Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Govt flattened wrong curve: Rajiv Bajaj to Rahul Gandhi

- Aurangzeb Naqshbandi and Rajeev Jayswal letters@hindustant­imes.com

on the importance of a stimulus to boost demand, Rajiv Bajaj, managing director of Bajaj Auto, said in a video conversati­on with former Congress president Rahul Gandhi that the 68-day lockdown to flatten the Covid-19 curve ended up flattening the “wrong curve” of the economic growth.

He said the lockdown has not been able to check growth of Covid-19, but ended up hurting the economy. “You [the government] flattened the wrong curve. It is not the infection curve, it is the GDP [gross domestic product] curve,” Bajaj told Gandhi.

Bajaj was speaking to Gandhi as part of the series of video conversati­ons with global and Indian thought leaders to discuss the Covid-19 crisis and its consequenc­es on the country’s economy.

According to official data, the economy grew 3.1% in the three months ended March 31, 2020 and 4.2% -- the slowest pace in 11 years -- in the financial year 2019-20.

The lockdown is expected to dent the growth further.

Days after the release of official GDP data, Moody’s Investors Service cut India’s rating by one notch to the lowest investment grade with a negative outlook, citing growing risks that Asia’s third largest economy will face a period of slower growth.

On June 2, while addressing businessme­n Prime Minister Narendra Modi voiced confidence in the economy’s ability to return to a path of rapid growth. “Yes ! We will definitely get our growth back,” Modi said in his speech to a conference on ‘Getting Growth Back’ organised by the Confederat­ion of Indian Industry (CII).

The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) dismissed Bajaj’s views.

“This is Rajiv Bajaj’s personal opinion and in India everyone is allowed to have one. The government has said that we bought time to build health infrastruc­ture so that we can open economic activity. Today, we have robust structures to combat Covid-19 spread,” said BJP spokespers­on Gopal Agarwal.

In the interactio­n, Bajaj said India’s lockdown strategy was influenced by the West. Despite being an Asian country, India preferred to tackle the situation like the developed West, instead of looking at what was happening in the East. Bajaj gave examples of Japan and Sweden, where measures such as sanitisati­on, masks and social distancing were followed, but where the countries kept the wheels of economy turning. “...India not only looked West, it went to the wild west. I think we stayed more towards the impervious side. We tried to implement a hard lockdown which was still porous,” he said.

India lifted many restrictio­ns on June 1 and has said even more would be opened up by June 8.

Bajaj also urged PM Modi to spell out how the country would move forward after the lockdown is fully lifted. “I am really distressed because it is a herculean task to open up economic activities .... There has to be a very clear aligned narrative from the PM because, whether right or wrong, when he says something people seem to follow,” he said.

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