overview of the indian economy: budget 2008 and beyond by a.v. vedpuriswar
TRANSCRIPT
Overview of the Indian Economy: Budget 2008 and beyond
By A.V. Vedpuriswar
The Indian Economy at a glance
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1990 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007
-91 -00 -01 -02 -03 -04 -05 -06 -07 -08
GDP at factor cost
5.6 6.1 4.4 5.8 4 8.5 7.5 9.4 9.6 8.7
Manufacturing
9 7.1 5.3 2.9 6 7.4 9.2 9.1 12.5 9.8
Foodgrain (Mt)
176 210 197 213 175 213 198 209 217 219
WPI 12.1 3.3 7.2 3.6 3.4 5.5 5.1 4.1 5.9 4.1
FDI ($mn) 97 2093 3272 4734 3217 2388 3713 3034 8479
FII ($mn) 0 2135 2590 1952 944 11356 9287 12494 7062 -
Forex reserves
($bn)2.2 - 40 51 72 108 136 145 272 -
IPOs (Jan-Dec) - - - 525 1981 1940 12402 9918 24779 33912
•The Indian Economy
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The Rupee vs Dollar
EIU forecasts
Key indicators200
7200
8200
9201
0201
1201
2Real GDP growth (%) 8.7 7.8 7.2 7.4 7.7 8Consumer price inflation (av; %) 6.4 5.8 5.5 5.2 5 5.2Budget balance (% of GDP) -3.2 -3.1 -2.9 -2.8 -2.7 -2.5Current-account balance (% of GDP) -1.2 -2.4 -1.5 -1.5 -2.1 -2.7
Lending rate (av; %)13.
112.
8 12 11 10 10Exchange rate Rs:US$ (av)
41.3
38.5
36.4
35.5 35
34.5
Exchange rate Rs:¥100 (av)
35.1
37.8
37.9 38
38.1
37.6
Highlights of Economic Survey
Inflation projected at 4.4 per cent in 2007-08.
Holding 9% growth will be a challenge.
Inflation and infrastructure are the biggest growth challenges.Skill dearth is causing attrition, wage hike; pushing inflation
Agricultural growth in FY'08 is seen at 2.6%, against 3.8% a year ago.
Economy will slow down to 8.7% in 2007-08
Industrial growth slower at 9% in first 9 months of FY'08.
Recommendations in survey
Phase out control on sugar, fertilisers, drugs.
Sell old oil fields to private sector.
Allow a share for foreign equity in retailing.
Raise foreign equity in insurance to 49 per cent.
Allow 100 per cent FDI in greenfield private agri banks.
Complete the process of selling 5-10% equity in previously identified profit making non-navratna PSUs.
Key challenges
Challenges
Many parts of the economy are cut off from free trade.
Restrictions on FDI make growing businesses difficult.
Economic reforms, especially labor market reforms, have been slow in coming.Even without significant reform, India’s economy has performed so well (growing by 9.4% in the fiscal year ending in March 2007) that it may be overheating.Huge supply side challenges remain. Especially when we consider that by 2025 the country could have more than 580m middle class consumers
Although BPO, IT, Telecom, manufacturing have boomed in recent years, India’s economy remains mostly agricultural.
- Source : The Economist
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Three main barriers to growthMultiplicity of regulations
governing product markets
•Unfairness and ambiguity
•Uneven enforcement
•Reservation for SSIs
•FDI restrictions•Licensing
Distortions in the market for land.
•Unclear ownership
•Counter productive taxation
• Inflexible zoning, rent and tenancy laws
Widespread government ownership.
•
Growth inhibitors
According to McKinsey (2001) these factors inhibit GDP growth to the extent of 4% plus every year.
Using resources effectively
Clearly this is the need of the hour
But what does the data tell us?
A quick look at Union Budget 2008
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2008 Budget at a glance (Rs Crores)2006-07
(Actuals)2007-08
(RE)2008-09
(BE)
Revenue receipts 434,387 525,098 602,935
Capital receipts 149,000 187,275 147,949
Total receipts 583,387 709,373 750,888
Non plan exp 413,527 501,849 507,498
Plan exp 169,860 207,524 243,386
Total exp 583,387 709,373 750,884
Revenue deficit 80,222 63,488 55,184
Fiscal deficit 142,573 143,653 133,287
Primary deficit -7,699 -28,318 -57,520
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Major plan expenditure2007-08
(Rs. Crores)2008-09
(Rs. Crores)
Rural development 17,511 18,972
Agriculture 8,544 10,075
Health & family welfare 12,049 14,878
Education 23,073 29,054
Urban development 4,808 5,674
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Where the rupee comes from?
