[The Budget 2017-18 does not acknowledge the external and the internal
problems confronting the economy and the country. It therefore does
not offer a solution. The FM ended his speech with the lofty couplet:
‘When my aim is right, when my goal is in sight, the winds favour me
and I fly.’ All one can say is this: the aim is not right, the goal is
not in sight and the winds do not favour him; so flying is out of
question. Then who will help the nation in this hour of crisis?]

http://www.mainstreamweekly.net/article6973.html

Mainstream, VOL LV No 8 New Delhi February 11, 2017

Union Budget 2017-18: Inadequate Response in Times of Crisis
Sunday 12 February 2017, by Arun Kumar

The Budget is an instrument of macroeconomic policy first and then
anything else. If its aggregate figures are found wanting, its
allocations and goals would also not be attained. In times of a shock
to the economy, chances that the figures may be incorrect become
greater. Assumptions underlying the preparation of the Budget have a
high probability of being incorrect. The chances of this turning out
to be true become greater if the government does not acknowledge the
problem it may have created and wishes to portray the opposite image
of successful policies or if it tries to show that it is business as
usual. All this applies to the just presented Union Budget 2017-18.

The FM is correct to anticipate that there are huge global
uncertainties that face the nation as a result of major advanced
countries changing policies or planning to do so in the near future.
Brexit and the US elections are posing huge challenges for India’s
exports. The Rightward drift in large parts of Europe are likely to
aggravate the situation further in the coming times. The Budget needed
to take this into account but seems to have done little in this
direction. External instability is aggravating the difficulties
created by demonetisation.

A Budget which plans to spend about 14 per cent of the GDP has a lot
of resources to give to every section of society and to every sector
of the economy. This is the political aspect of a Budget. If this is
not done, some section or the other would complain. However, the issue
is whether the expenditures are adequate to solve the problems faced
by various sections of the population. For instance, whether
allocations to the MGNREGS are adequate to resolve the problem of the
poor in the rural areas. Of course, if expenditures do not lead to
outcomes, then the problem is greater. In all these regards, this
Budget is no different than the earlier Budgets and it allocates some
funds to everyone. Let us see what are some of the key proposals.

I. Some Key Features of the Budget

It was expected that the Budget would have a strong political element.
That is because demonetisation had severely impacted the marginalised
sections of society and especially those belonging to the unorganised
sectors of the economy. Five Assembly elections, and especially the UP
elections, are around the corner; so some message of helping the
pro-marginalised sections was required. Such a focus was also needed
to counter the popular perception of the government being pro-rich and
pro-corporate sector. Consistent with this, the FM said: ‘My Budget
proposals (will be) under ten distinct themes to foster this broad
agenda.’ The first four of these ten themes were focused specifically
on the marginalised sections—farmers, rural population, youth, and the
poor and underprivi-leged. Quite considerable space was devoted to
enumerating the steps that will be taken to favour these sections of
the population.

Saying that these sectors will be prioritised should imply large
increases in allocation to them. The FM’s speech mentions that the
‘total allocation for the rural, agriculture and allied sectors in
2017-18 is Rs 1,87,223 crores, which is 24 per cent higher than the
previous year’. Sounds impressive. But as usual the Budget compares
the allocations planned to be spent (called Budget Estimates) in the
previous year with the estimates for the year just ahead. However,
this is not a valid comparison since it should be with what has been
actually done, namely, the Revised Estimates for the current year.
Such a comparison shows that the increase is 12 per cent which is not
too large. The allocation for this sector turns out to be 8.7 per cent
of the total expenditure planned. Does not sound big given that the
rural population is still 70 per cent of the total and the unorganised
sector employs 94 per cent of the total work force.

Similarly, it is argued that the allocation to the MGNREGS will rise
substantially from Rs 38,000 crores to Rs 48,000 crores but the actual
to be spent in the current year will be Rs 47,500 crores so that the
planned increase is negligible. If the spurt in demand post-November
2016 is projected, then the amount required may be Rs 80,000 crores.
It is by now well known that a large number of workers in urban areas
did not find work due to demonetisation and went back to the villages
and needed work. That is why the demand for work under the MGNREGS
rose rapidly. It is quite likely that the full demand for work was not
met because the administration is not geared to meeting such a spurt
in demand. Since the conditions in urban areas are likely to remain
adverse, the demand for the MGNREGS can be expected to remain large
and the allocation should have been higher.

Another aspect of the Budget is that many policies proposed/mentioned
do not have any budgetary implication. For instance, the target for
agricultural credit has been enhanced to Rs 10 lakh crores. An
impressive amount; but this will be from the banks and not the Budget.
Schemes like the Long Term Irrigation Fund, Micro Irrigation Fund and
Dairy Processing and Infrastructure Development Fund will all be set
up in NABARD with its funds. These proposed Funds alone are slated to
increase by Rs 27,000 crores but the overall Budget for the relevant
Ministries has been raised by only Rs 13,000 crores. Since there have
been other increases as well, even this amount would not be available
for the creation of these Funds. The burden will clearly fall on
NABARD.

