Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

FIREFIGHTI­NG ON ECONOMY FRONT

Inadequate revival in consumptio­n and stagnant investment have hit India’s economy hard. The government has taken measures to revive growth, and maintains that the fundamenta­ls of economy are strong

- Roshan Kishore roshan.k@htlive.com ■

In the Hindustan Times Leadership Summit, held earlier in December, when finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman was asked whether the economy had already bottomed out (in terms of falling growth rates), she displayed guarded optimism. “I’d like to believe that [the economy has bottomed out)] and I’d like to believe that that’s true of some sectors in specific. But in some other sectors, may be they would want some more help…If it happens, so be it and I’ll be happy for it. But I think my attention will be only on making sure that all is done through a greater stimulus,” she said.

Her remarks capture the dominant sentiment 2019 evoked on the economy front — that of constant fire-fighting to keep it on track.

The Indian economy has lost growth momentum for six consecutiv­e quarters up to September 2019. This is the longest recorded decelerati­on phase for the economy from December 1999 onwards, the earliest period for which quarterly growth data is available. This decelerati­on has continued despite the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) cutting policy rates, raising questions about the efficacy of one of the most important policy instrument­s in the economy. In fact, RBI itself has been bringing down its projected growth rates in successive Monetary Policy Committee meetings.

RBI has not been the only one trying to revive economic activity. The government, too, has taken several measures. In November, Sitharaman informed Parliament that the government had taken 32 measures to revive growth and address issues faced by the various sectors. These included a cut in corporate taxes, a real estate fund aimed at reviving incomplete projects, the merger of banks, and a large-scale disinvestm­ent exercise.

Addressing reporters immediatel­y after announceme­nt of the GDP numbers for the July-September quarter, department of economic affairs (DEA) secretary Atanu Chakrabort­y and chief economic adviser (CEA) KV Subramania­n said consumptio­n and investment were expected to pick up in the subsequent quarters. “The economy has bottomed out,” Chakrabort­y said, adding that the fundamenta­ls of the Indian economy were very strong, as reflected in factors such as “low inflation, macro-economic stability, low fiscal deficit and good foreign reserves”.

Low growth has not been the only problem for the Indian economy this year. 2019 has also been a year when India’s economic statistics faced a serious credibilit­y crisis.

In June 2019, Arvind Subramania­n, who was the Chief Economic Advisor under the first Narendra Modi government, published a paper arguing that India’s official GDP (gross domestic product) figures had a large overestima­tion bias. While the new GDP series has been criticised by independen­t economists, a former CEA questionin­g its validity triggered a fresh debate.

Earlier in February, months before the general elections, leaked findings from the first Periodic Labour Force Survey (PLFS) report, the successor to the earlier Employment Unemployme­nt Surveys of the National Sample Survey Office (NSSO), were published in the Business Standard newspaper. PLFS findings showed that unemployme­nt rate was at 6.1% in 2017-18, the highest in four and a half decades. The leak was preceded by two nongovernm­ent members of the National Statistica­l Commission resigning in protest against the withholdin­g of the NSSO data. The data controvers­y erupted again when leaked findings of NSSO’s Consumptio­n Expenditur­e Survey (CES), showing a real decline in average consumptio­n between 2011-12 and 2017-18, were published in November. Unlike PLFS, which was released formally after the elections, the government decided to scrap CES. These entire set of events made critics question the credibilit­y of India’s official economic statistics, which have traditiona­lly been considered to be among the best outside the developed world. The controvers­y over official statistics and a perception that the government might be unwilling to release data which does not show the economy in good light has spooked not just academics but also internatio­nal organisati­ons and rating agencies. For example, the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund has raised objections over India’s GDP methodolog­y earlier this month and Moody’s downgraded India’s rating in November.

Even as the economy is hoping to revive itself, high food prices, especially that of vegetables, have begun to pinch family budgets after many years. Large-scale crop destructio­n due to untimely rains has triggered a huge spike in prices of vegetables such as onions, forcing the government to use measures such as export bans and even order imports. Trends in food inflation have seen a sharp reversal in the course of the year.

The developmen­ts in the real economy, however, do not seem to have affected wealth creation in the stock markets. Stock markets are at an all-time high in the country and have gained 14.6% this year (till December 30, 2019).

 ?? ILLUSTRATI­ON: MOHIT SUNEJA ??
ILLUSTRATI­ON: MOHIT SUNEJA
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