Business Standard

Can India sustain growth at 7-8%? A PIECE OF MY MIND

To do so, the government will have to tackle a number of broad developmen­t challenges successful­ly

- SHANKAR ACHARYA

Ever since the Second Advanced Estimates of National Income for 2016-17 were released at end-February, projecting gross domestic product (GDP) growth of 7.1 per cent, there have been numerous statements by government spokesmen pointing to the limited adverse impact of demonetisa­tion and confidentl­y expecting GDP growth in the order of 7.5 per cent or higher in 2017-18. There has also been a subtext that the Indian economy is back on a sustainabl­e, medium-term growth path of 7-8 per cent. Is this really so?

Several analysts (such as Sudipto Mundle in Mint, March 17, 2017 and Indira Rajaraman in Mint, April 7, 2017) have pointed out that in the early assessment­s of national income by the Central Statistica­l Organisati­on (CSO), the estimates of gross value added (GVA) at basic prices, built up from the sectoral side, are substantia­lly more reliable than those of GDP at market prices from the side of broad expenditur­e categories. They note that growth of GVA is officially estimated to decline to 6.7 per cent in 2016-17 from 7.8 per cent in 2015-16. Furthermor­e, if one separates out the sectors relatively insensitiv­e to demonetisa­tion (such as agricultur­e, utilities and public services) and focuses on those sectors (industry and other services) where the impact of demonetisa­tion was expected to be significan­t, then even the official data show marked slowdown of value-added growth. Thus, Dr Mundle notes that growth of the latter category of “industry and other services” (accounting for about 70 per cent of GVA) slowed from 6.7 per cent in 2015-16 to 4.5 per cent in 2016-17.

Furthermor­e, the CSO’s Advanced Estimates use very little actual data on India’s informal or unorganise­d sector, relying instead on proxies from the organised sector. This standard methodolog­y may be particular­ly vulnerable when all available “anecdotal” informatio­n indicates that the tremendous cash squeeze exerted by demonetisa­tion in the November 2016-February 2017 period had a disproport­ionate negative impact on unorganise­d trade, industry and services. To allow for this possible weakness in the CSO estimates, Dr Mundle uses a “leading indicators model” (relying heavily on trends on non-food bank credit) to separately estimate GVA growth in 2016-17 at 6.1 per cent. Over the next year or so, the CSO’s estimates for 2016-17 will get revised, several times. Only then will we know how close was Dr Mundle’s estimate to the “final” CSO estimate.

The point of all this is to acknowledg­e that India’s economic growth (in GVA terms) in 2016-17 was very likely to have been significan­tly below 7 per cent. With the process of “remonetisa­tion” largely complete by mid-April, a rebound in economic growth to 7 per cent or higher is quite possible in 2017-18. The real issue is, can 7-8 per cent growth be sustained in the medium-term, say, over the coming five years?

That looks increasing­ly difficult, given legacy problems and recent trends and developmen­ts:

Legacy constraint­s include unreformed, law-distorted land and labour markets, woefully weak public education and health systems, poor infrastruc­ture in transport, energy, water and sanitation, and little investment in science and R&D.

Gross fixed investment nation-wide stagnated last year. As a ratio to GDP it has fallen from 30 per cent in 2014-15 to 27 per cent in 2016-17. Rarely has any country grown at 7 per cent plus with gross fixed investment rates below 30 per cent, and that too declining.

A major deterrent to investment has been the growing “twin balance sheet” problems of highly stressed public sector bank asset portfolios and overly leveraged borrower companies. Despite some initiative­s and much discussion, a broadly viable framework for resolution has remained elusive.

Another has been post-2009 history of high fiscal and revenue deficits (central and state government­s combined), which have preempted private financial savings to fund government borrowing, reduced public savings, and made prudent monetary policy difficult. Modest reductions in central government fiscal deficits over the past three years have been largely negated by rising deficits of state government­s.

The recent announceme­nt by the new Uttar Pradesh (UP) government of a hefty ~37,000 crore farm loan waiver programme will weaken both the financial system and government­al efforts towards fiscal consolidat­ion, especially if other states emulate such action. Reserve Bank of India Governor Urjit Patel has been forthright in criticisin­g the UP loan waiver announceme­nt for underminin­g the credit culture and discipline and weakening state and national fiscal health. If similar actions are taken by other states as part of competitiv­e populist politics, overall fiscal deficits will rise inexorably, priority developmen­t programmes will suffer, interest rates will go up and growth will weaken. Governor Patel has rightly pleaded for a consensus against such general loan waivers.

The ramping up of actions against bovine slaughterh­ouses in UP and other states have also hit major employment-intensive industries of meat-processing and leather, both of which also make significan­t contributi­ons to national exports. Kirit Parikh has pointed out (Times of India, April 10, 2017) that a nation-wide ban on cow slaughter could seriously damage the economic viability of the dairy industry. He goes so far as to argue, “The ban on cow slaughter will result in a ban on cows. They may disappear from India.”

Judicial decisions have also taken their toll of economic activity. For example, the recent ban on liquor sales near highways could have major adverse consequenc­es for the hospitalit­y and tourism industries. The CEO of NITI Aayog has tweeted that a million jobs could be hit. State revenues would also suffer, worsening an already weak condition of state finances.

India’s merchandis­e exports have stagnated, or worse, since 2011-12, with 2016-17 expected to show $270 billion. This is in sharp contrast to the period between 2003-4 and 2011-12, when the value of merchandis­e exports surged from $66 billion to $310 billion. Unsurprisi­ngly, that was the period when GDP growth averaged over 8 per cent a year. For 7 per cent plus economic growth to be sustained in future, export performanc­e has to improve markedly. That does not look imminent, given global economic conditions and the current over-valuation of the rupee.

To sum up, for India to achieve 7-8 per cent economic growth over the medium-term, the government will have to tackle successful­ly a broad range of developmen­t challenges.

 ?? ILLUSTRATI­ON BY BINAY SINHA ??
ILLUSTRATI­ON BY BINAY SINHA
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