II. Education Related Aspects

Under programmes for the youth, attention is focused on education,
skills and jobs. The section starts loftily by quoting Vivekananda and
then degenerates into business as usual and enume-rating the same
things that have not worked in the past. A radical new approach was
needed but this is missing because the vision is absent.

To begin with, the FM says it is ‘proposed to introduce a system of
measuring annual learning outcomes in our schools’. Nothing wrong with
that but can the goal be measuring how poor the outcomes are? Why not
focus on the root cause, namely, poor standards of teaching based on
rote learning. What are we doing to improve teaching which will then
automatically improve outcomes? How do we get the best to come into
teaching rather than go to sell oil and toothpaste? Why not work to
improve the relative salaries of teachers?

Today, teachers are increasingly marginalised as technology is pushed.
For instance, it is proposed to launch SWAYAM (whatever that stands
for). The government is good at the coining of such new acronyms which
sound good but lack content. The idea is to have online courses. Good,
but local teachers will be marginalised. They will further lose
credibility in the eyes of their students. But, teachers can be
role-models for the youth. They are an important interface with
society. Online courses obtained via net will only individualise and
atomise learning without necessarily enabling the students to create a
framework for social interaction. Local conditions are important for
learning while the online courses would not cater to that. So, good
local teachers are absolutely essential. Encouraging that is difficult
but that is the only way to improve teaching and the teacher-taught
relationship which deepens social relations and socialises the youth.
There are no short-cuts but the FM’s speech enters an arena which is
not properly its domain and should be left to a well-thought-out
education policy. Possibly, the government had little to say; so it
included some clichés.

The FM has proposed to ‘establish a National Testing Agency as an
autonomous and self-sustained premier testing organisation to conduct
all entrance examinations for higher education institutions’. If local
conditions are important for learning and teachers’ autonomy crucial
for better teaching, then such homogeni-sation is harmful. It is
premised on the idea that like in a factory, standards can be achieve
by standardisation, and the same can be done in education. It does not
recognise that education is very different from commercial routine
work and where quality is at least as important as quantity. As far as
possible, testing should be decentralised. Again this is not something
that a Budget should comment on.

Reform of the UGC is proposed but why in the Budget? What financial
implication is there? The content of the proposal seems to be driven
by greater commercialisation of colleges, in the name of autonomy, as
the next sentence in the speech makes clear. That privatisation in
education has been going on apace for 25 years and that massive
irregularities are associated with this is also known. How to achieve
a balance is the real question but the Budget cannot go into it; so
why bring it up?

After SWAYAM, it is proposed to have PMKK, SANKALP, STRIVE and in the
coming years more such acronyms are likely to appear. But is school
teaching going to improve? Without that, any number of such programmes
will not achieve much. The so-called demographic dividend is turning
into a demographic nightmare with ill-trained young people not able to
land well-paying jobs or at times any work.

It is suggested that jobs will be created in the textile, leather,
footwear and tourism industries. That is all very well; but the real
issue is jobless growth due to automation. It is leading to job losses
as more and more investment takes place in the organised and corporate
sectors. The real issue is: how is investment going to be rebalanced
to create jobs? How will more public investment be ensured in rural
areas and especially in infrastructure? Is there a strategy of getting
more private capital into the rural infrastructure?

The Infrastructure section of the FM’s speech also focuses mostly on
transportation and especially the railways since the Railway Budget is
now merged with the regular Budget. How these proposals would mesh in
with the rural infrastructure needs is unclear since this is relegated
to the section on ‘Rural Population’. Then what of the statement that
there will be an integrated view of the infrastructure needs?

III. Revenue-related Features for 2016-17

The critical issue for any Budget is whether there are enough
resources to finance the proposed expenditures? Governments like to
claim credit for a lot and, therefore, often show higher revenue
collections. When this does not materialise, as happens when there is
a crisis, then quietly expenditures are curtailed. No one is the wiser
till the next year’s Budget is presented and at that time the focus is
on the next year and not on the past. So, governments get away with
claiming more than what is possible.

The present Budget faces a similar problem. Will it garner the
resources it claims it will? But before we get into that, it is
important to analyse what is happening to the resources in the current
year which is not yet over, namely, 2016-17. This is the year in which
the crisis of demonetisation suddenly hit the economy. Kumar (2017)
has argued that demonetisation has hit production, employment and
investment. Kumar (2016) argued that all this is also impacting
banking profitability and their capacity to lend more in spite of a
flood of funds into savings accounts. It was also argued that in spite
of a cut in the bank’s rate of interest for borrowers, the demand for
credit will remain slack. It has been pointed out that credit offtake
is now at the lowest point in the last 50 years.

