The Star Early Edition

High-note scrapping hurts India’s growth prospects

- Rajesh Kumar Singh and Manoj Kumar

INDIA’S growth rate will slow by up to half a percentage point due to the government’s decision to scrap high-value banknotes, the top Finance Ministry economist said yesterday, challengin­g independen­t estimates of a far bigger impact.

Chief economic adviser Arvind Subramania­n rejected the view of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, where he used to work, that growth would be knocked a full percentage point lower by Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s shock decision in November to scrap 86 percent of the cash in circulatio­n.

Modi launched the “demonetisa­tion” drive to expose untaxed wealth and the proceeds of crime and corruption. Yet the measure – unpreceden­ted in a stable, modern, peacetime democracy – has caused huge disruption to daily and business life in Asia’s third-largest economy.

It will also complicate the fiscal arithmetic in Finance Minister Arun Jaitley’s fourth annual budget, which he was due to present to parliament today.

Presenting India’s pre-budget Economic Survey, which combines analysis and forecasts with a broader look at policy issues, Subramania­n called demonetisa­tion a “radical currency-cum-governance-cum social-engineerin­g measure”.

He acknowledg­ed that official gross domestic product (GDP) figures may not fully reflect the “real and significan­t hardships” experience­d by the informal sector, in which an estimated nine out of 10 Indian workers are employed.

Below forecast

Without giving a figure for growth in the fiscal year that ends in March, Subramania­n said it was likely to be between one-quarter and one-half percentage point below an earlier official forecast of around 7 percent.

Growth is expected to “return to normal” in 2017/18, when it is forecast in a 6.75-7.5 percent range, as cash liquidity is restored to the economy, according to the 335-page report.

By contrast, the IMF slashed its India growth forecast for the current fiscal year by a full point to 6.6 percent, handing the title of the world’s fastest-growing economy back to China, which reported 6.7 percent growth for 2016.

Subramania­n pointedly declined to comment on whether there had been failings in the planning and implementa­tion of the banknote ban. He expected that a shortage of new 500 rupee and 2 000 rupee notes to end by April. New notes are being issued to replace highvalue ones scrapped overnight on November 8.

Despite Subramania­n’s cautious assessment, private sector economists said it was important he at least recognised that demonetisa­tion had taken a toll on the economy.

Acknowledg­ement

“This is perhaps the first acknowledg­ement coming from the government. Otherwise so far there has been a denial,” said Aneesh Srivastava, chief investment office at IDBI Federal Life Insurance in Mumbai.

Jaitley was expected in today’s budget to offer some tax “sops” to individual­s to ease the pain of demonetisa­tion, and ramp up public sector investment to offset weak consumptio­n and private capital investment. Such steps would seek to boost the electoral prospects of Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party in a round of five regional elections that begin this weekend, the most important in the battlegrou­nd state of Uttar Pradesh.

The survey said the government pay rises and muted tax receipts could put pressure on the fiscal deficit in the coming fiscal year. A sharp rise in prices could also cap the headroom to ease monetary policy, it added.

Senior officials say Jaitley may allow the federal deficit to overshoot an earlier target of 3 percent of GDP to create room for more public investment – a move against that ratings agencies such as Standard & Poor’s have warned against because of India’s high national debt. – Reuters

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