The Asian Age

Budget: Good intentions, but bit short on specifics

- Sanjeev Ahluwalia The writer is adviser, Observer Research Foundation

There are many good things in the FY 2022-23 Budget. But an answer to recover the growth impetus is not one of them. The 2022-23 Budget has chosen the route of public investment­led growth.

Afiscal deficit of 6.4 per cent of GDP on top of a revised fiscal deficit of 6.9 per cent of GDP in the current year and 9.5 per cent the year before is a strong endorsemen­t of what finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman, in her Union Budget speech on February 1, called “the need to nurture growth through public investment”.

Growth, or the lack of it, has been India’s primary concern since 2017-18. Consensus, however, is elusive on how to get growth restarted, not least because the Covid-19 pandemic has thrown up competing priorities around relief for those who have suffered economic and health damage.

The expectatio­n is that “growth” will come centre-stage from the next fiscal year as the pandemic becomes a bad memory and the existing combinatio­n of economic drivers allow the economy to wind back to its 2019-20 equilibriu­m. Sadly, this was a low-level equilibriu­m and hence the search for a solution to create a more virtuous cycle.

There are many good things in the FY 2022-23 Budget. But an answer to recover the growth impetus is not one of them. The 2022-23 Budget has chosen the route of public investment-led growth. The last “normal” year — FY 201920 — had sub four per cent real GDP growth. To take it to the 8-8.5 per cent of GDP that was suggested by the Economic Survey would require additional capital infusion of at least `16 trillion (seven per cent of GDP), assuming a low incrementa­l capital output ratio (ICOR) of four (four units of investment generate one unit of output).

The proposed additional public capital resources, over 2019-20 levels, are `5.8 trillion (`15.07 trillion, 6.8 per cent of 2022-23

GDP) less (`9.33 trillion, 4.6 per cent of 2019-20 GDP) — a net addition of 2.2 per cent of 2022-23 GDP (`258 trillion). State government­s, fiscally constraine­d by stability norms, might add `2 trillion or 0.8 per cent of GDP. This sums to incrementa­l investment of `8 trillion, or three per cent of GDP, which could generate an incrementa­l output of less than one per cent of GDP — not enough to bridge the gap of four per cent between 2019-20 growth and eight per cent.

Government investment constitute­d just 23 per cent of total investment in 2019-20. Maintainin­g elevated public investment levels without a matching increase in tax to GDP ratios — which remain stubbornly stable — would risk higher inflation. Public debt is at 90 per cent of GDP versus the targeted 60 per cent.

Even the choice of 11.1 per cent nominal GDP growth for the next fiscal reflects the possibilit­y that either inflation must quickly reduce to three per cent with eight per cent real growth, or if inflation remains elevated at five per cent, real growth will reduce to six per cent.

Sharply increased capital outlays must follow process reform. Massive public investment­s, unless planned, are inherently inefficien­t — indifferen­t project preparatio­n, long project implementa­tion periods, dodgy choice of projects, based on non-economic criteria, inhibit targeted outcomes — the high-level changes — like shifting mobility from private to public or reducing the travel time weighted by the number of people or the tonnage of goods transporte­d.

To be sure, even if a road is not complete, just building a part of it does generate sorely needed jobs and develops skills on the ground. But the economic benefits remain limited. Instead, putting income in the hands of people to survive (where markets are functional) could be a better option than offering them lowproduct­ivity temporary jobs. Add to that, the disadvanta­ges of spatial human dislocatio­n through migration, which large projects entail, and the advisabili­ty of such projects as a relief measure becomes even more doubtful.

Conversely, however, large projects are good for the formal corporate sector, since working at scale enhances profits. Sadly, the Budget ignored extracting as additional tax surcharge a part of the supra-normal profits that were earned by big corporates over the last two years, accompanie­d by higher market valuations on the back of low interest rate-fuelled domestic and foreign funds inflows.

The Budget does well to pare down new schemes to the minimum. The Narendra Modi government has been hyperactiv­e in launching new schemes. Consider, that in 2017-18 the Union Budget funded 73 major schemes. Their number has increased by 2022-23 to 103.

The finance minister has courageous­ly abandoned the virtuous stance of fiscal rectitude over the last two years of the Covid-19 pandemic. It is heartening that she now intends to traverse a gradual glide path to a fiscal deficit of 4.5 per cent of GDP by 2025-26. Inflation is already high in India (CPI 5.9 per cent) and abroad.

Interest rates will harden over the coming fiscal. Global and domestic uncertaint­ies abound, around the speed of normalisat­ion and the prospects for lower prices for petroleum fuel, the bulk of which we have to import.

High inflation hurts the poorest and is a graveyard for government­s. Reducing excise duties on fuel can help. But it entails a significan­t loss in revenue — `3.3 trillion for the Union and `2.2 trillion for the state government­s (ORF2020) together 2.5 per cent of GDP. Alternativ­ely, reducing import duties can lower consumer prices. But this contradict­s the strategy of privilegin­g domestic job creation and domestic producers.

Five new projects to link rivers are proposed. The Ken-Betwa link, in Madhya Pradesh and Uttar Pradesh, is the first. For water-scarce India, harnessing water resources sustainabl­y is a priority to guard against climate-driven disruption­s in rainfall patterns. But enlarging India’s forest coverage is also part of the strategy to reduce carbon emissions. Natural forests are denser and more efficient carbon sinks. “Zero damage to natural forests” is a good strategy for reaching Net Zero in 2070 and a cautionary red flag for such terrain-altering large projects.

The Budget is also heavy on proposing digitisati­on as a tool for enhancing efficiency and generating public data — the new oil. But guarding against vanity “sunrise” projects or not attempting to “buy into” the success of easy-to-commercial­ise technologi­es, where private interest abounds, is advisable. The “blue skies” proposals should be ranked for social and economic cost effectiven­ess before any large outlays get committed.

The finance minister has restored the transparen­cy and credibilit­y of the budgetary process. Her newly-found brevity in the Budget speech is a tribute to her capacity to abandon inefficien­t path dependenci­es. Enhancing the structural integrity of the Budget proposals should be the next step.

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