The implication is that the rate of growth of the economy dropped
sharply post-November 8. If that be so, how will the revenue target
for the current year be achieved? The Budget for 2016-17 had assumed
that the GDP would grow by 11 per cent. Since for 2016-17, the rate of
growth has come down and the rate of inflation has been around four
per cent, the nominal rate of growth could not have been 11 per cent.
The government claims that the rate of growth of the economy would be
hardly affected by a per cent, not taking into account the impact of
demonetisation. In other words, the economy was already slowing down
prior to the demoneti-sation; so the impact of demonetisation would be
on top of that.

If it is assumed that demonetisation adversely affected the
unorganised sector and the organised sector only marginally, even then
the implication would be that the rate of growth of the economy for
the period after November 8, 2016 would be zero if not negative.
(Kumar, 2017b) If that is so, tax collection would be adversely hit.

However, the government has claimed that tax collection has been
buoyant. Both direct and indirect tax collections, according to it,
have risen sharply. As explained in Kumar (2017c), there could be
special reasons for why this may be the case for the period up to
December but post that the tax collection would be negatively
impacted. For instance, old notes were allowed to be used for payment
of taxes and people paid advance tax. In the case of income tax,
people had to pay a new instalment of tax in June which was earlier
not the case. In the case of excise duties, the increased consumption
of petroleum products and increased excise collection contributed
substantially to the rise. In contrast, various surveys have pointed
to a fall in demand and an impact on output. Thus, collection of high
amount of tax for the year as a whole would be doubtful at best.

Can it be the case that more revenue has been collected because of the
declaration of black incomes? Indeed, under IDS, which closed on
September 30, 2016, about Rs 65,000 crores was declared and it was
expected that about Rs 30,000 crores of taxes would be collected.
Another such scheme was opened in conjunction with demonetisation. How
much has been declared under this has not been revealed as yet; so we
do not know what has happened. Coming so soon after the previous
scheme, it may not have garnered much. Reports are that those with
black money managed to recycle most of these into new notes.

The real issue is: can the big deposits in the banks by the
businessmen and the rich be classified as black and taxed? The
government has recently claimed that 18 lakh such cases have been
identified. But for businessmen to have crores of rupees of funds as
working capital is not unusual. To prove that the deposits were indeed
black funds is a time-consuming affair. The Income Tax department
would have to assess the people and that takes time. Then there are
provisions for appeal and that takes more time. Finally, the Income
Tax department is usually able to audit only one per cent of the
people (five lakhs) who are in the tax net; so how will it now assess
tens of lakhs of more people? Thus, in this year (2016-17) or the next
financial year (2017-18) hardly much additional tax revenue can be
obtained from this source. So, the figures for 2016-17 are in doubt.
This puts the figures for the next year also in jeopardy.

IV. Budgetary Calculus for 2017-18: Is the Rate of Growth Achievable?

The rate of growth underlying a Budget is important to predict the
resources that would be available for development. The Budget assumes
a rate of growth of 11.75 per cent for 2017-18. Given the impact of
demonetisation, which has led to recessionary conditions in the
economy, this seems to be highly doubtful, to put it mildly. The
government does not wish to admit that due to demonetisation there is
a fall in the rate of growth in 2016-17 or that this effect will
continue in the next year. It is putting up a brave face and arguing
that whatever the effect, it was small and in the future, this will
reverse quickly.

The FM makes an error of judgment by identifying the current problem
of slowdown as one originating in cash shortage only. While the
problem started with cash shortage, it soon transformed into decline
in output, employment, investment and banking crisis. This implies
recessionary conditions have taken hold and these are
irreversibilities which do not disappear with cash coming back into
the system (as it eventually will). There is a change in expectations
and this will not reverse soon.

The government needs to act to boost demand because the private sector
does not automatically start investing more when it has large spare
capacity and its profitability is hit. The banks and the
infrastructure sector already face large NPAs which would only
increase. In such a situation neither would the private infrastructure
sector invest more nor would the banks lend them more.

V. Stimulus Needed

The stimulus from the government could have been through higher public
expenditure, higher deficit and tax concessions.

The Budget only increases expenditure for 2017-18 by six per cent over
the expenditure (Revised Estimates) shown last year. This is quite
small as a stimulus when inflation is taken into account. Compared to
last year also it is small when the expenditure was increased by about
11 per cent.

The Fiscal Deficit, if anything, is lower. The target for 2016-17 was
3.5 per cent but that in the revised figures is 3.2 per cent and for
2017-18 it is also slated to be 3.2 per cent. In the name of fiscal
prudence, it is suggested that deficit should rather be allowed to
shrink. If the government’s claim that there is no impact on growth is
correct and the economy was running as usual, this argument would be
alright but when that is not the case, it will dampen the economy. But
the government has to first admit that there is a problem; then only
can it justify the solution.

