After elections, the next government should not dodge the need for more radical reforms.
Business
Standard : India, the world's fastest growing large economy,
is slowing: There has been a visible deceleration in activity in the
past six months. It started with slowing sales of autos and some
durable goods and has spread from there. Airline traffic growth is
down; companies are now saying sales of consumer staples such as
soaps and detergents have begun to weaken, too. Even as the hunt for
reasons for the slowdown begins, the main culprit appears to be a
familiar one: the still largely government-owned financial system.
The
issue is that there isn’t enough money in the economy. For much of
the past two years, distributors and retailers of consumer products
have been warning of a growing lack of liquidity. At first,
policymakers largely dismissed their concerns. The government's late
2016 decision to withdraw most currency from circulation temporarily,
and the introduction the following year of a nationwide
goods-and-services tax, made it hard to decipher signals on economic
momentum. Plus, liquidity, as the central
bank measures it, generally looked stable: Banks were still
parking funds with the Reserve Bank of India overnight.
Now
that the GST is more than a year old and the effects of
demonetization have faded, the growth numbers are less distorted by
base effects and the slowdown is becoming more obvious. So is the
lack of liquidity: For the past two years, growth in money supply, as
measured by M3, has lagged GDP growth; the M3-to-GDP ratio has
declined sharply from 85 per cent to below 80 per cent. Though
aggressive purchases of government bonds by the RBI have caused base
money or M0 (much of which is currency in circulation) to grow at 16
per cent in recent months, it is still about 1 percentage point of
GDP lower than its level before demonetization.
Obviously,
the engine that converts the 28 trillion rupees of base money (M0) to
the 154 trillion rupees available as broad money (M3) is
malfunctioning. The bottleneck is in the financial system. Money gets
created when loans are given and, even though bank credit growth has
accelerated in the past few months, aggregate credit growth is still
far too weak.
A
reluctance to privatize the financial system is to blame. State
banks continue to dominate the sector, controlling some
two-thirds of banking assets. They also accounted for nearly 90 per
cent of the non-performing assets from the last lending boom. While
all sides of the political spectrum acknowledge the need for reform,
governments have shied away from selling off state lenders outright,
preferring to reform the sector by stealth. The hope has been to slow
the growth of state-owned banks and allow privately owned rivals to
gain market share.
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