Service & other taxes
7%
Borrowings & other
liabilities
14%
Corporation tax
24%
Income tax
15%
Customs
13%
Excise
15%
Non tax revenue
10%
Non debt capital
receipts
2%
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Where the rupee goes?
State plan assistance
7%Non plan assistance to
state govt
5%
Other non plan
expenditure
10% Subsidies
8%
Defence
11%
Interest
21%
Central plan
19%
States’ share of
taxes/duties
19%
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Changing revenue mix(Rs. billion) (% of total revenue)
2004 - 05 2008 - 09 2004 - 05 2008 - 09
Corp tax 830 2264 22 29
Income Tax 509 1383 13 18
Customs 563 1189 15 15
Excise 1007 1379 26 18
Service Tax 142 644 4 8
Other 9 18 0 0
Tax revenue 3060 6877 80 88
Non tax rev 751 958 20 12
Total revenue 3811 7835 100 100
Currently, the revenue deficit is 1% of GDP.
Fiscal deficit is 2.5% of GDP.
Budget deficit
But does this tell the complete story?
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Off Balance Sheet items
Amount(Rs Crore)
% of GDP
Debt Waiver 60,000 1.12
Oil bonds 11,257 0.21
Fertiliser subsidy 7,500 0.14
Food subsidy 10,000 0.19
Sixth pay commission 25,000 0.47
Total 113,757 2.13
Fiscal deficit budgeted 133,287 2.50
Gross fiscal deficit 247,044 4.63
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What about the budget deficits of states?
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India vs China
China is sitting pretty
But some economists reckon that the cautious government is understating its true fiscal health: it probably had a small surplus.If the profits of state-owned firms were also added in, the government could have a surplus of around 3% of GDP.China's public debt has also fallen to only 17% of GDP, well below the average ratio of 77% in OECD economies.
According to official estimates, China's government ran a budget deficit of around 1% last year.
Indeed, China has the best fiscal position of any big country, giving the government plenty of room to cushion the economy if demand suddenly falls.
By contrast, India, though improving, has one of the worst fiscal positions in the world.
However, in a recent report the IMF argued that the true total deficit is closer to 7% of GDP once we add in the state governments' deficits and various off-budget items.If the losses of state electricity companies are also added in, the total deficit could cross 8% of GDP.
India's public debt is also uncomfortably high at about 75% of GDP.
The Indian government claims it has reduced its deficit to an estimated 3.3% of GDP in the year ending March, from 6.5% in 2001-02.
(The Economist)
Should the Fiscal Responsibility and Budget Management (FRBM) Act be scrapped? For this law seems to be having the perverse effect of making the government hide more and more of its expenditure and not show it in the Budget. The finance minister can then claim that he is meeting FRBM targets, when in truth he is not. Scrapping the law might encourage more honest budgeting.
Business Standard
Newspaper editorial
Sectoral Reforms
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Agriculture
Farm loan waiver
Moral hazard?
What about people who have borrowed from money lenders?
Is this the best way to help farmers?
To give a boost to agriculture?
A scorched earth policy?
Options to minimise the damage
Lower credit limits/impose higher collateral on bad borrowers.
Reduce the risks in agriculture
This will lower the number of intermediaries and bring down the consumer price.
And improve the realisation for farmers..
Institutional reforms to reduce the dependence on moneylenders.
Give borrowers with good records lower interest rates.
(Subhir Gokarn)
Get back to the fundamentals
Reduce the gap between the farmer’s price realisation and what the consumer pays.Reduce wastage because of poor roads, inadequate warehousing and refrigerated transport.Reduce the number of people dependent on agriculture.Encourage organised retailing, contract farming, ebusiness
(A.V. Rajwade)
Increase output per acre.
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Industry
No big ticket reforms in key industries
Retail
Power
Financial sector
Financial sector reforms
Reduce micro management by RBI and SEBI.
Liberalise derivatives and commodity markets.
