BusinessMirror

‘India food program restructur­ing is politicall­y deft’

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INDIA’S move to restructur­e the world’s biggest food program is a fiscally prudent and a politicall­y deft move, according to Nomura Holdings Inc.

The withdrawal of the free food plan was always going to be politicall­y tricky, but the simultaneo­us reorientat­ion of the food public distributi­on system makes it an easier political sell, Nomura economists Sonal Varma and Aurodeep Nandi wrote in a report to clients Tuesday.

The move is particular­ly significan­t in light of the busy political calendar in 2023, with states elections due to be held in Karnataka, Chhattisga­rh, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan and Telangana, and general elections in the summer of 2024, they added.

The government last week discontinu­ed a version of a free-food program for low income households announced in April 2020, and replaced it with the new initiative that will also give out free grains while lowering the quantity. This move, Nomura estimates, will result in subsidy savings to the tune of 0.16 percent of gross domestic product in the three months to March.

The overall fiscal impact of these announceme­nts “is positive,”and should help the government meet its deficit aim of 6.4 percent of gross domestic product in the current fiscal year, the economists said. They expect a sub-6 percent deficit target for next fiscal year starting April 1, but such consolidat­ion target would be “tricky” due to weaker growth, they added.

“If the government can hold the line on its food subsidy expenditur­e, then it should help reduce one of the risks,” the economists wrote.

The end of the free foodgrain program should help raise foodgrain stocks back over buffer norms and reduce the pressure on open markets for procuremen­t. This, in turn, should help ease inflationa­ry pressures on cereals, they added.

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