The government expects the new stimulus to add around 0.5 per cent
of GDP - a small boost compared with the 11.5 per cent drop in real GDP for
year ending March 2021.
India’s second
round of stimulus package will provide limited support to growth and highlights
budgetary constraint to back the economy during a very sharp contraction,
rating agency Moody’s said on Thursday.
On October 12, Finance Minister Nirmala
Sitharaman unveiled its second round of fiscal stimulus, amounting to Rs
46,700 crore ($6.4 billion), which is about 0.2 per cent the gross domestic
product (GDP) for year ending March 2021. The new stimulus, which includes cash
payments to government employees and interest-free loans to states, aims to
boost consumer spending during India’s festive season and to increase capital
expenditures.
The measures will
involve additional direct official spending of around Rs 41,000 crore, but will
not require fresh funding given that the government lifted its borrowing limit
earlier in 2020 to allow for coronavirus-related expenditure, Moody’s said.
Even when combined
with the government’s fiscal stimulus earlier in 2020, the size of the measures
remains modest. In total, the two rounds of stimulus bring the government’s
direct spending on coronavirus-related fiscal support to around 1.2 per cent of
GDP. This compares with an average of around 2.5 per cent of GDP for Baa-rated
peers as of mid-June. While the latest stimulus will spur consumer spending
over the near term as Covid restrictions continue to be eased and India’s
festive season begins, the support to growth will be minimal, the agency said.
The government
expects the new stimulus to add around 0.5 per cent of GDP – a small boost
compared with the 11.5 per cent drop in real GDP
for year ending March 2021. Consumer confidence has remained subdued even as
India has emerged from a very stringent nationwide lockdown, which drove a 24.5
per cent contraction in private consumption in the April-June quarter, compared
with the previous year.
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