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Page 1: Is the economy sick_ Salman Soz writes on Modi government’s policy - The Hindu.pdf

7/23/2019 Is the economy sick_ Salman Soz writes on Modi government’s policy - The Hindu.pdf

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12/31/2015 Is the economy sick? Salman Soz writes on Modi government’s policy - The Hindu

http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/op-ed/is-the-economy-sick/article8045884.ece?homepage=true&css=print

OPINION » COMMENT

Published: December 31, 2015 00:58 IST | Updated: December 31, 2015 08:03 IST December 31, 2015

Is the economy sick?

 Salman Anees Soz

The Modi government’s policy is choking domestic demand at a time when global demand is also weak. This is hardly a recipe for double-digit growth.

The title seems provocative. After all, for the last several months, we have all heard that India is now the fastest growing large economy in th world. The Finance Minister keeps assuring us that the country’s economic revival is on a firm footing and that India is “witnessing significamacroeconomic stability”. The Prime Minister’s Make in India initiative, the JAM (Jan Dhan, Aadhaar and Mobile) trinity as well as thegovernment’s emphasis on ease of doing business are supposedly game changers. One gets the feeling that the Indian economy isturbocharged and major progress is around the corner. Yet, there are also reports of many economists and analysts indicating that economigrowth doesn’t “feel” that robust. So, something doesn’t “feel” right and this “feeling” isn’t going away. When things don’t “feel” right, perha

 we are dealing with some sickness.

Before we proceed further with the diagnosis, let us understand the counterfactual. In other words, what does good economic health look 

like? For this, let us turn back the clock just a little bit. I reviewed data for 2005-06 to 2010-11, a six-year period when economic growthaveraged almost 9 per cent per year. By drawing a contrast with economic conditions then with the current situation, we may get a sense of 

 what, if anything, is leading us to “feel” that everything is not well with the economy today.

Six years of sunshine 

Let’s get straight to the big numbers. In that six-year period, India experienced an average GDP growth rate of about 8.8 per cent. In four ouof six years, GDP growth exceeded 9 per cent. Only in 2008-09, a year associated with the global financial crisis, did growth fall below 8 percent. These high growth years also saw high savings and investment ratios. The savings/GDP ratio averaged 34 per cent and the investmentratio (gross capital formation/GDP) averaged 36 per cent. In addition, exports grew at an annual rate of 21 per cent and imports grew at aneven higher rate of 23 per cent, reflecting robust demand both in the domestic and external markets. The fiscal deficit averaged 4.5 per cent GDP and the current account deficit was about 1.9 per cent of GDP. This is roughly the same time period in which India reduced the numbeof people living in extreme poverty by almost 130 million. Those six years were terrific. India was doing exceptionally well and, along withChina, provided support for the global economy in the aftermath of the 2008 crisis.

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12/31/2015 Is the economy sick? Salman Soz writes on Modi government’s policy - The Hindu

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Fast forward to the present. Since the government revised GDP data, there is increasing talk of India’s emergence as the fastest growingeconomy. In a sea of global economic weakness, India is apparently a buoyant force. But there are murmurs that the economy is not as stronas the government would have us believe. What’s going on? Let’s again go straight to the big numbers. While growth rate was 7.3 per cent in2014-15, various official estimates point to a growth rate of 7-8 per cent in 2015-16. But savings and investment ratios have dropped sharplyto around 30 per cent. Export growth has declined sharply. From April to November 2015, exports have dropped by over 18 per cent. If thistrend continues, 2015-16 will see the worst export performance for over 15 years. Import growth has also declined by double digits indicatinlack of demand (and also falling prices of crude). The average fiscal deficit for the first two years of the Modi government is likely to be aroun4 per cent with the current account deficit around 1.3 per cent of GDP. Without lower crude prices, these twin deficits would be higher, as

 would inflation.

 With numbers such as these, it is no wonder that many are expressing concerns about the state of the economy. This is not all. There are

reports of widespread rural distress, mixed performance of the industrial sector, continued problems in the banking sector and low privatesector investments due to market uncertainty and stressed corporate balance sheets. With all of these factors forming the foundation of theeconomy, it is easy to see why something doesn’t “feel” right. In order for the economy to match its performance in the six years describedearlier, a lot has to go right at a time when very few things appear to be going right.

 A bridge too far 

One of the things highlighted by the government as a success is fiscal consolidation. That is a fancy term for lower fiscal deficits. Thegovernment’s fiscal deficit target for 2015-16 is 3.9 percent of GDP (slightly higher than the earlier estimate of 3.6 per cent). Some economis

 believe that the government must continue on this fiscal consolidation path to give “confidence” to investors that macroeconomic stability isof utmost importance. This is all very well if private investors were stepping in to invest and create jobs. However, as I have mentionedearlier, they are not doing that. So, the government is trying to increase public investment as a way of boosting the economy. This is excellen

 but not the full picture. The government’s own mid-term review concludes that “the positive contribution from greater public investment isoffset by a combination of lower other expenditures and higher tax receipts”. This is in the context of lower minimum support prices, lowerNREGA disbursements and a host of cuts in social sector expenditures. The review suggests that fiscal policy will be contractionary in 2015-

compared to 2014-15 and has floated the idea of relaxing the fiscal deficit target.

In effect, government policy is choking domestic demand at a time when global demand is also weak. This is hardly a recipe for growing atdouble digits. The only thing that will grow in double digits is the frustration for millions of young Indians who won’t have the promised jobopportunities. At a time when India should be aggressively going after a greater share of the global economic pie, we are seeking comfort infiscal management. At a time when we should be promoting big investments in our food supply chain, we are choking off rural demand. At atime when we should be providing major incentives for our small and medium enterprises to modernise and compete globally and employ 

 young people, we are adding to the tax burden of the common man who could become a source of demand for these companies. Our majorcorporations should be encouraged to invest at a time of global weaknesses so that when demand picks up, they are ready to take a biggershare.

But our government appears to have a vision deficit and a surplus of complacency that is bound to add to the “feeling” that things are not weHaving said this, I don’t believe the economy is sick. It is in a funk. It is the government that appears sick and in need of a fiscal deficit feverreducer.

(Salman Anees Soz, formerly with the World Bank, is a spokesperson of the Indian National Congress. Views expressed are personal.)

Printable version | Dec 31, 2015 6:21:45 PM | http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/op-ed/is-the-economy-sick/article8045884.ece

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