Khaleej Times

India set to boost spending

- Jeanette Rodrigues

mumbai — Prime Minister Narendra Modi will probably boost spending to retain young voters and those in India’s hinterland, who are straying away from his party as joblessnes­s grows.

The government will target a budget deficit of 3.2 of GDP in the year starting April 1, according to a Bloomberg survey published this month, wider than the previous goal of three per cent. Higher expenditur­e will stoke inflation that’s seen accelerati­ng to 4.6 per cent from 3.5 per cent the previous year and boost GDP growth to 7.5 per cent from a projected 6.7 per cent.

More people aged 18-25 are estimated to have voted for the opposition in an election in Modi’s home state of Gujarat, which ended with the ruling party getting its lowest seat tally in more than two decades. His Bharatiya Janata Party was pushed across the finish line largely because of its urban voters, which is acceptable for this region because of its higher urbanisati­on rate but could backfire in a slew of state elections next year and a national vote in 2019.

“The BJP is unlikely to interpret these results as business-as-usual,” Neelkanth Mishra and Deepali Bhargava, analysts at Credit Suisse Group, wrote in a December 18 report. They predict the budget due

India’s budget, due in February, is pegged to focus on rising farm distress. —

in February will focus on rising farm distress and unveil cash transfers for fertiliser subsidies, crop insurance and possibly higher guaranteed crop prices.

“However, contrary to widely held beliefs, we do not expect a fiscal slippage,” they said, predicting a 3.1 per cent shortfall for next year versus the 3.2 per cent current-year target.

Bank of America Merrill Lynch sees the government retaining 3.2 per cent for next year, as write offs on farm loans will probably double to $40 billion by the time Modi faces re-election early 2019. Its economists Indranil Sen Gupta and Aastha Gudwani said the federal government — which raised salaries for its employees last year — could extend this to staff of staterun companies, and provincial administra­tions will rush to follow its lead. The budget should also raise the income tax exemption limit, they said, adding that “we reiterate our call of playing consumptio­n over investment.”

While India’s consumptio­n growth has been perceived as resilient, it’s largely being funded by declining savings, so a pickup in employment is needed to sustain or spur demand, according to analysts at UBS Group.

“Our discussion­s with macro experts and government officials indicate that job creation remains a key focus area, especially going into the 2019 general elections,” they said. — Bloomberg

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