Business Today

Vectoring the 3Fs Is Crucial

FARM DISTRESS RESOLUTION, FACILITATI­NG JOBS AND FOCUS ON FISCAL PRUDENCE SHOULD BE THE GOVERNMENT’S PRIORITIES.

- BY DHARMAKIRT­I JOSHI

It would be fair to call the just-concluded 2018 a year of recovery as the economy rebounded from demonetisa­tion and glitches in the levy of Goods and Services Tax (GST). A moderate pick-up in growth and low inflation despite spiralling crude prices also helped. But inflation was low mainly due to weak food prices, which meant farmers were – and are – in pain. Plus, the country did not escape the global tailspin in equities. The selloff in emerging market bonds also hurt currencies of countries with current account deficits and India was no exception.

So where do we go from here? Given that the external environmen­t will remain stormy, with the US interest rates higher and protection­ist winds still threatenin­g growth and trade, India will have to lean on domestic factors in fiscals 2019 and 2020, and perhaps beyond that.

Essentiall­y, the new year will be about staying on the curve, which will require fixing domestic priorities and doggedly pursuing them even as new global challenges loom. That is why the policy stance of the government becomes all-important this year. Of course, monetary and fiscal stimuli or farm loan waivers can push the growth cycle, but they do little to lift the growth potential of the economy or the trend rate of growth. The government, therefore, needs to focus on what can be called the ‘ three Fs’.

F1: Farm Distress Resolution Despite three consecutiv­e spells of normal rainfall and healthy farm output, agricultur­al distress is mounting. Higher minimum support prices, or MSPs, have not helped either, owing to sluggish procuremen­t. Real and nominal agricultur­al gross domestic product (GDP) stood at 4.6 per cent and 4.9 per cent, respective­ly, in the first half of FY2018/19. In the second quarter, the nominal fell below the real GDP growth, indicating falling pricing power at the farm level. Many crops are still selling below the MSP.

The problem is that the brand new year could continue to be a challengin­g one for agricultur­e.

The World Meteorolog­ical Organizati­on is forecastin­g 2019 as an El Nino year, and the odds are against another normal monsoon. So, it is important to focus on the long-term solution, which should be about disinterme­diation and clipping middlemen’s margins.

The government could take a leaf out of the dairy farming experience. Unlike the growers of crops and vegetables or horticultu­rists, dairy farmers capture a larger part of the value chain. Replicatin­g that

will improve farm incomes while keeping food inflation low.

The received wisdom is that for unshacklin­g agricultur­al markets, doing away with the Agricultur­al Produce Market Committee (APMC) Act is critical. But there has been very slow progress regarding this with states’ resistance reflecting entrenched vested interests. State government­s need to be pursued on a war footing to kick in lasting reforms rather than resorting to Faustian farm loan waivers.

Finally, the agricultur­e sector is supporting far too many people who need to be moved to other productive areas.

F2: Facilitati­ng Job Creation India will contribute about a quarter to the rise in global working-age population over the next decade. Given that, creating jobs and skilling people will pose a big challenge. What’s more, swift technologi­cal advancemen­ts and advent of artificial intelligen­ce will rapidly result in job displaceme­nt/disruption in the future. The net impact on jobs may not be positive as it has been in the past as jobs requiring cognitive skills are also at risk.

In a bid to counter mediumand long-term challenges to job creation, the government should focus on an expansive mix. Given the risk of monsoon failure this year, job safety net programmes such as the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme must be leveraged well. Alongside, it is imperative to push economic activity in labour-intensive sectors such as manufactur­ing and constructi­on and across services such as healthcare.

So far, the investment thrust has come from the public sector. Now, a decisive shift needs to be made towards a public-privatepar­tnership model and asset monetisati­on to generate investible resources for infrastruc­ture. It will also support private investment revival and job creation.

F3: Fiscal Prudence

Amid mounting global risks and slowing growth, maintainin­g macroecono­mic prudence and reducing external vulnerabil­ity are critical as vulnerable countries tend to get punished more in a risk-off scenario. In 2013, we saw how the high and rising twin deficits – current account and fiscal – created huge volatility in Indian currency. Even with reduced vulnerabil­ity, the recent sell-off in emerging markets led to a sharper-than-expected weakening of the rupee.

Maintainin­g a tight fiscal ship helps keep vulnerabil­ity to global shocks in check, in addition to facilitati­ng monetary easing for which conditions are ripening. In the medium term, India can offset some of the global headwinds by focussing on efficiency-enhancing domestic reforms.

Sure, India will rake in the benefits of past reforms on account of GST, Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, financial inclusion, digitalisa­tion, focus on infrastruc­ture developmen­t and improving the ease of doing business. But these are still works in progress and need relentless execution in an election year.

A stable political outcome will make the ride less rough.

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