Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Panel may seek study of note ban impact

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com ▪

NEWDELHI: A parliament­ary panel may ask the Narendra Modi government to study the impact of the 2016 invalidati­on of highvalue banknotes and the 2017 introducti­on of the goods and services tax (GST) on key economic benchmarks such as gross domestic product (GDP), investment, and industrial production.

The panel may also flag “several inadequaci­es” in the way GDP — the value of goods and services produced in the economy — is calculated and insist that it take into account GST to “reflect reality”, Hindustan Times has learnt.

The government justified the recall of old, high-value banknotes on grounds that it would help unearth black money and fake currency and curb terror financing.

Later, it said the move would help shift India to a less-cash economy by promoting digital transactio­ns. GST, which subsumed an array of local, statelevel and central taxes, was billed as the biggest tax reform since Independen­ce.

In a draft report, the Estimates Committee of Parliament, led by Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) veteran Murali Manohar Joshi, acknowledg­ed that the November 8, 2016 invalidati­on of ~500 and ~1,000 currency notes had led to an increase in digital transactio­ns. GST kicked into force on July 1, 2017 .

HT has learnt that the draft report added: “The extent to which demonetiza­tion and GST have affected the GDP, investment, industrial production, credit growth, capacity utilizatio­n etc, their impact in concrete terms is yet to be worked out.” The panel has recommende­d that the impact of these policies on various parameters of the economy may be worked out and intimated to them within three months.

PANEL MAY ALSO FLAG ‘INADEQUACI­ES’ IN THE WAY GDP IS CALCULATED AND INSIST THAT IT TAKE INTO ACCOUNT GST TO ‘REFLECT REALITY’

The draft report, a final version of which is expected to be tabled in Parliament in the upcoming budget session, effectivel­y suggests a change in the way GDP is measured. In 2015, the government adopted a new method of calculatin­g GDP, revising the base year on which comparison­s are made to 2011-12 from 2004-05, expanding its coverage of manufactur­ing and including underrepre­sented sectors and data from the corporate database. According to the new GDP series with 2011-12 as the base year, the economy grew 7.3% in the first four years of the National Democratic Alliance (NDA) government, outpacing the 6.7% and 6.4% achieved during the two terms of the previous United Progressiv­e Alliance (UPA) government.

HT has learnt that the Joshiled panel quoted former economic advisor Arvind Subramania­n to say that “the most frequently used indicator for measuring growth of the economy, has many deficienci­es and it has been elevated and given the sanctity that, may be, it does not deserve.”

The panel is likely to remark that the GDP growth does not necessaril­y mean that there is growth in every area and growth in the income of every individual.

Pointing out that the GDP measure does not take into account the depletion of natural resources such as water and the effects of an environmen­tal crisis, the draft report of the panel said some socio-economic factors need to be accounted for to ensure it reflects “ground reality and is near to realty/ public perception thereby adding confidence in the government statistics”.

The Centre has already formed a sub-committee to look into ways in which data from GST Network, the technology backbone of the new taxation regime, can be used in compiling GDP. “Understand­ing the impact of GST and demonetisa­tion are welcome steps provided those are undertaken by academicia­ns and not done in a haste to prove or disprove a certain idea. It will give out valuable lessons that India can share with the world,” said economist Tamal Sarkar. “Sustainabi­lity devoid GDP growth rates are at best short term growths which may or may not be sustainabl­e in the long run. It is time that GDP includes sustainabi­lity issues in a robust form such that one takes into account a growth phenomenon that is sustainabl­e and reflects to a great extent the long run growth rate of the economy,” he added.

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