SUMMARY OF ECONOMIC SURVEY
More than 6 Per Cent Growth Forecast for Next Fiscal Considerable Enhancement for Social Sector Spending India on Verge of Creating Quality Jobs to Seize ‘Demographic Dividend’
More than 6 Per Cent Growth Forecast for Next Fiscal Considerable Enhancement for Social Sector Spending India on Verge of Creating Quality Jobs to Seize ‘Demographic Dividend’
Indian economy is likely to grow between 6.1% to 6.7% in 2013-14
as the downturn is more or less over and the economy is looking up. Following
the slowdown induced by the global financial crisis in 2008-09, the Indian
economy responded strongly to fiscal and monetary stimulus and achieved a
growth rate of 8.6 per cent and 9.3 per cent respectively in 2009-10 and
2010-11, but due to a combination of both external and domestic factors, the
economy decelerated growing at 6.2% and an estimated 5% in 2011-12 and 2012-13
respectively. The Economic Survey 2012-13, presented by the Finance
Minister Shri P. Chidambaram in the LokSabha predicts that
the global economy is also likely to recover in 2013 and various government
measures will help in improving the Indian economy’s outlook for 2013-14. While
India’s recent slowdown is partly rooted in external causes, domestic causes
are also important. The slowdown in the rate of growth of services in 2011-12
at 8.2%, and particularly in 2012-13 to 6.6 percent from the double-digit
growth of the previous six years, contributed significantly to slowdown in the
overall growth of the economy, while some slowdown could also be attributed to
the lower growth in agriculture and industrial activities. But despite the
slowdown, the services sector has shown more resilience to worsening external
conditions than agriculture and industry. For improved agricultural growth, the
survey underlines the need for stable and consistent policies where markets
play an appropriate role, private investment in infrastructure is stepped up,
food price, food stock management and food distribution improves, and a
predictable trade policy is adopted for agriculture. FDI in retail allowed by
the government can pave the way for investment in new technology and marketing
of agricultural produce in India. Fast agricultural growth remains vital for
jobs, incomes and food security.
The survey points out that the priority for the Government will be
to fight high inflation by reducing the fiscal impetus to demand as well as by
focusing on incentivizing food production through measures other than price
supports. But unlike the previous year, when food inflation was mainly driven
by higher protein food prices, this year the pressure has been coming mainly
from cereals. On the Balance of Payments and External Position, the survey
highlights that with net exports declining, India’s balance of payments has
come under pressure. Moreover, in the current fiscal, foreign exchange reserves
have fluctuated between US$ 286 billion and US$ 295.6 billion, while the rupee
remained volatile in the range of Rs 53.02 to Rs 54.78 per US dollar during
October 2012 to January 2013.
The survey had a special chapter focusing on jobs. The future
holds promise for India provided we can seize the “demographic dividend” as
nearly half the additions to the Indian labour force over the period
2011-30 will be in the age group 30-49. India is creating jobs in industry but
mainly in low productivity construction and not enough formal jobs in
manufacturing, which typically are higher productivity. The high productivity
service sector is also not creating enough jobs. As the number of people
looking for jobs rises, both because of the population dividend and
because share of agriculture shrinks, these vulnerabilities will become
important. Because good jobs are both the pathway to growth as well as the best
form of inclusion, India has to think of ways of enabling their creation.
The survey calls for a widening of the tax base, and
prioritization of expenditure as key ingredients of a credible medium term
fiscal consolidation plan. This along with demand compression and augmented
agricultural production should lead to lower inflation, giving the RBI the
requisite flexibility to reduce policy rates. Lower interest rates could
provide an additional fillip to investment activity for the industry and
services sectors, especially if some of the regulatory, bureaucratic, and
financial impediments to investment are eased. On financial sector reform, it
takes note of the high level of gross NPAs (non-performing assets) of the
banking sector which increased from 2.36 percent of the total credit advanced
in March 2011 to 3.57 percent of total credit advanced in September 2012. The
survey suggests that revival of growth will help contain NPAs, but more attention
will have to be paid to whether projects are adequately capitalized up front
given the risks. Expenditure on social services also increased considerably in
the 12th Plan, with the education sector accounting for the
largest share, followed by health. In the 11th Plan period
nearly 7lakh crore rupees has been spent on the 15 major
flagship programmes. A number of legislative steps have also been taken to
secure the rights of people, like the RTI, MGNREGA, the Forest Rights Act, AND
THE Right to Education. However, the survey notes that there are pressing
governance issues like programme leakages and funds not reaching the
targeted beneficiaries that need to be addressed. Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT)
with the help of the Unique Identification Number (Aadhaar) can help plug some
of these leakages. With the 12th Plan’s focus on ‘environmental
sustainability’, India is on the right track. However, the challenge for India
is to make the key drivers and enablers of growth-be it infrastructure, the
transportation sector, housing, or sustainable agriculture-grow
sustainably.
Dr. Raghuram G. Rajan,
Chief Economic Adviser, Ministry of Finance writes in an introduction to the
Survey that these are difficult times, but India has navigated such times
before, and with good policies it will come through stronger. Slowdown is a
wake-up call for increasing the pace of actions and reforms. The way out
lies in shifting national spending from consumption to investment, removing the
bottlenecks to investment, growth, and job creation, in part through structural
reforms, combating inflation both through monetary and supply side measures,
reducing the costs for borrowers of raising finances and increasing the
opportunities for savers to get strong real investment returns.
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