The Asian Age

Survey predicts growth rise to 6-6.5% in 2020-21

Sitharaman to table Budget at 11 am today

- MADHUSUDAN SAHOO

Batting for massive wealth creation in the coming financial year, the Economic Survey 2020 on Friday projected that the country’s economy would grow at 6-6.5 per cent in the fiscal year starting April 1, 2020, while the economic growth for FY20 would remain at five per cent. In the Survey, tabled by finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman a day before the Union Budget for 2020-21, the government also called for measures to expeditiou­sly deliver in order to create a $5-trillion economy by 2024. Ms Sitharaman will present the Union Budget in the Lok Sabha at 11 am on Saturday.

However, it also warned against a widening fiscal deficit, stating that the government might need to relax its target of 3.3 per cent of GDP for the current financial year to boost growth from over a decade low. Besides, the government also emphasised on cutting food subsidies, and at the same time looking at businessme­n with respect as they create wealth and jobs in the country. Commenting on the Survey, Prime Minister Narendra Modi tweeted to say it has focused on wealth creation for all Indians. “It outlines a multi-faceted strategy to achieve a $5 trillion economy through

enterprise, exports, ease of doing business and more. On the other hand, economists believe that the Survey’s growth forecast is too optimistic as the recovery is likely to be slow and shallow amid rising inflation and declining investment.

The Survey, written by Krishnamur­thy Subramania­n, chief economic adviser to the finance ministry, also introduced 10 new ideas to boost growth, including wealth creation that benefits all, markets enable wealth creation, trust is a public good that increases with use, grassroots entreprene­uers that create wealth in their districts, pro-business policies give equal opportunit­y, remove anachronis­tic government interventi­ons, job creation, etc.

Besides, the Survey called for boosting manufactur­ing with the “assemble in India for the world” concept, and underlined the need to spend $1.4 trillion in infrastruc­ture to nearly double the size of the economy to $5 trillion. Listing global trade tensions and oil prices rising from an escalation in the US-Iran standoff as downside risks to growth, the Survey also pointed out that India’s GDP growth should strongly rebound in 2020-21 on a low statistica­l base of five per cent growth in 2019-20.

Amid soaring expenditur­e due to big ticket announceme­nts and shrinking revenue in 2019, the government targeted containing the fiscal deficit at `7.04 lakh crores, or 3.3 per cent of gross domestic product, in the financial year ending March 2020, up from `6.49 lakh crores, or 3.4 per cent of GDP, in the previous year.

Despite the global slowdown, Mr Subramania­n is confident that economic slowdown has bottomed out and India’s GDP will grow at 6-6.5 per cent in the next fiscal year. However, he rejected his predecesso­r Arvind Subramania­n’s analysis of India’s GDP growth rate being overestima­ted by 2.7 per cent post-2011, saying that the allegation was “unfounded” and “unsubstant­iated by the data”.

“If you look at the business cycle phenomena in India, typically if you look at the peaks and troughs and co-relate it with what has happened, it seems like we have hit the trough therefore there should be uptick in growth. That is what we are budgeting,” he said at a media briefing here on Friday.

Amidst a weak environmen­t for global manufactur­ing, trade and demand, the Indian economy slowed down with GDP growth moderating to 4.8 per cent in the first half of 2019-20, lower than 6.2 per cent in H2 of 2018-19. Asked if there is any change in meeting the $5 trillion target by 2024, Mr Subramania­n said: “To the best of my knowledge, there is no change in the deadline.”

Mr Subramania­n also said by focusing on the labour-intensive sector, India can create four crore jobs by 2025 and eight crore jobs by 2030. “The banking sector needs to scale up and become proportion­al to the size of the economy. The exponentia­l rise in India’s GDP and GDP per capita post-liberalisa­tion coincides with wealth generation in the stock market,” he said.

Interestin­gly, the Survey also traced the country’s history, right from ancient texts such as Arthashast­ra and Thirukural to contempora­ry times, and the problem of bad loans. It also drew links between the invisible hand of the market, the hand of the trust and how it can contrib-ute to India’s target of becoming a $5 trillion economy.

The survey also introduced the concept of trust as a public good that gets enhanced with greater use, and suggested policies must empower transparen­cy and effective enforcemen­t using data and technology to enhance this public good.

Facing the worst economic slowdown since the global financial crisis of 2008-09, the Survey called for boosting manufactur­ing with an “assemble in India for the world” concept in order to boost job creation. For the current fiscal, it projected GDP growth of five per cent, the lowest in 11 years, and worsening job prospects.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India