Sunday, February 21, 2021

A toolkit for recovery

 

India’ graded and targeted fiscal and monetary support should be a template for future economic crises

 

Rarely does a budget pleases all stakeholders. Union Budget 2021 has achieved the impossible feat. The government is satisfied that its intention to gradually withdraw from running businesses, except in four strategic sectors, has been enthusiastically embraced by the market. The Nifty gained more than 11% over the next fortnight. Companies are cheering the 34% increase in capital expenditure. The massive allocation of Rs 5.54 lakh crore to create assets in the coming fiscal year and the allocation of Rs 1.97 lakh crore for productivity-linked incentive scheme covering 13 sectors over the next five years will trigger private investment, essential for growth to sustain. The proposed development financial institution is a break from the piecemeal approach to infrastructure. The targets to build roads, railways and metros will spur offtake of commodities, capital goods, transport, and power. The resultant generation of employment will see higher inflows into savings and investments, apart from discretionary and non-discretionary buying. The surging stocks captured the enthusiasm of investors, particularly after the resilience displayed by most companies in Q3 December 2020 despite the lingering challenges of supply and distribution.  The Nifty Bank index flirted with a new high, spurting more than 11% since the budget, on the prospect of public sector banks cleaning their balance sheets by disposing of toxic assets to a bad bank and getting Rs 20000-crore capital infusion to prepare for the anticipated increase in appetite for credit. The Nifty Realty index galloped 15% in 10 sessions since end January, reflecting the change in the outlook for developers due to the growth-oriented budget, low interest rates and profit booked from a resurgent stock market looking for diversification.

 

There is more on the plate for the cautious investors looking for alternatives to the volatile equities. With the next fiscal year’s borrowings pegged at Rs 12 lakh crore, there is urgency to attract investment to the debt market. Infrastructure debt funds can issue zero coupon bonds below face value to capture current yields. Real estate and investment trusts can get dividend income without TDS to turn them into hot destinations for FPIs. The most significant change is freeing government securities to all categories. The jump in individual clients of brokers even during the lockdown and simultaneous redemption of mutual fund units indicate retail investors are snatching back decision-making from fund managers. Small savings schemes will continue to be an important option for a resources-hungry government. Surprisingly, even the finnicky ratings agencies have been circumspect. Instead of scolding the government for allowing the fiscal deficit to spiral to 9.5% of the GDP this year and to 6.8% in the next, there have been murmurs of understanding. The expenditure splurge, with the potential to bolster inflationary pressure, has sought to be offset by divestment and strategic sale of PSUs and monetizing dedicated freight corridors, airports, and railway infrastructure.

In fact, the four Atmanirbhar Bharat packages have created a new template for pulling the economy back from the brink by marrying loose fiscal policies with calibrated monetary measures. The standard operating procedure of liquidity infusion, found so effective in the aftermath of the credit crunch of September 2008 and repeated during the current pandemic, has been enriched by step-by-step policy support. Instead of dispatching monthly cheques, India deposited cash into the Jan Dhan accounts of the poor. Besides the quarterly instalment in farmers’ accounts, free ration to the urban and rural poor ensured food security. Access to low-cost money was eased for the vulnerable sections. Collateral-free loans to the unorganized sector and partially guaranteed credit lines to NBFCs smoothened the flow of money in the desired direction. The targets were MSMEs for their ability to create jobs, home buyers to set in motion demand for housing-related inputs and farmers, whose disposable income is a magnet for consumption themes such as consumer durables and non-durables. In the process, India has created a toolkit to be mimicked to contain future economic crises. The most heartening outcome has been Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s assertion that damning the private sector is insulting the youth. After the 1991 dismantling of licence raj, which was a covert nod to entrepreneurship but celebrated as coexistence of a mixed economy, the statement in parliament is the most overt acknowledgement by any government of India of the contribution of promoter-owned businesses in the country’s development.

 

 -Mohan Sule

 

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