Business Standard's own calculations suggest that the Centre's
fiscal impact amounts to around Rs 2.28 trillion, or around 1.2 per cent of
GDP.
The actual fiscal
cost of the Centre’s Rs 21-trillion ‘Atmanirbhar
Bharat’ Covid-19 package was lowest among 20 major nations, said a recent
research report by Motilal Oswal.
“The true fiscal
stimulus in FY21 (fiscal year 2020-21), as per our estimates, amounted to only
around Rs 2.5 trillion or 1.3 per cent of gross domestic product (GDP). The
bulk of the fiscal support constituted loan guarantees and non-budgetary
measures,” the report said.
Business
Standard’s own calculations suggest that the Centre’s fiscal impact amounts to
around Rs 2.28 trillion, or around 1.2 per cent of GDP. This includes tax
revenue foregone, outlay towards free food distribution and cash handouts,
increase in NREGA, interest subvention, increase in viability gap funding for
social infrastructure, and initial support from the centre’s coffers to
kickstart some of the liquidity and credit measures announced by Finance
Minister Nirmala Sitharaman.
Additionally, not
all of this amount will necessarily be borne in the fiscal year 2020-21. A
portion of the total fiscal burden, especially on the rural sector and
agriculture-related announcements, will come out of the centre’s budget over
the next two-five years.
Motilal
Oswal, it its report last week, said that this feature was not unique to
India.
“Although the
support packages in some developing economies, such as Thailand, Brazil, South
Africa, and Malaysia cost 12–17 per cent of GDP, the actual fiscal stimulus is
under 5 per cent of GDP for all. This is true for some developed economies as
well.”
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