The finance minister touched upon the difficulties in meeting the fiscal deficit, and indirectly signalled a fiscal slippage for the year.
Finance
Minister Nirmala
Sitharaman on Wednesday defended her handling of the economy,
saying steps taken by the government since the Union Budget
presentation had started bearing fruit and some sectors such as
automobiles are showing signs of recovery. The minister added that
while economic growth had slowed in the past few quarters, the
country was not undergoing a recession.
“Every
step being taken is in the interest of the country. Looking at the
economy in discerning view, you see that growth may have come down,
but it is not a recession yet and it won’t be a recession ever,”
she said while replying to a discussion on the economic
slowdown in the Rajya Sabha.
Sitharaman’s
reply was marked by unruly scenes and some disruptions, especially by
Anand Sharma of the Congress. A number of Opposition members staged a
walkout.
The
finance minister touched upon the difficulties in meeting the fiscal
deficit, and indirectly signalled a fiscal slippage for the year.
“A
lot of concern has been raised over the fiscal deficit. In the July
Budget, I pegged it at 3.3 per cent of GDP (gross domestic product).
Although the FRBM Act has been there since 2004, on average, the
fiscal deficit during the UPA-2 was 5.5 per cent of GDP. In our first
term, the average was 3.6 per cent,” she said.
“They
(the Opposition) should know that there are difficulties in
maintaining fiscal discipline and sometimes it is not possible… I
appreciate the anxiety (about the fiscal deficit), but the people who
ran it well above 5 per cent should know what is fiscal management,”
she added.
While
the Centre has not revised its fiscal deficit target for the year,
officials expect a slippage, given that tax revenue shortfall is
expected to be larger than Rs 2 trillion in the current financial
year.
Sitharaman
blamed the lagged effect of the twin balance sheet crisis in banks
due to non-performing assets (NPAs) on the one hand and heavily
indebted corporates on the other, resulting from the UPA regime
lending, for the fall in GDP growth in the past two financial years.
“As
a result of the twin balance sheet (crisis), private investment
suffered and that led to the slowdown. Therefore, in 2017-18, GDP
growth was 7.2 per cent, and in 2018-19, it was 6.8 per cent,”
Sitharaman said, admitting that the decline was very pronounced in
the first quarter of 2019-20. Real GDP growth for the April-June
quarter was 5 per cent, the lowest since 2013.BS
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