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Indian Economy Crises - Updated, News & Discussion

With growth this bad, India needs more than luck
The troubling state of India's economy requires the ability of rate cuts to flow through the economy.
By Daniel Moss

With India's growth tumbling to 4.5% from 8.1% in little more than a year, you’d be surprised to know that Shaktikanta Das has one of the easiest jobs in central banking. He just has to keep doing what he's been doing since becoming governor of the Reserve Bank of India last December: cut interest rates. Fortunately, political will is on his side.

That’s an enviable state of affairs for a central banker these days. Just look at Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell, who has become a constant target of President Donald Trump’s Twitter tirades. It’s also face-saving for Das that politics and economics are pointing in the same direction. He took up this post under a cloud of question marks about the RBI’s independence. Das’s immediate predecessor, Urjit Patel, quit abruptly almost a year ago, just as the government was ratcheting up pressure for the institution to hand over some of its reserves to free up fiscal spending.

The troubling state of Asia's third-largest economy makes Das's task uncomplicated. The pace of growth is slowing dramatically; government numbers Friday showed India’s expansion slipped in the third quarter to its weakest clip since 2013. Many big economies have been stalling, but it’s hard to think of another where growth has come down to earth this quickly. Expectations have diminished so radically that even a slowdown of this magnitude was in line with economists’ projections.

Falling Toward Earth
For Das to even contemplate taking his foot off the monetary pedal now would be a mistake. He should look past the recent uptick in inflation last month, largely attributed to vegetables such as onions, a staple of Indian cooking. Those price gains helped push the measure beyond the RBI's 4% medium-term target. More important is the slide in core inflation, which strips out volatile commodity prices. This points to a demand problem in the economy.

Das says policymakers will keep cutting rates until growth revives. The five reductions he’s overseen haven’t given the economy back its groove; so the mission is clear going into next week’s meeting, when the central bank is expected to cut again. His global peers may have done well to adopt the same approach. It's clear from the Fed’s retreat that the hikes in 2018 went too far in the face of anemic inflation. The European Central Bank had barely curtailed quantitative easing before it had to start all over again.

Lest Das be tempted to sail through, there's the iceberg of India’s banking industry to consider, which is saddled with one of the world's most dangerous loads of bad debt. The trouble is, about 60% of the financial system is controlled by state-run banks that report to the government, so Das’s ability to influence them is constrained. At some point he may well have to challenge entrenched political interests.

The other hurdle is that India’s broken financial system hinders the ability of rate cuts to flow through the economy. Shadow banking, a big source of weakness, was also a major source of lending. That spigot appears to have largely dried up.

I wrote in February that Das was lucky: Economic need trumped the political circumstances surrounding his first rate cut. But luck doesn’t last forever. It wasn’t too long ago that economic aspirations for India echoed China’s. Now this young country of 1.4 billion people is looking more like Indonesia, Malaysia or the Philippines — that is, just another middling emerging market. At this rate, Das will need more than rate cuts and a good reputation to fix things.

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Is Indian economy looking at a new low?
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Slowdown Vs Recession
"Indian economy may be facing a slowdown but there’s no danger of a recession"--This is how Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman defended the government. While GDP growth has been slipping for five consecutive quarters now, it's still a slowdown and not yet a recession. That's because a recession means a contraction in GDP for two consecutive quarters. The GDP growth for the July-September quarter has slipped to 4.5%. Let's have a look at the major indicators that fulled this.
 
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A Downward Spiral
Why India's growth continues to slip despite a spate of measures by the government
MG Arun

