KEY HIGHLIGHTS
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CEA Subramanian Makes The Case For Counter-Cyclical Fiscal Policy
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Watch | Chief Economic Adviser's Press Conference
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Economic Survey Says Sole Focus On Combined CPI May Not Be Appropriate
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Government Calls For Fresh Asset Quality Review Of Banks After Covid Related Forbearances Are Removed
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Economic Survey Expects Fiscal Slippage For FY21
CEA Subramanian Makes The Case For Counter-Cyclical Fiscal Policy
Chief Economic Adviser KV Subramanian has said that the government must use its fiscal policy to support growth till pre-Covid levels are reached.
Counter-cyclical fiscal policy must become an important point of emphasis in India, especially at times like these, Subramanian said in his press conference on the Economic Survey 2021. Subramanian said that fiscal rules that do not enable a counter-cyclical policy need a rethink.
Subramanian argued that higher growth will lead to more sustainable debt levels, and not the other way around. In the worst-case scenario, he said, even if India has real GDP growth of 3.8% each year between FY23-FY29, debt will still come down. "Debt will come down because nominal rate of growth would be higher than nominal rate of interest," he said.
Watch | Chief Economic Adviser's Press Conference
Economic Survey Says Sole Focus On Combined CPI May Not Be Appropriate
- Food inflation driven primarily by supply-side factors.
- Several components of food inflation are transitory with wide variations.
- Changes in consumption patterns not reflected in current index.
"For all these reasons, a greater focus on core inflation is warranted. Further, given the significant increases in e-commerce transactions, new sources of price data capturing e-commerce transactions must get incorporated in the construction of price indices."
Economic Survey Recommends Increase In Public Spend From 1% To 2.5-3% Of GDP
- According to National Health Accounts, 2017, 66% of spending on healthcare is done by the states.
- An increase in public spending to 2.5-3% can substantially reduce OOP from the current level of 60% to 30%.
- Therefore, the richer states should especially target increasing the healthcare spending as a percent of GDP to 2.5-3%.
Economic Survey 2021: New Farm Laws Will Benefit Most Small Farmers
- The new farm laws will empower farmers in their engagement with processors, wholesalers, aggregators, large retailers and provide level-playing field.
- It will transfer risk of market unpredictability from farmer to the sponsor and enable access to modern technology.
- Farmers will have full power in the contract to fix a sale price of their choice for the produce and receive payments within a maximum of 3 days.
- Due to the new law, 10,000 farmer producer organisations will be formed through the country which will bring together small farmers.
- After signing the contract, farmers will not have to seek out traders.
- The new farm laws are designed and intended primarily to benefit small and marginal farmers who constitute 85% of total farmers.
- The new laws will herald a new era of market freedom which can go a long way in improvement of farmer welfare.
Government Calls For Fresh Asset Quality Review Of Banks After Covid Related Forbearances Are Removed
- AQR must account for all the creative ways in which banks evergreen loans
- RBI must be more equipped to find early fault lines and must expand its tool kit for remedial measures
- Clean-up exercise must be followed by a mandatory recapitalisation of banks after reviewing capital needs of banks
- RBI may consider penalties on bank auditors if ever-greening is discovered
- The judicial infrastructure for the implementation of IBC – comprised of Debt recovery tribunals, National Company Law Tribunals, and the appellate tribunals must be strengthened substantially
Economic Survey: Initial Covid-19 Disruptions Drove Rising Prices
- CPI inflation from April-October 2020 was mostly driven by substantial increase in price momentum, possibly due to the initial disruptions caused by the Covid-19 lockdown
- CPI inflation averaged 6.6% in 2020-21 (April-Dec) and stood at 4.6% in Dec 2020, mainly driven by rise in food inflation, which has increased from 6.7% in 2019-20 to 9.1% in 2020-21, owing to build up in vegetable prices
Economic Survey Expects Fiscal Slippage For FY21
The Indian government may need to continue with an expansionary fiscal stance in order to sustain the recovery in aggregate demand, said the Economic Survey for 2020-21.
