Restoring the finance ministry's credibility requires more than ensuring that the fiscal deficit numbers are believable.
Budget
2019 : During election years such as this one, India’s
outgoing finance minister offers up only an “interim budget,”
under the assumption that the incoming government will have different
policy priorities. Given that Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s
government was reelected so easily, one might think the budget it’s
scheduled to present on July 5 won’t look much different. It
should.
Modi’s
new finance minister, Nirmala
Sitharaman, faces different conditions than her predecessor. In
the months since the interim budget, India’s economy has taken a
turn for the worse. In May, we learned that the economy had grown at
only 5.8% in the three months between January and March,
significantly lower than expected.
The
monsoon -- crucial for growth in agriculture, which employs half or
more of India’s workers -- has under-performed. Rain in June was a
third less than expected; it was the fifth-driest June in a century.
That
means consumer demand in India will be under further pressure and the
government will be expected to step in to support spending and
provide welfare.
Given
those conditions, markets might forgive some deviation from the
government’s fiscal glide path. The plan has long been to reduce
the fiscal deficit to 3% of gross domestic product, but instead it
seems to be stuck closer to 3.4% of GDP. Sitharaman will be tempted
to further relax that target. Gross government debt as a proportion
of GDP in India is fairly high, at close to 70%. Still, if combined
with a credible plan to control expenditure, missing the deficit
target slightly won’t be seen as a disaster.
What
is far more important is to restore the government’s credibility.
Frankly, the deficit figures in the interim budget didn’t stand up
to sustained scrutiny.
A
couple of years ago, India introduced a new indirect tax regime
which, while still a good idea in theory, has in practice been so
poorly designed that revenue collections have been lower than
expected. In 2018-19, the actual collections from the goods and
services tax were more than 10% less than budgeted the previous year.
Even
so, the interim budget assumed that collection of the GST would grow
by 18% in 2019-20. That claim found few takers. Now that even the
government admits that the economy is slowing, it’s hard to see how
the full-year budget could possibly repeat that assumption and still
be taken seriously.
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