Two days before the second quarter GDP numbers were released by the government, finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman told Parliament that although the economy was facing a slowdown, fears of a recession were unwarranted. She attributed the slowing growth to the so-called 'twin balance sheet' crisis--the huge corpus of bad loans on the one hand and highly indebted corporates on the other. On November 29, the worst fears of the government came true. India's GDP growth plunged to a 26-quarter low of 4.5 per cent in the July-September quarter of 2019-20 as manufacturing contracted, investments weakened and consumption demand fell. GDP growth rate was 8.1 per cent in the same period a year ago. In the first quarter of this fiscal, it was just 5 per cent, already the slowest in six years.
What is of utmost concern is that the economy has not rebounded despite the spate of measures introduced by Sitharaman's finance ministry over the past few months, primarily targeting the real estate, automobile and banking sector, and also reducing corporate taxes steeply to spur investments. In the first quarter itself, there were indications that more bleak news was on the way. Government data released on November 11 showed that factory output, as indicated by the Index of Industrial Production (IIP), fell for the second consecutive month in September to 4.3 per cent, the lowest in eight years. The troubled auto sector continues its rough ride. Data from the Society of Indian Automobile Manufacturers (SIAM) stated that total vehicle sales declined by 12.8 per cent to 2,176,136 units in October from 2,494,345 units sold in the corresponding month of the previous year. Meanwhile, domestic car sales were down almost 6.34 per cent, 173,649 units compared to 185,400 in October 2018. The festive season has also given no reprieve. Several news reports point to as much as a 40 per cent dip during the festive season, with some traders not even filling their inventory ahead of the season.

"The private part of the GDP is not doing well, it is the government that is supporting the GDP growth," says D.K. Joshi, chief economist with Crisil. "Government consumption has grown at over 15 per cent. Apart from this, the other engines are not firing," he adds. Moreover, nominal growth has fallen sharply, which shows a demand slowdown, he adds. The good thing, according to him, is that the government has started spending.

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Private investment is not picking up as the banking sector is still in the doldrums. At one point, state-owned banks had shied away from lending to large-scale projects; the situation now is that no corporates are coming forward to put in any large-scale investment. With demand slowing in a variety of sectors including auto, FMCG (fast moving consumer goods), consumer durables and retail (with the exception of online sales driven by large discounts), private investors have good reason to hold back large scale investments. Private sector capex announcements were near historic lows in the quarter ended September, the Centre for Monitoring India Economy (CMIE) said in October. Private sector investments fell 70 per cent compared to the year-ago period. CMIE says the investment slowdown is linked to the persistence of stalled projects, which have dampened the animal spirits in the economy. Moreover, the health of the shadow banking sector still remains precarious, cutting off precious money supply to both large and small enterprises to fund operations and growth. Growth in the core sector for October further contracted to 5.8 per cent from the 5.2 per cent seen in September, dragged down by a de-growth in electricity consumption.

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"I just want to highlight that 32 steps were taken by me. Every step that is pertaining to different sectors, whether it is MSME (micro, small and medium enterprises) or banks... these steps I review on a weekly basis," Sitharaman had told Parliament. However, the issue seems to be that most of the measures taken by the government so far support growth only in the medium-to-long term. Also, as these measures were an effort to reduce the cost of goods and services, they are essentially a supply-side response to revive growth. What is needed is to stimulate demand by putting more disposable income in the hands of rural and urban households.

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Most keenly watched now will be how the second half of the fiscal performs, and what holds for the full year. Predictions have been bleak so far. Already, there has been a spate of data revisions. Moody's Investors Service cut India's GDP growth forecast for 2019-20 to 5.8 per cent, from the 6.2 per cent it had projected earlier. The decline, it said, was due to an investment-led slowdown that had widened to impact consumption, driven by financial stress among rural households and weak job creation. The RBI, too, has lowered India's growth forecast for 2019-20, to 6.1 per cent from the 6.9 per cent it had projected earlier. The World Bank has cut India's GDP growth forecast for 2019-20 by the most among South Asian nations, to 6 per cent compared to 7.5 per cent it projected in April this year, citing a deceleration in local demand, and a weak financial sector. The International Monetary Fund has forecast a 6.1 per cent growth for this fiscal.

With the economy continuing its slow run, the RBI is expected to further cut lending rates in its next monetary policy review in the first week of December. Already, the RBI has cut key rates by a cumulative 135 basis points since Shaktikanta Das became governor in December 2018.

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Indian economy headed for structural breakdown
By Ravi Kant
On November 8, India marked the third anniversary of demonetization, the single biggest monetary experiment in human history to curb black money. Prime Minister Narendra Modi surprised India and the rest of the world with the announcement that 500- and 1,000-rupee banknotes would no longer be legal tender. Overnight, more than 86% (US$206 billion) of the total currency in circulation at that time was affected. The prime reason given by the government for such a bold move was to root out corruption. But cash only accounts for about 6% of all illegal holdings in the country.

