Deccan Chronicle

Growth crawls, DeMo blues linger

- Parsa Venkateshw­ar Rao Jr

Both the World Bank and the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund have pegged the Indian economy’s growth rate at 7.2 per cent for 2017-18, about four points up from 6.8 per cent for 2016-17. There is not much spring in the growth rate step: it is trudging well, but nothing beyond that. Consider this against the shrill claims by Prime Minister Narendra Modi and finance minister Arun Jaitley, specially with regard to demonetisa­tion, this government’s much-proclaimed surgical strike against black money.

Mr Modi’s post-Uttar Pradesh Assembly poll jibe last month about hard work disproving Harvard (university-based and educated economists) and Mr Jaitley’s remark in the Lok Sabha in his reply to the Finance Bill 2017 debate that the people of UP had endorsed demonetisa­tion seems a bit frivolous. The rhetoric by Mr Modi, Mr Jaitley and their government and BJP colleagues can’t conjure away the economic dampener that demonetisa­tion has been.

The political strike rate of the Modi government is at a brisker rate than that of the economy. Like all facile politician­s, the Prime Minister, the finance minister and others in the government are slipping into the false belief that electoral victories connote success on the economic front. The government has gone silent on the good that demonetisa­tion is supposed have done to the economy.

It is busy preparing for the election in Gujarat at the end of this year, and other Assembly elections in 2018 followed by the Lok Sabha elections of 2019. The economy thus goes on the back-burner except for talk about the rolling out of the Goods and Services Tax (GST) on July 1. The recommenda­tion of the N.K. Singh committee for the Debt and Fiscal Responsibi­lity Act to replace the little-over decade-old Fiscal Responsibi­lity and Budget Management (FRBM) Act is a long-term gambit, which began when V.P. Singh was finance minister in the Rajiv Gandhi Cabinet in the mid1980s, will only be a windowdres­ser and nothing more.

The potholes of demonetisa­tion are mentioned in the Reserve Bank of India’s Monetary Policy Report for April 2017.

Earlier, in the Monetary Policy Statement of April 6, when the reverse repo rate (the interest rate paid to retail banks for parking their funds with the central bank) was increased from 5.75 per cent to 6 per cent, it was spelt out: “Activity in the services sector appears to be improving as the constraini­ng effects of demonetisa­tion wear off.” A little later it refers to the remonetisa­tion (antidote to demonetisa­tion) process: “With progressiv­e remonetisa­tion, the surplus liquidity in the banking system declines from a peak of `7,956 billion on January 4, 2017 to an average of `6.016 billion in February and further down to `4,806 billion in March.”

The beans are spilled, as it were, where it is stated that one of the reasons that shaped the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) stance was “an overwhelmi­ng preference for waiting out the transitory effects of demonetisa­tion”. In discussing the outlook for inflation, the report hints in a tentative and uneasy tone: “As vegetable price declines were likely on account of demonetisa­tion-driven distress sales in addition to seasonal factors, remonetisa­tion could fuel a sharp reversal in vegetable prices, going forward. This developmen­t imparts uncertaint­y to the near-term outlook for inflation.”

It shows that vegetable prices plunged as much as 21 per cent after demonetisa­tion, between November 2016 and February 2017. There were “distress sales” of fruits and vegetables and other perishable goods during this period because of demonetisa­tion.

The report ties itself up in knots in a way when it wants to downplay the negative impact of demonetisa­tion while noting at the same time how the impact is being countered through remonetisa­tion. It dismisses with certain contempt the doomsayers with the observatio­n: “With the effects of demonetisa­tion turning out to be shortlived and modest relative to some doomsday expectatio­ns, the outlook for 2017-18 has been brightened considerab­ly by a number of factors. First, with the accelerate­d pace of remonetisa­tion, discretion­ary consumer spending held back by demonetisa­tion is expected to have picked up from Q4 2016-17, and will gather momentum over several quarters ahead.

The recovery will also likely be aided by the reduction in banks’ lending rates due to large inflows of current and savings account deposits, although the fuller transmissi­on impact might be impeded by stressed balance sheets of banks and the tepid demand for bank credit.”

This was the after-effect of demonetisa­tion and the adjustment that was required to be made by the banking system. And this was no routine matter where money flow in the economy through cash and bills is always in a state of flux and there is a semblance of equilibriu­m. Whether demonetisa­tion improved the economy remains an open question.

The RBI has not yet offered any sustained analysis of the impact of demonetisa­tion. It has in the Monetary Policy Report of April just mentioned the measures taken to deal with the liquidity surge in bank coffers as people deposited all the specified banknotes — the `500 and `1,000 denominati­on notes — in banks. It is not yet clear how much of it was unaccounte­d for and therefore untaxed money.

It would be a weak argument to say that demonetisa­tion has not unearthed black money, which was the ostensible aim of the crude policy measure. Demonetisa­tion hurt the economy more than anything else. It was not mere shortterm inconvenie­nce for people at large, particular­ly for those in the predominan­tly cashbased unorganise­d sector.

The banking system was forced to make huge adjustment­s in terms of managing liquidity, including creation of appropriat­e financial instrument­s. And it affects the long-term policy of the RBI to create the required equilibriu­m of money flows and to boost credit growth so that the economy in general can take off. Policy pyrotechni­cs of the kind that the Prime Minister has indulged in is not exactly an ideal means to improve economic growth rates. Reality is unbending and resistant, and propaganda does not help in altering facts. The author is a Delhi-based commentato­r and analyst

Demonetisa­tion hurt the economy more than anything else. It was not mere short-term inconvenie­nce for people at large, particular­ly for those in the predominan­tly cash-based unorganise­d sector. The banking system was forced to make adjustment­s in terms of managing liquidity...

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