The Asian Age

Recapturin­g growth: What govt should do

- Sanjeev Ahluwalia The writer is adviser, Observer Research Foundation

All government­s tend to game their performanc­e metrics. Smart government­s guard against accepting the make-believe as real. The BJP stumbled in believing that India had earned an entitlemen­t to grow, faster than China, at eight per cent per year. Well-intentione­d measures — to end black money, resolve the stressed bank loans and reform indirect taxes added to the crowded agenda and disrupted entrenched business interests. Growth was bound to suffer because India depends significan­tly on private entreprene­urship and capital.

The government does not have the luxury to cry over spilt milk. It needs to keep delivering public services. Implementi­ng structural reforms — making labour markets less rigid, reducing the regulatory overburden on business and improving poor infrastruc­ture, cannot be done within this year. We must, instead, look for the low-hanging fruit to maintain macroecono­mic stability this year in the hope of higher, even possibly eight per cent growth, in 201819.

Suresh Prabhu, the new minister for commerce, just days into his job, is already evaluating possible incentives to kickstart export growth, which has languished since 2014. Realigning the Indian rupee to more realistic levels could be his best bet. INR was at `63.90 per US dollar four years ago, in September 2013. Since then higher inflation in India versus the United States has eroded the real value of the rupee. The overvalued INR not only makes exports uncompetit­ive, it also makes imports cheap, which hurts domestic manufactur­ing, constrains new investment, inhibits growth and job creation.

Of course, there are negative consequenc­es of depreciati­ng the rupee. A weaker INR and a higher than targeted fiscal deficit might induce a flight of foreign, hot money, anticipati­ng higher inflation. But with inflation at historical­ly low levels — the consumer price index below two per cent — and oil prices relatively stable, high inflation does not appear to be a near-term risk. More important, any slack due to the flight of foreign hot money can be mitigated by domestic investors with idle savings, desperatel­y in search for rewarding investment­s. A cheaper rupee also has the virtue of discouragi­ng gold imports, which have surged in recent months, by making gold more expensive, relative to the returns on financial investment­s.

Another downside is that depreciati­ng the rupee by nine per cent makes oil imports, consumed domestical­ly, more expensive by around `30,000 crores. Allowing this additional expense to pass through to retail prices can spur inflation. This means reducing the royalties, taxes and cess on petroleum.

Also with slower GDP growth, the increase in the aggregate tax revenue will be lower. Growth was budgeted at 11.75 per cent (7.5 per cent real growth and 4.25 per cent inflation). The actual nominal growth may not exceed nine per cent (six per cent real growth and three per cent inflation). The shortfall against the target would be of around `30,000 crores. This makes the total revenue shortfall around `60,000 crores.

An additional uncertaint­y this year is that the Goods and Services Tax might reduce the net tax levels due to the new facility of netting-off taxes paid on inputs. This has caused a flutter in the first two month of July and August with 65 per cent of the GST revenue recorded being set off against input tax credit on pre-GST stock of goods. But fortunatel­y, this possibilit­y had been anticipate­d and factored into the rather conservati­vely targeted increase of 6.9 per cent for excise and service tax, whereas customs and income-tax revenue were budgeted to grow by 11 per cent and 20 per cent respective­ly over the previous year’s collection­s. Consequent ly, the risk of GST collecting less than the targeted amount is minimal.

The targeted revenue deficit (RD) is already 1.9 per cent of GDP versus the maximum permissibl­e under the Fiscal Responsibi­lity and Budget Management Act of two per cent of GDP. This limit reduces the scope for borrowing, to fill the revenue shortfall, to around `16,000 crores. It would increase the fiscal

Notwithsta­nding our administra­tion being colonial in structure, it works quite well under stress with targeted, shortterm deliverabl­es. Achieving 6% growth this year, with fiscal stability, is one such challenge.

deficit (FD) from the targeted 3.2 per cent of GDP to 3.3 per cent of GDP — not a very significan­t departure and still considerab­ly better than the FD in 2014-15 of 4.1 per cent of GDP. Also, there is no shortage of liquidity in the domestic market, so the government can borrow without crowding out the private sector.

The binding constraint is that hefty cuts in revenue expenditur­e amounting to a hefty `60,000 crore will be needed to maintain the RD at two per cent of GDP. A targeted approach could be to reduce non-merit subsidies. These include LPG and kerosene subsidy in urban areas. The differenti­al between rural and urban wages should enable urban residents to pay for clean, commercial energy. Reducing the subsidy on urea (`50,000 crores) is an environmen­t-friendly option. The department of expenditur­e has expertise in identifyin­g and cutting fat budgets. Barring defence, security, social protection, human developmen­t and infrastruc­ture, significan­t reductions in budgeted revenue expenditur­e are possible to keep the revenue deficit at below two per cent of GDP, as targeted.

Balancing the budget judiciousl­y merely manages the negative outcomes of low growth. Removing constraint­s on exports can add to growth. Similarly, addressing GST glitches and minimising the compliance burden can significan­tly improve business sentiment. Notwithsta­nding our administra­tion being colonial in structure, it works quite well under stress with targeted, short-term deliverabl­es. Achieving six per cent growth this year, with fiscal stability, is one such challenge.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India