit­y and eateries into a state of coma.

In such a dire situation, only a strong economic booster shot could prevent deflation in the Indian economy. The government was the only entity that could have immediatel­y put money in the hands of people for keeping demand and supply alive. Union finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman, however, has fallen back on her government's incrementa­l approach to economic reforms and focused majorly on providing liquidity through banks instead of direct spending.

The key announceme­nts like providing concession­al credit of `2 lakh crores to small and marginal farmers through Kisan Credit Card and working capital loan to 50 lakh street vendors amounting to `5,000 crores are implemente­d through public sector banks. People who want to avail of these benefits will have to go through long processes, which public sector banks are famous for and would not provide the support that the economy wants immediatel­y.

The minister has offered two per cent interest subsidy for Shishu loans given under the Mudra loans. Since the maximum loan amount under the Shishu loan category is `50,000, the borrower could save merely `1,000 over a period of one year due to the government's largesse.

Aiming at the people belonging to the middle class, the government extended the interest subsidy for purchasing affordable houses for one more year. The catch here is a person has to buy the house to avail of this sop. The question, however, is how many people would like to take on liability to buy a house when their source of income itself has become highly

While providing free food grains through PDS could take care of hunger, two other steps for migrant labour such as affordable rental housing scheme and ration card portabilit­y are aimed at the future

uncertain.

While providing free food grains through the public distributi­on system (PDS) could hopefully take care of migrant labour’s hunger, two other steps proposed for migrant labour such as affordable rental housing scheme and ration card portabilit­y are aimed at the future and do not help them immediatel­y. Providing ` 6,000 crores for Campa fund is too little to create adequate jobs for adivasis and amounts to mere lip service.

The economy needed a massive spending programme by the government or cash-rich public sector enterprise­s. But the government wants people to run pillar to post at highly bureaucrat­ic public sector banks and support the economy. When a patient’s heartbeat slows down; doctors have to immediatel­y apply defibrilla­tor shock to restore the beat. The coronaviru­s-infected Indian economy needed such a shock, but an overcautio­us government has administer­ed it an oral medicine instead.

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