THE GIST of Editorial for UPSC Exams : 21 January 2020 (The deficit bogey (Indian Express))

The deficit bogey (Indian Express)

Mains Paper 3: Economy
Prelims level : Fiscal deficit
Mains level : Indian Economy growth, development and major challenges regarding fiscal deficit

Context:

  • The Union budget will be presented in the context of an entrenched slowdown that is becoming increasingly difficult to overcome.
  • The recent increase in inflation has complicated the budget-making exercise. We believe that this budget could make a substantial difference by challenging the conventional wisdom that does not stand the test of scrutiny.

Estimated budget scenario:

  • The primary purpose of the budget is to lay out a receipt-expenditure statement and thereby the fiscal deficit estimates.
  • This year the slowdown has derailed the fiscal arithmetic.
  • Our estimates show that the shortfall might be anywhere between 0.5-0.7 per cent of the GDP in the current fiscal after adjusting for revenue shortfall and expenditure rationalisation.
  • Given that the government is now facing such a huge mismatch, the fiscal deficit glide path is likely to be recalibrated.
  • The strong resistance from the votaries of fiscal consolidation, which is echoed in government circles too with independent reports pegging the fiscal deficit estimate at 3.5 per cent for 2020-21.
  • We believe the government must not target a number in FY21 that is not credible and achievable.
  • The growth dynamics suggest that with a nominal GDP growth that could be at 10 per cent, a 3.5 per cent target will result in the absolute fiscal deficit in FY21 being lower than in FY20, and that again will be unachievable.

Data implicates to reduce the fiscal deficit:

  • The government wanted to reduce the fiscal deficit from 4.8 per cent of the GDP to 4.6 per cent.
  • But, in absolute terms, the difference between the fiscal deficit in FY11 and FY12 jumped four times as the 3.3 percentage point collapse in growth was not factored in.
  • Thus, the temptation of having a 3.5 per cent deficit target in the budget must be avoided at any cost as we face a similar growth slowdown.
  • Instead, the fiscal deficit must be kept only at a marginally lower level or the same level in FY21 (vis-à-vis FY20).
  • We must focus on growth. A large fiscal compression in the budget, through a reported expenditure curtailment of Rs 2 lakh crore, could be an unmitigated disaster for growth and will definitely raise the possibility of lack of transparency in the fiscal numbers of FY21 in the eyes of the market.

So, what are the options before the government?

  • The apparent trade-off between tax concessions and stimulating the economy by giving a fillip to the rural economy.
  • There is now an apparent consensus that with only 4 per cent of people paying income tax, a tax concession might be a wrong approach to stimulate demand.

Fallacies with this argument:

  • Even when 2 per cent of the people paid income tax during 2004-08, the Indian economy expanded by close to 8 per cent on average.
  • The 4 per cent population accounted for a significant part of overall consumption, and in FY19, the overall gross taxable income of this population was Rs 46 lakh crore, which is 40.8 per cent of the overall private final consumption expenditure.
  • Hence, it is possible to tweak both the slabs and the tax rates to increase consumption, which is key to growth.
  • The only issue with such tax changes that could make the government wary is the revenue foregone.
  • Our estimates suggest that a 5 per cent cut in taxes across income buckets can result in a revenue shortfall of only 0.5 per cent of GDP.

Coverage to PM-KISAN scheme:

  • The idea of a rural push through PM-KISAN scheme is understandable, but efforts must first be made to cover all the farmers under the scheme.
  • It is quite puzzling that despite 92 per cent of the land records being digitised, PM-KISAN still covers only half of the eligible beneficiaries.
  • As was promised in the 2018 budget, a tenancy certificate must be issued to every tenant farmer — 70 per cent of farmland is cultivated by tenant farmers, who are not entitled to any benefit because they do not own land.
  • The government should think about increasing the Rs 6,000 yearly amount in a calibrated manner (say Rs 500 per year over the next four years) as the incremental cost will be negligible. As this will create a feel-good factor across the farming community, why not start from this year itself?

Tax adjustment and incentivising savings:

  • The government must think about the trade-off between tax adjustment and incentivising savings.
  • When the government notified an increase in the public provident fund (PPF) limit by Rs 50,000 to Rs 1,50,000 in August 2014, its impact on household savings was enormous.
  • For example, an increase in the 80C limit by Rs 1 lakh to Rs 2.5 lakh for individual households will lead to additional savings of more than Rs 2 lakh crore as compared to a revenue and interest foregone amount of Rs 40,000 crore.

Incentivising consumption, or savings or both?

  • The repeated fallacies of commentators who advocate in favour of fiscal conservatism on the ground that entire household financial savings are being used to finance government borrowings. The
  • numbers suggest otherwise. Of the Rs 11.2 lakh crore of net financial savings in FY18, total claims on government were around Rs 70,000 crore, while Rs 7.74 lakh crore were claims on insurance, pension and provident funds (assuming FY17 ratios).
  • Household claims on pension, insurance and provident funds are purely savings for the households’ retirement corpus and it is completely naïve to equate such claims as financing government borrowings.
  • The decision of such retirement funds on where to invest their corpus is a purely portfolio-decision, just as is the household decision to investment in small savings.
  • Apart from such fiscal measures, the budget must announce its intent to bring back trust in the financial system.
  • To this end, a simultaneous recognition of stressed assets of NBFCs and thereafter immediately initiating measures to help them to raise capital by initiating takeovers/mergers if required and giving the rest a clean chit, thereby, increasing the confidence to lend, is required.
  • We must not repeat the mistake we made with banks when we first initiated recognition of bad loans through the asset quality review in 2015, then brought resolution through the IBC law in 2016, and then resorted to recapitalisation in October 2017.
  • The sequence should have been resolution first, and recognition and recapitalisation simultaneously thereafter.

Way forward:

  • We can also think of forbearance for large NBFCs by deferment of principal repayments by systemically important NBFCs and HFCs.
  • These NBFCs and HFCs can allow similar deferments to their clients. Since interest would be paid during this period, lenders would not make a loss.
  • This should be adequate to get the cash flows from stuck projects going and to ensure the fulfillment of the prime minister’s vision of Housing for All by 2022.
  • As we write on the budget priorities, the Supreme Court judgment on telcos’ adjusted gross revenues could just about tilt the budget arithmetic in the government’s favour.
  • On the flip side though, this order could lead to significant market disruptions and possibly impact consumption as well.

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Prelims Questions:

Q.1) With reference to the Green Credit Scheme, consider the following statements:
1. The proposed ‘Green Credit Scheme’ allows agencies like private companies, village forest communities etc to identify land and begin growing plantations.
2. The Forest Advisory Committee (FAC) of the Environment Ministry is a statutory body.

Which of the statements given above is/are correct?
(a) 1 only
(b) 2 only
(c) Both 1 and 2
(d) Neither 1 nor 2

Answer: C
Mains Questions:

Q.1) Government has promised to double farmer’s income by 2022, in this light discuss the measures taken by government to implement the same. Also suggest suitable strategies to timely and sustainable achievement of this target.