Business Standard

PM plans pre-Budget balm for note ban pain

Modi likely to announce sops for rural population, SMEs at Lucknow rally on Jan 2

- ARUP ROYCHOUDHU­RY & ARCHIS MOHAN

The Narendra Modi government and Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) have planned a blitzkrieg of initiative­s to recast the political narrative at the expiry of the “50 days of pain” because of note ban, particular­ly before the Assembly polls in five states, including Uttar Pradesh, in February-March.

Senior BJP leaders and ministers claim Modi’s rally on January 2 in Lucknow is set to be a game-changer in the note ban discourse. This would also be an opportunit­y for the Modi government to announce such measures before the Election Commission of India (ECI)’s model code of conduct kicks in after the announceme­nt of poll dates for five states, likely in the first week of January.

According to sources, the Prime Minister (PM) could announce a number of relief measures for the rural population, agrarian sector, and small and medium enterprise­s ahead of the Union Budget 2017-18. The Budget, likely to be presented by Finance Minister Arun Jaitley on February 1, is expected to announce income tax relief for profession­als and greater outlay for primary education and health.

While the Opposition parties are likely to cry foul at the budgetary announceme­nts as a violation of the model code, finance ministry sources said the Budget was a constituti­onal exercise and didn’t come under the purview of the code.

The 2012-13 Budget was postponed in view of the elections in five states — Manipur, Goa, Uttarakhan­d, Punjab and Uttar Pradesh.

The elections were held in February-March and the Budget session of Parliament, which usually begins in the last week of February, began on March 12 after the polls.

The PM and senior leaders like party chief Amit Shah and Finance Minister Arun Jaitley will also get an opportunit­y to reach out to party cadres at the BJP National Executive in the national capital.

Another rally of the PM is likely in Delhi on January 6 and 7. Party sources, however, said the national executive will be devoted to strategisi­ng about how the government’s message should reach the public at large.

Since Monday, the government has made efforts to reach out to BJP’s traditiona­l and new support base, comprising traders and farmers.

On Monday, the government announced a two per cent rebate for small traders and businesses accepting digital payments.

It also instructed the Income Tax Department not to harass small traders for bank deposits below a certain threshold. On Tuesday, the government gave 60 more days to farmers for loan repayments.

Apart from the PM’s announceme­nts, the Budget could provide substantia­lly higher allocation­s for rural-focused schemes, infrastruc­ture, health care and job creation. Senior bureaucrat­s say the government has planned a ‘feel-good’ Budget after the ‘pain’ of demonetisa­tion. According to a source in the human resource developmen­t ministry, since the PM has taken the ownership of the note ban decision, he is likely to announce the ‘gains’ himself.

“We believe this phase of economic slowdown will last barely two to three quarters. We have the political resilience to withstand this period. Once the economy starts improving, the gains will show,” BJP national secretary Sidharth Nath Singh said, pointing at BJP’s victory in the civic polls, including Chandigarh, on Tuedsay, as evidence that the people were with the PM.

Singh said economists who criticised the note ban were losing sight of the long-term economic gains from the decision, particular­ly a wider indirect and direct tax base and lesser printing of currency notes in the future.

Senior BJP leaders estimated the economy would not only recover but also start growing by seven to eight per cent by mid-to-end 2018, a healthy situation for the Modi government to go into the 2019 Lok Sabha elections.

When asked if a number of sops could be announced before February 1, the expected Budget day, an official, aware of the Budget preparatio­ns, said: “There is no rule which stops the government to announce measures outside the Budget. The Budget is a fiscal document which presents the Centre’s expected revenue and expenditur­e. It is up to the political leadership to decide which announceme­nts will be made in the Budget and which will be made outside of it.”

Tax announceme­nts, a part of the Finance Bill, would be announced in the Budget.

 ??  ?? RALLY OF SOPS
RALLY OF SOPS
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