budget in the shadow of record current account deficit
Managing the current account deficit has to be at the centre of the budget and this strategy has to be two-pronged
The problem is that the current account deficit is high at a time when investment is very low, which means that increasing investment, which is needed to boost growth, runs the risk of inflating the external deficit. Photo: Mint
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Updated: Fri, Feb 22 2013. 12 03 AM IST
Mumbai:
The second quarter of 2012-13 saw a current account deficit of 5.4% of
the country’s gross domestic product (GDP). The third quarter is likely
to see a current account deficit of around 6% of GDP. And just to remind
everybody, the deficit was 3% of GDP in 1990-91, the year of the
country’s worst balance of payments crisis. This year’s budget is being
prepared under the lowering shadow of a record current account deficit.
Why
is that important? Well, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) believes the
country’s sustainable current account deficit is 2.5% of GDP. It’s far
above that level now, and the massive gap has to be financed through
capital inflows, which makes the Indian economy completely dependent on
the kindness of foreigners. Any loss of confidence in India’s growth prospects, any
lessening of global risk appetite,
and fund flows to the country’s markets could start drying up, dragging
down the rupee and leading to a stampede for the exits. The price of
imports will rise, inflation will go up, growth will slow, companies
that have borrowed abroad will totter, and we could see a vicious
backlash. It’s a huge risk, as rating agency
Moody’s Investors Service
recently underlined. And don’t
forget that we have the general election in 2014, so political
uncertainty is likely to weigh on inflows. The finance minister has only
a small window of opportunity. He must make the most of it.
That
means managing the current accou
nt deficit has to be at the centre of
the budget. The strategy has to be two-pronged—taking steps to reduce
the current account deficit on the one hand, and ensuring that the
confidence of international investors in the Indian economy is boosted
on the other, so that capital inflows to cover the deficit are adequate.
The
current account deficit is the gap between domestic savings and
investment. But the problem is that the current account deficit is high
at a time when investment is very low, which means that increasing
investment, which is needed to boost growth, runs the risk of inflating
the external deficit. A high current account deficit at a time of low
growth also indicates that the problem is structural in nature. The
finance minister can do little, in the short term, to remove the supply
bottlenecks that have led to higher imports, such as a shortage of coal,
the increased use of diesel, or the mess in iron ore. He can do little
about oil prices or oil imports in the short term without affecting
growth.
What
can he do then? He could take measures to increase domestic savings.
Shrinking the fiscal deficit is one way of doing that. That will also
increase the leeway for RBI to cut interest rates. But if the deficit is
cut by reducing subsidies, it will lead to higher administrative
prices, increasing inflation. Higher tax receipts cannot be taken for
granted, because the reasons holding back growth are supply-side
bottlenecks that will take time to resolve and the recovery is likely to
be slow as a result. He could, however, go in for a tax on the very
rich. Cutting non-Plan expenditure is essential, but unfortunately a
large part of the Centre’s expenses are more or less fixed. In short,
while it’s absolutely necessary to reduce the fiscal deficit and the
finance minister has already indicated he’ll aim for it to be 4.8% of
GDP in 2013-14, a large part of the improvement will have to come from
non-tax receipts, such as divestments.
It is
not just the government that needs to save more—the financial savings of
households have gone down from 12% of GDP in fiscal 2010 to 8% of GDP
in fiscal 2012. This trend has to be reversed, by giving more incentives
to people to save in financial instruments. The finance minister must
give sops for exports, which will improve the trade deficit. He could
also increase the import duty on gold. And he could lay out the timeline
for the implementation of the goods and services tax.
What
can the finance minister do to ensure that capital inflows remain
robust? One, he could announce measures that would help the capital
markets, which would support his divestment agenda and allow foreign
institutional investors’ funds to flow into debt markets, lowering
interest rates. He must try and get domestic investors back into the
markets. And secondly, he could outline in his speech his agenda for
further reforms, such as the pension and insurance Bills, freeing up
foreign direct investment further, and making the tax code more
investment friendly. Finally, the markets will not take kindly to more
populism.
Ultimately,
credible supply-side structural reforms, not all of which can be
addressed by the budget, are needed to restore confidence in the
economy. Will the finance minister do his bit? This is after all the
last full budget before the 2014 election and there will be pressure on
him to play to the political gallery. The hope is that the government
has in recent months taken several reformist steps, albeit only after it
was pushed to the wall by the threat of a ratings downgrade. That
threat persists and the reforms momentum needs to be carried forward in
the budget. If it isn’t, it won’t be long before the slowdown snowballs
into a crisis.
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