The Free Press Journal

Fresh support of only Rs 12-13 L cr in PM's econ stimulus: DBS Bk

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NEW DELHI: Of the Rs 20lakh-crore package that Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced to defend the economy against coronaviru­s disruption­s, fresh support may be only around 60 per cent of the offer as it counts the first financial stimulus and liquidity support that Reserve Bank has given already, and will overburden bond market, says a report.

In a big push to revive the COVID-hit economy, PM Modi on Tuesday announced massive new financial incentives on top of the previously announced packages for a combined stimulus of Rs 20 lakh crore.

Modi outlined a Rs 20-lakhcrore which is 9.7 per cent of GDP support package, of which new allocation­s could only be 50-60 per cent of the offer. But until more details are known, financing burden will fall on the bond markets, Radhika Rao, the economist at Singaporea­n lender DBS Bank said in a note on Wednesday.

She further noted that "the new fiscal package is upsized and its scale lends a positive surprise, at a biggerthan-anticipate­d size with emphasis on making the economy more self-reliant via local manufactur­ing and improved supply chains".

It can be noted that the government had in late March announced fiscal measures worth Rs 1.7 lakh crore while the RBI offered liquidity support of Rs 3.7 lakh crore in March and Rs 2 lakh crore in April.

"The new fiscal measures might account to around 60 per cent or Rs 12-13 lakh crore. If this includes a wider net of RBI measures, then the new package might amount to Rs 10 lakh crore," Rao said.

She further said coordinate­d approach is needed to cushion a part of the after effects of the growth slowdown, which will impact incomes, jobs and business viability.

The nuances of the measures are key, particular­ly details on how much is about short-term relief for Micro, Small & Medium Enterprise­s (MSMEs), sector-specific payouts, cash handouts to the poor, loan guarantees, capital infusion into banks, Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MNEGRA) etc, and on medium-term priorities like infrastruc­ture, labour/land reforms etc.

"This will dictate the extent of economic cushion to growth, incomes and employment outlook this year," she said.

On the fiscal side, the report said revenue shortfall is already translatin­g into an increase in deficit from budgeted 3.5 per cent to at least 5.5 per cent now. Assuming only part of the spending is reflected in the FY20 fiscal math and capital spending is scaled back, the deficit might rise by another 2.5-3 per cent of GDP.

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