Business Day

Glory to gory in India as downturn hits all sectors

• Once the world’s fastest-growing economy, the Modi government is now scrambling to plug revenue holes

- Vrishti Beniwal New Delhi

The sudden slowdown in India’s economy is spreading from carmakers to gold, leaving policymake­rs fretting as the room for stimulus runs out.

A crunch that started out in the shadow banking industry and hurt retailers and automotive businesses is now infecting everything from diesel to home sales. Company defaults on bonds are at a record, output of coal, cement and other heavy industries are contractin­g, so is manufactur­ing and trade has plunged.

On top of that, toxic air in New Delhi is driving away tourists, disrupting flights and shutting schools. It is all culminatin­g in Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s biggest test since he was re-elected with an overwhelmi­ng majority in May, with the government so far failing to inspire confidence in its efforts.

“The current downturn is so broad and relatively deep, there is a downward spiralling effect that takes more than political rhetoric to change course,” said Seth Freeman, a senior MD at GlassRatne­r Advisory & Capital Group in San Francisco, who specialise­s in strategy on emerging markets entry, including India.

“Something has to happen that restores confidence.”

The government has taken several steps to boost the economy, the biggest of which was a cut to corporate taxes worth $20bn (R295bn), spurring a rally in the stock market. However, the fiscal measures so far have focused on boosting investment rather than domestic spending, with authoritie­s stopping short of bailouts and direct support to consumers due to a widening revenue hole in the budget.

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has already cut interest rates five times in 2019, by a cumulative 135 basis points, though banks are not passing on the easing to customers. The door for further rate cuts may now be closing as inflation starts to tick up and the US Federal Reserve signals a pause in its easing cycle.

It was not so long ago that India was the world’s fastestgro­wing economy, expanding more than 8% in the first three months of 2018. Now it is posting growth of 5%, the weakest pace in six years. That may not look so bad in a world economy that is also fast losing momentum, but for a country with 1.3-billion people and widespread poverty, growth of 5% is considered recessiona­ry.

“The economy has performed worse than most had anticipate­d this year,” said Darren Aw, Asia economist with Capital Economics in Singapore. “There is a case for fiscal loosening to complement monetary easing.”

With tax collection lagging estimates, economists predict the government will miss its budget deficit target of 3.3% of

GDP in 2019. To plug the revenue hole, finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman is extracting more dividends from the central bank and state-run companies, and selling some government assets.

For Modi, the run of bad news may be hurting his party’s popularity. The Hindunatio­nalist Bharatiya Janata Party lost ground in two crucial state elections in October, especially in drought-stricken farming districts. He faces three provincial elections between now and the end of 2020.

It’s against that backdrop and opposition from farmers that Modi’s government decided at the last minute not to join the world’s biggest regional trade pact. That may help shore up his popularity with rural citizens, a key voting bloc, but is a missed chance to integrate India’s manufactur­ing within global supply chains and boost trade.

From the RBI to the IMF, growth projection­s have been downgraded for 2019. The central bank is forecastin­g growth of 6.1% in the year through March 2020, down from 6.9% previously, while the World Bank cut its projection to 6% from 7.5%.

GDP data due on November 29 will probably show a mild recovery in growth to 5.5% in the September quarter, though economists say the main reason for that may be a statistica­l gain.

“Some of the rebound in growth will be driven by favourable base effects,” said Priyanka Kishore, head of India and Southeast Asia research at Oxford Economics in Singapore. “In the absence of a stronger policy push to revive stalling income growth, underlying spending momentum is unlikely to pick up substantia­lly.”

India’s biggest shopping season around the festival of Diwali also turned out to be a damp squib in 2019. Bank of America Merrill Lynch said research from 120 retail outlets in the financial capital of Mumbai indicated a drop of more than 90% in customers compared with the previous year s festival period.

Car sales also remained depressed in October, though the exception was Maruti Suzuki India, India’s biggest seller, which posted the first gain in nine months in October.

For Fitch Ratings, a turnaround will only come about once underlying pressures in the financial sector ease and credit growth improves.

“The financial sector is very crucial for the macro outlook in India,” Brian Coulton, Fitch’s chief economist, told BloombergQ­uint.

“What we have tended to see when we’ve had problems in the financial sector, which then feed through to the real economy, it takes an awful long time to turn that around.”

WHEN WE’VE HAD PROBLEMS IN THE FINANCIAL SECTOR, THAT FEED TO THE REAL ECONOMY, IT TAKES A LONG TIME TO TURN AROUND

 ?? Reuters ?? Toxic atmosphere: A schoolgirl wearing a protective mask holds her father’s hand as she waits for her school bus on a smoggy morning in New Delhi, India, on Thursday. Tourists are giving the city a miss as it continues to grapple with its serious pollution problem. Schools have been shut and flights disrupted. /
Reuters Toxic atmosphere: A schoolgirl wearing a protective mask holds her father’s hand as she waits for her school bus on a smoggy morning in New Delhi, India, on Thursday. Tourists are giving the city a miss as it continues to grapple with its serious pollution problem. Schools have been shut and flights disrupted. /

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