The suddenness of the announcement and printing-press constraints prevented the immediate replacement of the demonetized currency with new notes. The total amount of currency used as legal tender declined by 75% overnight. This acted as a shock to the economy and created a liquidity crisis. It also hit consumption badly, which directly impacted production, and following the domino effect, employment, growth as well as tax revenue went down. The GDP growth rate of 8.01% in the 2015-16 fiscal year fell to 7.11% in 2016-17 after demonetization. With this monetary exercise, India took its biggest ever risk with its domestic consumption driven economy.

Before Indians had a chance to recover from this shock, the government implemented the most complex tax reforms in its history, the GST (goods and services tax), on July 1, 2017. The old license regime (an elaborate system of licensing, regulations and red tape for setting up a business) was back with a new name, in the form of a complex tax rate mechanism.

There were several issues with the GST, such as multiple tax rates, surcharges, and the requirement to file monthly returns. It imposed criminal penalties for a sale without an invoice, misuse of tax refunds, and manipulation of tax credits. In a country as big as India with a large informal sector, the high GST rates and complex compliance needs make doing business quite difficult.

According to a survey by AITUC (the All India Trade Union Congress), as of September 2018, a fifth of India’s 63 million small businesses contributing 32% to the economy and employing 111 million people has faced a 20% fall in profits since the GST rollout and had to fire hundreds of thousands of workers. According to the Laffer curve, raising tax rates always results in lower tax revenues. That’s mainly due to confiscatory tax rates slowing the velocity of money.

After these two major disastrous reforms, India’s economy has seen a lot of turbulence in relation to GDP growth going down each successive quarter, the fiscal deficit growing significantly, and various sectors facing crises.

The fundamental reason behind such dismal performance on the economic front is government policy itself. In order to eliminate corruption, the government has waged a war against the informal economy. But a large portion of the economy, especially in rural regions, is informal, so this becomes a war on the economy itself. Hence the government has ended up killing the economy. India lost its crown as the world’s fastest-growing economy in May this year.

Is the slowdown cyclical or structural?
The current debate among economists is whether the current slowdown is cyclical or structural. The government probably thinks it is more cyclical in nature. But that ignores the fact that cyclical slowdowns are recessionary. A recession is two consecutive quarters of slow growth, but the Indian economy has been slowing down for quite some time and despite having successive interest rate cuts this year and the fiscal deficit reaching 102% of the 2019 annual budget, the economy has yet to show any positive signs.

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According to Fitch Ratings, the Indian economy grew by 4.7% in the July-to-September quarter, the lowest in six years. It’s quite evident that the current slowdown is depressionary rather than recessionary in nature. A depression is a sustained period of below-trend growth with no signs of collapse or getting back on trend. For example, if a country’s trend growth is 5-6% and it is currently growing at 3-4%, then the 2-percentage-point gap is a depressed growth. Depressions are persistent and structural in nature, which take decades to resolve. Structural problems cannot be solved with cyclical solutions.

An economy based on creating value
India needs urgently to start the second wave of reforms (since 1990) in order to address structural challenges faced by the economy, such as slowing demand, low saving rates, complex labor laws and land reforms. Relaxation of capital controls is one of the best ways to attract foreign investment. Apart from that, India needs to take bold steps in the capital market with more focus on connecting rural India, which accounts for 80% of consumption demand.

It should focus more on research and product development rather than the more traditional focus on manufacturing and assembly. India needs to move up the value chain and progress from being primarily a service provider for many different industries, to becoming an innovator across industries, and indeed, many parts of the local and global economy.

India needs to focus on three key factors: competition, deregulation, and market access. A long-term strategy for sustainable growth in the next few decades should be built to counter the threats posed by artificial intelligence (AI) and automation. For that, an economy based upon on innovation and creation of intellectual property will be vital for sustainable growth. In the future, countries high in IP activity and a strong culture to boost innovation will have a large share of world GDP.

