However, the finance minister has achieved a "balancing act" through her moves, Goyal said.
The
Union
Budget was “disappointing” as it lacked a vision, though
measures like relaxing the fiscal deficit target and simplifying
income tax are positives, the PM’s economic advisory council member
Ashima Goyal has said.
Goyal,
who is a part-time member of the Economic Advisory Council to the
Prime Minister (EAC-PM), also said that it was a “surprise” not
to have a mention of the word ‘slowdown’ in the nearly three-hour
long speech by Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman.
The
Budget document is a “balancing act” between fiscal stimulus to
drive growth and the need to be responsible on spending, she said at
the Indira Gandhi Institute for Development Research here over the
weekend. “Overall it (Budget) was disappointing because they didn't
bring out the vision as a first real budget of a new government. It
had to give a vision,” she said.
India’s
GDP growth is expected to slip to a decadal low of 5 per cent
this fiscal, pressured by domestic factors like drop in consumption,
as well as global issues.
She
said Sitharaman was in a “catch-22” situation from the word go in
the Budget making process, wherein any action would have left someone
unhappy. However, the finance minister has achieved a “balancing
act” through her moves, Goyal said. She elaborated that by adopting
the ‘exit clause’ under the Fiscal Responsibility and Budget
Management (FRBM) Act, the government gave a stimulus to growth and
yet affirmed commitment to rules against fiscal profligacy.
To
drive the point further, she said a 0.5 percentage point relaxation
in fiscal deficit target offered under the exit clause makes lot of
resources available, considering that the overall size of the economy
is nearly $3 trillion.
Goyal
also welcomed the government's resolve not to adopt policies similar
to the response following the 2008 financial crisis.
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