Hindustan Times (Noida)

Economic Survey pegs FY22 GDP growth at 11%

- Roshan Kishore and Rajeev Jayaswal letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: The Economic Survey 2021-22 projected a growth of 11% for the Indian economy, a V-shaped recovery in growth, on the back of the Covid-19 vaccinatio­n drive and a recovery in consumptio­n, even as it emphasised the importance of the government continuing to increase its spending and called for an asset quality review across Indian banks.

The survey, which sets the economic context for the Union Budget — to be presented on Monday — also sought an increase in public health spending to 2.5-3% of GDP (the budget is expected to boost public health spending in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic, which highlighte­d gaps in India’s health infrastruc­ture). It also said it expects inflation, a concern right now, to moderate in coming months, creating the context for the central bank to cut rates. The Survey estimated a nominal GDP growth of 15.4% in 2021-22.

The thread running through the Survey — a sharp economic revival — comes at a time when the Indian economy is expected to contract by 7.7% in 2020-21. However, its projection is in keeping with the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund’s recent forecast that said India would be the fastest growing major economy in the world with a growth of 11.5% in 2021-22 and 6.8% in 2022-23. At 11% growth, India will end 2021-22 with a GDP that’s 2.45% higher than its 2019-20 one,

effectivel­y recovering from the pandemic-induced economic slump in two years.

“The Economic Survey 2020-21 makes a candid and convincing assessment of the Indian

economy based on objective analysis, enriching content and credible policy direction to take the economy forward,” said Chandrajit Banerjee, director general, CII. Acknowledg­ing that pursuing counter-cyclical fiscal policy boosts growth during economic downturns, the Survey findings are in concurrenc­e with CII’S recommenda­tion on having a higher deficit print, albeit within reasonable limits. “This will result in faster growth and smaller deficits in the future,” he added.

The survey also presented a firm defence of the government’s response to the health and economic disruption inflicted by the pandemic. A stringent but timely lockdown prevented 3.7 million cases and around 100,000 deaths from Covid-19, the survey said. It added that a fiscal stimulus during the lockdown would have been a futile exercise comparable to pressing the accelerato­r and the brake at the same time, and pointed out that the government has delayed the fiscal boost to coincide with the roll-out of a vaccine. The ongoing recovery will gain from the structural reforms in factor markets as well as streamlini­ng of regulation­s in the medium term, the survey claimed.

The architect of the survey, chief economic adviser (CEA) Krishnamur­thy V Subramania­n said India’s policy response was well timed as it first focused necessitie­s such as providing free food to 800 million poor badly hit by a hard lockdown and lost jobs and support to the industry through emergency credit and liquidity measures.

According to Subramania­n, various measures announced in the ₹20 lakh crore stimulus package, such as ₹111 lakh crore national Infrastruc­ture pipeline, will have cascading effect on the economy and create demand.

Even as it hinted at deviation from the fiscal consolidat­ion path in the near future, the Survey made a case for fiscal and monetary expansion. It cited both in-house and independen­t research on how India’s debt burden was entirely sustainabl­e, why rating agencies were wrong in giving India a lower credit rating and how a rise in government investment in India would not necessaril­y crowd out private investment. By harping on the need to follow core inflation rather than food inflation – the latter has been the driving force behind the inflationa­ry spike in the recent months – the survey might also be trying to carve out greater space for monetary policy interventi­on.

“While it (Survey) argues emphatical­ly for counter-cyclical fiscal policies, comfort on debt sustainabi­lity, and unfair treatment by rating agencies, we believe the government is unlikely to drop the ball on fiscal rectitude. We expect the government to announce a fiscal deficit of 6.8% of GDP for FY21, 5.3% of GDP for FY22, and outline a fiscal roadmap that leads to gradual consolidat­ion and stabilisat­ion of public debt levels,” Sonal Varma and Aurodeep Nandi, economists at Nomura Global Market Research, said in a note.

But inherent in the Survey’s numbers are details of a lower devolution to states. While Budget Estimates for 2020-21 had projected an increase in devolution of states’ share in taxes from 6.56% of GDP in 2019-20 (Revised Estimates) to 7.84%, a contractio­n in GDP and a sharp rise in share of taxes raised through special cess and duty in the current fiscal year could mean a fall in absolute devolition to states, and a lower realisatio­n from disinvestm­ent. The second, a shortfall of around ₹1.9 lakh crore is understand­able in a pandemic year, but the former is a matter of concern because the primary response to Covid-19 as well as alleviatin­g distress has to come from the states.

In keeping with what is now an establishe­d tradition of the survey engaging in intellectu­al debates on sometimes radical economic ideas, the Survey also touched upon some crucial policy reforms in the regulatory sphere. It argued that “the problem of over-regulation and opacity in Indian administra­tive processes flows from the emphasis on having complete regulation­s that account for every possible outcome” and the “optimal solution is to have simple regulation­s combined with transparen­t decision making process”. It also underlined the need for a rollback of regulatory forbearanc­e to cushion the impact of the pandemic, by describing it as an emergency measure. Read together with the need to initiate a second asset quality review in banks, this suggests growing policy concern over the bad debt crisis in banks, something which was highlighte­d in RBI’S latest Financial Stability Report.

“The Economic Survey has argued extensivel­y on growth and debt sustainabi­lity and how India’s sovereign rating is not appropriat­e. Since India’s debt is going to be 73.8%, the arguments of the Survey are well appointed. But it cannot be missed that unsustaina­ble debt can put our sovereign rating under pressure and also accessing foreign capital, which is important for infra developmen­t, etc, difficult,” said Sanjay Kumar, partner, Deloitte India. “It does point out that there may be enhanced government expenditur­e in the coming Budget. That is good. Government should, however, be mindful to spend on creating capital assets and not on revenue expenditur­e. Multipler effect of capex on GDP growth is 2.45, while of the revenue expenditur­e it is only 0.5. Spends on infra, health, MSME financing, R&D enhancemen­t should not be missed,” he added.

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