We Indians have already missed the opportunity to reap the benefits of the demographic dividend, but we need to capitalize on human resources efficiently. It’s a race against time, and if the current administration keeps prioritizing settling the political agenda (as it appears from five years’ experience) and ignoring the economic woes, then there is a greater chance of the Indian economy heading for structural breakdown within a few years.
 
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Why India slips further among emerging economies race
India's economy grew only 4.5 per cent in June to September this current year, whereas GDP of peer countries like Vietnam jumped 7.31 per cent in the same period.
Dipu Rai
The latest data on Gross Domestic Product (GDP) showed that India is in an acute slump. Consumers and businessmen are not spending or investing due to bleak prospects and economy have slumped to 4.5 per cent.

Data released by Central Statistics Office on Friday shows that India, once considered as the fastest growing economy in the world, is now finding it difficult to compete with emerging economies like Vietnam or Egypt.

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India's economy grew only 4.5 per cent in June to September this current year, whereas GDP of peer countries like Vietnam jumped 7.31 per cent in the same period. India's real GDP growth slumped even further in quarter two of the financial year 2019-20 (July-September) to 4.5 per cent year-over-year, from 5 per cent year-over-year in quarter one in the same fiscal year, due to a sharp slowdown in private consumption growth.

"As expected, the slowdown in GDP growth is largely on account of the slump in consumption expenditure and degrowth in exports. But for the government expenditure growth, 2QFY20 GDP growth would have been much lower. Investment, as measured by the gross fixed capital formation, in any case, has been down for the last two quarters and again came in at just 1 per cent. This shows that economy is passing through a declining growth momentum and there is no easy way out," Devendra Pant, chief economist of India Ratings and Research, the local unit of Fitch Ratings Ltd, told India Today.

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GDP growth rate lowest in six years

In the emerging economy, especially in Asia, China decreases its exports of labour-intensive manufactured goods and countries like Vietnam and Indonesia are stepping into that role.

In 2000, Asia accounted for one-third of global GDP (in PPP terms), and consultancy firm McKinsey hope that it is on track to top 50 per cent by 2040. But India, the third-largest economy is under pressure, may need more substantial uplift.

The latest GDP number shows that recent fiscal and monetary stimulus failed to rebound the Indian economy.
 
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Severe slowdown: When will the Indian economy recover and how?
India’s GDP growth dropped to 4.5% in Q2, a free fall from govt’s call for a double-digit growth.
Shantanu Nandan Sharma
India’s gross domestic product (GDP) growth has dropped to 4.5% in the July-September quarter of 2019-20, a free fall from the government’s ambitious call for a double-digit growth not so long ago. Propelling India into a $5 tn economic behemoth by 2024-2025 also seems implausible now.

The fall has been sudden although not entirely unexpected. In the first quarter of 2016-17, India registered a spectacular GDP growth of 9.4%. Today, it’s struggling at a 26-quarter low. A severe slowdown is here. The question is, how long will it last? How many more quarters will pass before India can bounce back to a desired 8-10% trajectory? Will Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman’s slew of interventions — from slashing corporate tax to doling out a real estate package — pay off immediately? Is there a way to accelerate recovery?

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Economists, statisticians and civil servants, whom ET Magazine spoke to, give mixed reactions. Former chief economic adviser to the government, Arvind Virmani, says the economy likely bottomed out in September or October. “So I expect Q3 growth to be higher than Q2. The issue now is what the government can do to accelerate growth recovery and reduce the time the economy takes to return to the 7.5% growth track,” he says. What is Virmani’s prescription for now? “Besides monetary easing by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), the government needs to simplify the goods and services tax (GST) and introduce a new direct tax code to clear the tax jungle created by our ancient income-tax law and rules,” he says.

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As soon as the GDP numbers were announced on Friday, the Ministry of Finance tweeted, quoting Secretary Atanu Chakraborty, that growth would pick up from the next quarter, reiterating that the fundamentals of the Indian economy remained strong. The expectation of finance ministry officials seems to be in sync with some economists like Virmani.

