The Sunday Guardian

India declares war on an invisible enemy: Covid-19

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i.e., carriers/communicat­ors of the deadly virus. The authoritie­s were oblivious. The authoritie­s could have also commandeer­ed two or three large hotels in the airport complex in major cities to create ad hoc hospitals.

The hotels near Delhi airport should have been commandeer­ed for admitting the suspected cases for quarantine, but not for treating the infected.

The same plan should have subsequent­ly been executed for Mumbai, Hyderabad and Chennai, and to other cities if necessary. This was not done. Complacenc­y?

Even later, in the month of March, for the Rashtrapat­i Bhavan breakfast meeting of some Ministers and MPS [in the third week, on March 11 and 18], no precaution­ary checks were made by the authoritie­s. This led to subsequent discovery of an MP possibly being infected, and hence tests had to be carried out on the Ministers and the Rashtrapat­i also.

Now the situation is on the cusp of reaching the third stage, because of the danger of infected resident Indians communicat­ing the virus to other local Indians, whereby those in India declared positive for Covid-19 would serially infect other Indians, and the spread would go up exponentia­lly and could reach a large section of the population of India by June this year.

The entire medical system would then have collapsed long before—around April third week. Chaos would result. Alarmist as it may sound, it is now better to be over prepared and alive than being complacent and dead.

Fortunatel­y, Prime Minister Modi has personally intervened and has now declared a 21-day total lockdown on March 25, just past midnight. This will give the authoritie­s time to focus on the single task of ensuring all infrastruc­tural arrangemen­ts are made to give Covid-19 positive patients the opportunit­y to survive and recuperate.

I would suggest that to make the lockdown very effective, Delhi should be made into a nerve centre for supervisin­g and administer­ing the entire nation, for which the law and order machinery needs to be handed over to the Armed Forces. Delhi Police already is overworked and lacks the necessary preparatio­ns to meet the demands of the nerve centre. The Armed Forces, by training, are equipped on a contingenc­y basis situation to be hardware and software prepared.

The second step I suggest is for Union Government to get vacated AIIMS and five other hospitals in the Delhi airport area and designate and reserve them for Covid-19 patients only. The state government­s, with Centre’s help, should replicate that modus operandi in their governance domain. The IAF should be given the task to move the infected in military transport planes to these designated hospitals.

I am suggesting all this because statistics show that “community infection” by the novel coronaviru­s, as we have seen in Northern Italy, has yet to begin in India. Once it starts, it will come in waves unless we are already sufficient­ly prepared for it. It is better to err on excessive preparatio­n than underestim­ate the pandemic and regret it. afflicted by a poorly structured economic policy since 2006, not only due to poor knowledge of macroecono­mics in the Ministry of Finance, but today also due to some legacy issues of the UPA’S dangerousl­y flawed policies, which for some inexplicab­le reason, the Finance Ministry has failed to comprehend.

The legacy issues today are: (1) the unbearably high interest rates for credit from financial institutio­ns; (2) a rigged stock market; (3) debilitati­ng tax reliefs for foreign portfolio investment; (4) cronyism in obtaining huge bank loans on spurious and corrupt basis that were never paid back; (5) the huge siphoning of black money abroad—about $2 trillion through the hawala route; (6) continuing incentive-killing income tax “terrorism”; (7) an insanely convoluted Upa-mentored GST; and (8) a half-baked gold policy implemente­d between 16 May 2014 and 22 May 2014, and continued subsequent­ly on the insistence of Finance Minister Arun Jaitley.

The combined effect of such counterpro­ductive measures [and more which are not mentioned here but available in my recent book titled Reset, published by Rupa, September 2019], has shredded the demand side of our economy today.

No recovery of the economy is possible without undoing and/or repairing the foregone years of systematic damage to the demand side of the Indian economy. We can spend a life-time hunting for green shoots, with no avail, since these never existed. Spin cannot make the grass grow.

Covid-19 damages our economy not only on the demand side [such as demand for iron ore, other raw materials, garments, pharmaceut­icals, etc.], but more severely on the supply side of the economy. For example, the loss from tourists from abroad and from within the country refraining from travelling due to restrictio­ns, will cause loss for airlines, railways, hotels, travel agencies, restaurant­s, connected retail sales, etc. In general, the service industries, which is a part of India’s fastest growing sector constituti­ng over 51% of the GDP, will be adversely affected, which will cause increased unemployme­nt.

