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Responding to Economic Developments

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December 08, 2018

What is the issue?

The economic indicators of the recent period call for shifts in policy response to boost the economy.

What do the economic indicators show?

  • Growth - The recently released quarterly estimates showed lower-than-expected July-September growth number for GDP.
  • With this, most analysts have lowered their full-year growth forecasts, with some projecting second-half growth at under 7%.
  • The encouraging sign is a pick-up in investment which was depressed so far.
  • But even this is overshadowed by declining consumer spending.
  • The Reserve Bank recognises this, but continues to project full-year growth at 7.4%.
  • Even that implies a second-half growth rate of only 7.2% which is no better than the unsatisfactory trend rate from 2014.
  • Inflation - Inflation has dipped more sharply than expected.
  • The current rate has been below RBI's target of 4% for the past three months.
  • Agricultural price inflation is lower still.
  • The quarterly GDP numbers record a sharp deterioration in terms of trade for agriculture.
  • This explains farmers' distress in many states, even as depressed rural wages have contributed to poor rural demand.
  • Fiscal deficit - The full year’s fiscal deficit target was crossed by October-end (in seven months).
  • The government insists that it will stay within the full-year target of 3.3% of GDP (down from 3.5% in the last two years).
  • But there is the growing possibility that it will be able to do so only by withholding payments that are due on various counts.

Is the response appropriate?

  • Government - The first two indicators (economic growth and inflation) point to the need for an economic stimulus.
  • This is especially needed when demand growth is slowing.
  • But the policy response is far from it and the government continues to insist on sticking to fiscal contraction.
  • Banks - RBI on its part argues that it needs more time to understand price trends, and therefore has not lowered its policy rate of 6.5%.
  • Loan rates in the market are too high. Most banks have a lending rate of over 9% for their best customers.
  • E.g. HDFC’s home loan rates range from 8.8% to 9.5%, at a time when house prices are falling. Naturally, housing demand is low.
  • Small and medium enterprises borrow at much higher rates of interest.
  • The effective borrowing rate for majority of companies is more than their return on capital employed which make it “unaffordable”.

What should be done?

  • Both the government and the RBI should re-examine their positions.
  • Interest rates need to drop if there is to be broad-based economic revival.
  • The fiscal stance should be less rigid as inflation is below target and the danger of runaway oil prices has also passed.
  • There is thus a legitimate case for government to allow deficit level to inch up to a more realistic 3.5% of GDP, the same level as in the last two years.
  • That will be a neutral, not expansionary, stance, easily justified in the current situation, and realistic.
  • Besides this, there has to be a policy package to shore up agricultural prices, especially for crops with greater price volatility.
  • The target to double agricultural exports is a start, but more needs to be done swiftly.

 

Source: Business Standard

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