Not all, however, agree that a quick turnaround is likely if the government fails to undertake a course correction. Former chief statistician of India, Pronab Sen, argues that the FM’s recent packages have focused too much on the supply side. He wonders if these measures would propel a quicker recovery. “The FM’s measures don’t address the problem of demand contraction. I don’t see a recovery out of those,” he says, adding that the economy will recover in two or three quarters only if the government quickly shifts its attention from mega highway projects to smaller core sector activities that have a quicker turnaround time. He also advocates increasing rural outlays to boost liquidity, create demand and thereby incentivise India Inc to invest more.

When will Indian Economy Recover?

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There has been suspicion that India’s profit-making companies might have ended up using the massive corporate tax cut to strengthen their books rather than to invest the new-found savings in building factories and offices, which would have spurred growth. In September, the Centre announced slashing the corporate tax from 30% to 22% for companies not availing other tax breaks, and from 25% to 15% for new manufacturers. “The state governments, Union territories and the Centre would need to ensure quick disbursement of payments due to the private sector, so that liquidity improves in the economy,” says Shailesh Pathak, CEO, L&T Infrastructure Development Projects. He says highway toll collections indicate that the worst is behind us, especially from late October 2019.

Not everyone shares that optimism. Former industry secretary Ajay Dua does not see the economy recovering anytime soon. He blames the government and its think tank NITI Aayog, in particular, for living in denial till mid-August about the slowdown. The FM’s first intervention came only in the second half of August, meaning the government did not do much for a big part of Q2, which eventually resulted in a muted number.

“The slew of measures announced by Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman will have an impact only in the medium term. I expect the economy to start recovering from June-July next year, provided we have a good monsoon,” says Dua, arguing that the government must release two instalments of PM-Kisan (Rs 4,000) at one go as well as increase the MGNREGS (Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme) allocation to spur rural demand. However, the GDP growth rate going below the 5% mark in the second quarter is not a bolt from the blue.

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There have been multiple indicators in the recent months — be it the 4.3% contraction of factory output for September, the shrinkage of merchandise exports in the successive months of August (-6%) and September (-6.6%), and then, the RBI survey suggesting that the consumer confidence dropped to a six-year low in September.

The government tried to avert the crisis. First it withdrew the super-rich surcharge levied on foreign portfolio investors and then rolled out a series of measures, including corporate tax cut and the proposal to set up a Rs 25,000 crore fund to revive the realty sector. The RBI, for its part, has already lowered its benchmark interest rate (repo rate) five times during this calendar year, taking the cumulative cuts to 135 basis points, from 6.5% in January to 5.15% in October, even as the Consumer Price Index (CPI)-based inflation shot up from a paltry 1.97 to a mildly worrisome 4.62. How much more will the central bank yield, as its stated priority has always been to curb inflation first? RBI’s monetary policy committee (MPC), which will meet this week, may consider marginally reducing the interest rate.

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For the government, the headroom to spend money has shrunk after it slashed the corporate tax, taking a hit of about Rs 1.45 lakh crore. The monthly collection of GST, stuck below the Rs 1 lakh crore mark since May, has been a concern for the government. To avoid further economic turbulence, the Centre has pressed the pause button on banning single-use plastics as well as the quick replacement of fossil fuel-guzzling automobiles with electric vehicles. The present state of economy has clearly reversed the government’s intent of being environmentally smart.

The government cannot take solace from the argument that the economy may have bottomed out if India has to replicate China’s fast growth. Today, China’s $14 trillion economy is about five times as big as India’s $2.9 trillion. And according to the UN’s 2019 World Population Prospects report released in June, India will have more people than China by 2027. India will have to grow at 8-10% to sustain this huge population.

While China’s economy grew only 6% in the July-September period, its weakest pace in over 27 years since 1991, the country’s GDP growth surpassed the double-digit mark for 10 years and was 10% and above between 2003 and 2007. For the government, the low Q2 GDP growth numbers should be a clear sign it is time to go full throttle to put the economy on an upward trajectory.
 
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From Q3 FY-21. It will be a stable and sustainable growth I guess.
 
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Graph shows 7 such bottoms since 2012-13. Every time anti India lobby gets excited but their excitement is always short lived. Though, 4.3 % for a quarter and 5% for the years is not a bad figure but those who can not do better may draw some satisfaction out of it. Ours is a fastest growing major economy and all set to remain for years.
 
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