Encourage more competition and innovation
To be a global financial services player, India needs :- An open capital account - Capable and efficient markets - World class institutions and responsive regulators - Less intervention by RBI and MOF. - (Percy Mistry, MIFC report)
Raghuram Rajan Committee report
“India is dangerously complacent. Its concerns about over-sophisticated
markets resemble a clock that looks right only because it is 12 hours behind. Indian households put only about half of their savings in the bank, and banks funnel less than half of their credit to private firms, …. The government's financing needs crowd out other borrowers, and state-owned banks account for about 70% of India's financial assets …. The cost of these financial failings is probably a percentage point or two of growth. They leave India's savers with too little reward for their thrift, its poorer borrowers with too few alternatives to the moneylender and its incumbent firms with too much protection from upstarts, who cannot raise money to compete. “
The Economist, April 12, 2008
“If America's subprime crisis demonstrates the pitfalls of untrammelled
finance, India illustrates the opposite danger. Since its regulators get blamed only for mishaps, not for lost growth and wasted opportunities, they are too conservative. ... New ideas are banned unless explicitly permitted. This helps regulators feel more secure, but it does little for the system's stability. ….For example, companies are barred from speculating in derivatives, but many have done so anyway. Those that have lost money now cite the very rules they broke as reason to back out of their obligations, saying they should not pay for mistakes they were not officially allowed to make.”
The Economist, April 12, 2008
“Last year the government banned futures trading in two types of bean, rice and wheat, arguing that speculators were driving up prices,…... Some in the leftist parties, … now argue it should extend the ban to other commodities, such as edible oils and perhaps even iron and steel.
This would be like “shooting the messenger”, argues B.C. Khatua, chairman of the Forward Markets Commission, which regulates futures exchanges. Before they were shut down, …. the futures markets conveyed the message that prices of wheat and rice would continue to rise. Sure enough, that is what happened.”
The Economist, April 12, 2008
“The futures market provides farmers with a sneak preview of the prices they will face in the months ahead, which should allow them to make an informed decision about what to sow. In principle, futures contracts should also allow farmers to lock in a price for their crops, insulating them from the vagaries of the spot market. At the moment, farmers are too small to participate in the market directly… small banks could aggregate the demands of farmers up to a practical size. “
The Economist, April 12, 2008
Pensions
Given the dismal levels of penetration of financial services, a majority of Indian people are not contributing towards their old-age security.
The Pension Bill could bridge that gap, and give people greater control over their retirement benefits.
The existing formal pension channels don’t cover unorganised sector workers.
Pensions ( Cont..)
But the Left has been a stumbling block
In 1981, Ronald Reagan launched the 401K plan in the US. The US pension industry, which was $60 billion then, is today a $9 trillion industry, with most of the money invested in equities.
Under the shadow of the Left, the government has not moved on increasing FDI limits from 26% to 49% in insurance .
General economic reforms
Labour
Education
Entrepreneurship
Subsidies
Legal system
Not a great place for entrepreneurs
The same will require just five days in the US, six days in Singapore and 48 days in China.
It takes 71 days to get all requisite clearances for starting an enterprise in India.
Legal system fails to deliver
According to a World Bank 2007 survey, ‘Ease of Doing Business’, India is ranked 177th out of 178 countries in enforcing business contracts.
It takes 425 days to enforce a contract in India, compared to 69 days in Singapore and 241 days in China.
Rigid Labour markets
The Industrial Disputes Act, 1947—particularly, Chapter 5B—bars manufacturing companies that employ more than 100 workers from firing employees without state government approval.Employers have been reluctant to add extra staff during peak seasons because they cannot be laid off during lulls.
Despite having surplus labour in the country, many large employers are expanding output through capital investment wherever possible.
The absence of a bankruptcy law and labour reforms, especially the difficulty in retrenching workers, has also reduced the competitiveness of Indian firms.
(Amit Mitra, Secretary General FICCI)
“Higher education is a dark spot. Though FM has enhanced allocation for education, he hasn’t done much for higher education. Starting a few IITs is not going to make much difference to the country. Bold steps are called for to open the sector. While steps have been announced to invest in skills development and education, clearly they are timid.”
Nandan Nilekani, Economic Times, March 1
“We are very keen to do more in these areas but we have our resource constraints. So we cannot do everything at one go.”
Manmohan Singh, Economic Times, March 1
Education
“Generous grants, compression, righteous rule and succour to the downtrodden are the hallmarks of good governance.”
P. Chidamabaram in his Budget speech
Conclusion
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