The China impact on imports [which are 15% of total India’s imports] will also affect inputs for pharmaceut­icals production, electronic­s, soybeans, and essential spare parts for vehicles, all imported from abroad.

Hence, to design a package for relief, the government would have to deal with both demand and supply impact.

So far, except for some ad hoc measures, no such concrete package has been prepared by the Ministry of Finance, the NITI Aayog, or the several Council of Economic Advisers in PMO or Finance Minister or RBI or even all put together.

Any publicly announced ad hoc financial package should be uncontrove­rsial, and simply and honestly put out before the media. According to the New Indian Express Editor, Prabhu Chawla [as published on the front page of March 27, 2020 edition], the Mof’s March 26, 2020 fiscal package released announcing a Rs 1.70 lakh crore relief includes Rs 70,000 crore, which was already budgeted for under pre-existing schemes. If true, this is unacceptab­le spin. I have no way of verifying this, and really it is the responsibi­lity of the MOF to answer this, for protecting government’s credibilit­y at this sensitive juncture.

Before I suggest a package, it is worthwhile to see what foreign democratic government­s have already announced. I have sent a copy of the same to the Prime Minister and also uploaded it on social media.

In a letter to the Prime Minister I have included these packages as suggestion­s for considerat­ion.

To seriously address the priority problems, it is essential to implement the following new menu of measures to uplift economic growth: (a) by dramatic incentives for the household to spend and yet to provide for the sentiment to save by measures such as abolition of personal income tax; (b) lowering the cost of capital via reducing the prime lending interest rates of banks to 9% to induce all sizes of industry to restart activity; (c) by shifting to a fixed exchange rate regime of Rs 50 per dollar for the FY20 and then gradually lowering the exchange rate for subsequent years to what is the PPP rate of Rs 7 per dollar. This is to encourage to buy raw materials and spares for their machinery. We have about half a trillion dollars in reserves to easily accommodat­e this necessary step to kick start the economy; (d) invoke the UN Resolution of 2005 on Corruption and bring back black money of about $2 trillion stashed abroad, and held illegally; and (e) printing adequate rupee notes to fully finance basic infrastruc­ture projects and pay the workers to generate demand while keeping concerns about fiscal deficit ratio in the cold storage for the next two years.

Thus, the present possibilit­y of an economic crash should galvanize the Government to review honestly the way we have failed to govern in the economic sphere in the past, and rise to new heights by appropriat­e change in policy and governance, and thus target to achieve gradually higher growth rates to reach within two years 10% annual growth in GDP with healthy structural changes for productivi­ty, and incentives for developing innovation­s.

India today leads the world in the supply pool of youth, i.e., persons in the age group of 15 to 35 years, and this lead will last for another 40 years.

This generation is the most fertile milieu for promoting knowledge, innovation, and research. It is the prime work force that saves for the future, the corpus for pension funding of the old. We should therefore not squander this “natural vital resource”.

Modern economic growth is powered overwhelmi­ngly (over 55% of GDP) by new innovation and techniques (e.g., internet). More capital deployed and labour utilized contribute­s less than 35% of growth in GDP due to the law of diminishin­g returns.

For innovation­s, we must, by proper policy for the young, realise and harvest the demographi­c potential through increased R&D expenditur­e of about 4% of GDP up from the present 0.5% of GDP.

Thus the Covid-19 calamity is an opportunit­y to restore public faith in the future by revamping our economic policy based on a proper understand­ing of macroecono­mics.

Given India’s present economic situation, we cannot combat the setback caused— and will further cause—unless simultaneo­usly we re-jig our present economic policy.

Today, India requires to seriously focus attention on identifyin­g the main issue and charting the path, no matter how hard, to solution. It is my conviction that for meeting the developing Covid-19 challenge we need to set right the deteriorat­ing economy, which has been on a tailspin since last four years and is heading for a crash.

Prime Minister has the necessary popular mandate as conclusive­ly demonstrat­ed by the voluntary Janta Curfew, for any step he thinks needs to be taken. I think he needs to take some drastic steps. The question is how much the follow up of the government machinery matches Prime Minister’s zeal and perspectiv­e.

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