The soon-to-conclude financial year is likely to see a fiscal slippage, the survey, released ahead of the Union Budget presentation on Feb.1, said, adding the expenditure support provided during the year will impart the required momentum to mid-term growth.
“Going forward, in order to sustain the recovery in aggregate demand, it is expected that the government may have to continue with an expansionary fiscal stance,” the survey said. “The calibrated approach adopted by India allows space for maintaining a fiscal impulse the coming year.”
India GDP Growth Pegged At 10-12% For FY22
- India’s GDP is estimated to contract by 7.7% in FY2020-21, composed of a sharp 15.7% decline in first half and a modest 0.1% fall in the second half.
- In the year 2021-22, a sharp recovery of real GDP growth of 10-12% is expected based on a low base effect and inherent strengths of the economy.
- It is expected that the economy grows at its trend growth rate of 6.5% in 2022-23 and 7% in 2023-24 aided by structural reforms.
- This path would entail a growth in real GDP by 2.4% over the absolute level of 2019-20 - implying that the economy would take two years to reach and go past the pre-pandemic level
Economic Survey 2021: India's Timely Lockdown Strategy Saved Lives
India has transformed the short-term trade-off between lives and livelihoods into a win-win in the medium to long-term that saves both lives and livelihoods, the annual economic survey authored by Chief Economic Advisor Krishnamurthy Subramanian said, in its first chapter.
“By estimating the natural number of cases and deaths expected across countries based on their population, population density, demographics, tests conducted, and the health infrastructure, we compare these estimates with actual numbers to show that India restricted the Covid-19 spread by 37 lakh cases and saved more than 1 lakh lives.”
The survey found a correlation between the stringency of the lockdown and it the number of Covid-19 cases and resultant deaths. It also found a correlation between the lockdown’s stringency and the country’s “V-shaped” recovery.
“India thus benefited from successfully pushing the peak of the pandemic curve to September, 2020 through the lockdown."
Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman Tables Economic Survey 2021 In Lok Sabha
Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman has tabled the Economic Survey 2020-21 document in Lok Sabha.
Here are the key highlights so far:
- India sees FY22 GDP growth at 11%
- Combined fiscal deficit to exceed target in FY21
- Growth recovery to be driven by government consumption
Source: Bloomberg
India Said To Forecast 11% Growth Buoyed By Vaccine Roll Out
India is predicting Asia’s third-largest economy will expand 11% in the year starting April betting that the vaccine roll out will contain the pandemic, while low interest rates and measures to lure investment will spur business activity, people with knowledge of the matter said.
The forecast for next year is in line with the International Monetary Fund’s estimate for 11.5% expansion, which will once again make India the fastest-growing major economy in the world ahead of China’s 8.1% pace.
A finance ministry spokesman was not immediately available for a comment.
Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman has tabled the Economic Survey of India 2021 -- authored by Chief Economic Advisor Krishnamurthy Subramanian -- in the parliament, ahead of the Union Budget on Monday.
Subramanian along with his team will address a press conference at 3:30 p.m. thereafter.
The annual document acts as a platform to pitch larger economic ideas and concepts which the government may or may not act upon. On Jan. 31 2020 -- before coronavirus became a sizable threat to the Indian economy -- Subramanian outlined a difficult year for India’s growth, the need to create fiscal headroom, pitched large-scale job creation and proposed a new divestment mode. All these issues have only intensified over the last year as the Covid-19 virus rummaged through the economy, especially the country’s poorer half.
Since the last economic survey was tabled, India’s GDP contracted by nearly a quarter in the April to June period owing to a nation-wide lockdown. GDP improved but remained in the negative in the second quarter, officially taking India into recession. Unemployment rate rose to 9.1% in December, according to data released by the Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy, highest in the last six months despite an increase in overall economic activity.