Interim budget 2014-15: Will Chidambaram focus on fiscal consolidation?
Mumbai: India’s finance minister P. Chidambaram
is expected to focus on fiscal consolidation in an interim budget on
Monday and resist the temptation to announce a populist spending spree
in a bid to stave off defeat at looming elections.
Finance minister Chidambaram, of the embattled ruling Congress
party, is expected to focus on tightening spending in his budget speech
to the Parliament, his final one before a national vote due by May.
“There is no room for populism. He will have to stay
focused on the current account deficit, fiscal deficit and inflation,”
said Vivek Rajpal, an interest rates strategist at Nomura Singapore Ltd.
The government aims to limit the size of its fiscal
deficit to 4.8% of gross domestic product for current financial year, at
a time when economic growth is at decade lows.
It hopes to make good on its aim thanks to
higher-than-expected, non-tax revenues such as those from the recent
auction of mobile phone spectrum licences, for which companies bid
around $10 billion.
Arun Singh, senior economist with research firm Dun & Bradstreet Corp.,
said international credit agencies would be looking closely at the
state of India’s public finances. “When they have already warned of an
adverse impact on India’s rating if this (deficit) figure worsens, the
government really has no choice but to keep walking on a fiscal
consolidation path,” Singh said.
‘Red Line’
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s
administration has been widely criticised for its inability to stem
corruption, boost growth and control India’s inflation, leading voters
to deliver a string of defeats in recent state elections.
In December, global ratings agency Fitch voiced concern
that “a steeper political struggle to pull in more votes” might prompt
the government to unleash a voter-pleasing spending spree before the
polls due by May. However, Chidambaram has dismissed talk of pre-poll
giveaways and termed the fiscal gap target for 2013-14
as a “red line”.
as a “red line”.
Many economists, therefore, expect Chidambaram to
announce an even lower fiscal deficit goal for the next financial year
of around 4.2% to 4.3% of GDP, taking it closer to 3 percent by 2016-17.
In last year’s February budget, the government hiked
spending in education, health, agriculture and rural development, even
though this did little to bring economic growth back on track.
With its term nearly over, economists say it is unlikely
the government can do anything dramatic to re-ignite the growth engine
while balancing inflationary pressures—something Reserve Bank of India
(RBI) has made a top priority,
with three interest rate hikes since September.
with three interest rate hikes since September.
India’s economy grew by only 4.5% last year, far down
from the near double-digit growth enjoyed in the past decade, and little
improvement is expected this year.
While cutting expenditure to lower fiscal deficit is a
standard procedure worldwide, rolling back the government’s presence can
also hurt growth in a country with widespread poverty and scant
infrastructure.
“Development spending is bearing the brunt of any cuts,”
wrote Anubhuti Sahay, senior economist with Standard Chartered Bank, in a
note last week.
“The government’s dependence on selling assets and
channelling funds from one arm of the government to another calls into
question the long-term sustainability of fiscal consolidation.” AFP
md.aquil alam
pgdm 2nd semester
source. mint
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