However, if the growth targets are not met (as is likely), the fiscal
deficit will tend to rise and then the government will have to cut
back expenditures which will mean that there will be no stimulus. The
government could have allowed the fiscal deficit to rise somewhat to,
say, four per cent of the GDP without attracting too much opprobrium
from the Credit Rating agencies. If our economy is seen to be in
recession, then anyway there would be a downgrade.

The government has given tax concessions to the lower middle class by
lowering the tax rate for those in the tax bracket up to Rs 5 lakhs.
This would benefit crores of taxpayers earning up to about Rs 40,000
per month. The benefit would also extend to those in the upper
brackets up to Rs 50 lakhs of annual income. These people could then
spend more and generate additional demand. This is a possibility but
not a certainty. During troubled times people may end up saving more
for a rainy day rather than spending more. But, how much is this
stimulus? The tax concessions amount to Rs 22,700 crores. This is
hardly 0.15 per cent of the GDP and not much of a stimulus when the
economy has lost its growth by several points. Each point would amount
to Rs 1.5 lakh crore of loss for an economy of Rs 150 lakh crores.

Companies with a turnover of Rs 50 crores have also been given a tax
concession of five per cent on their profits. So, 96 per cent of the
companies will benefit from this concession. Will they start producing
more or investing more? Indeed not if the demand is as slack as it
currently is.

In other words, none of the moves to stimulate the economy will
deliver and the recessionary conditions will deepen in spite of the
reduced cash shortage. The Budget lacks a strategy to tackle the
problem confronting the economy.

VI. Black Money Schemes

Demonetisation was supposed to eliminate the black economy but now it
is clear that it does nothing of the kind. (Kumar, 2017d) So, the
government had to show that it means business and it has announced
certain steps to tackle this menace. These do not necessarily have
anything to do with the Budget but they are there.

It has announced steps, proposed by the Election Commission, to bring
about transparency in election funding. Until now, names of those
contributing up to Rs 20,000 were not required to be disclosed.
According to experts, up to 65 per cent of the funding was coming
under this head; so the parties were getting away with not disclosing
the names. Now this limit has been lowered to Rs 2000. But how does
this matter? Bulk of the election funding is not disclosed at all and
no account of it is presented anywhere (neither to the Election
Commission nor to the Income Tax department). This will continue and
this is where the real black money is used and the nexus between
politicians and businessmen etc. created. (Kumar, 2017d) Thus, this
provision will not resolve the problem but yes, it may create more of
an accounting mess which the parties are capable of handling.

The government is going to get the RBI to issue electoral bonds
purchasable only by cheque or the digital mode; these would be donated
to the political parties and they can encash them within a certain
specified period. But again this does not overcome the problem of the
use of black money in elections to carry out various activities that
are disallowed. Further, it leads to non-transparency in
election-funding since the public would not know who is funding whom
and if there is a hidden agenda of the donor. After all, it is well
known that those who fund parties expect a quid pro quo. Yes, it does
marginally get over the problem of the ruling party getting to know
who the financiers of its opponents are. But, this may also not work
since there will be a record of purchase of the bonds in the banks and
a determined ruling party can get access to the data. But none of this
may matter since all businessmen are known to contribute to all
parties because they do not wish to fall foul of a party that may come
to power in the future in the Centre or a State.

There is also a provision of confiscation of property for those who
escape the country after committing economic offences. This proposal
may be a useful device but could not be used as a political device.
Further, would risk-averse businessmen start keeping more of their
assets outside the country just in case there is some problem some
day? Those who committed fraud and escaped the country are known to
live a life of luxury there because they had already spirited a large
part of their assets abroad.

The government has accepted the suggestion of the Supreme Court
ordered SIT that cash expenditures of above Rs 3 lakhs should be
disallowed. But what is the mechanism for detecting such transactions?
Without that what difference will there be? Currently, all manner of
high value illegal transactions take place and the government is
unable to detect them.

The problem of black economy needs to be dealt with more holistically.
(Kumar, 2017d) Some short-term measures could be the following, even
though the problem is long term. The limit for cash contribution could
be made zero. RTI should be applicable to political parties. There is
need for judicial accountability, and time-bound hearing and disposal
of cases. The Election Commission should be able to disqualify parties
for violation of the Code.

VII. Conclusion

***The Budget 2017-18 does not acknowledge the external and the
internal problems confronting the economy and the country. It
therefore does not offer a solution. The FM ended his speech with the
lofty couplet: ‘When my aim is right, when my goal is in sight, the
winds favour me and I fly.’ All one can say is this: the aim is not
right, the goal is not in sight and the winds do not favour him; so
flying is out of question. Then who will help the nation in this hour
of crisis?*** [Emphasis added.]

References

1. Kumar, A., 2016, “39 Days Demonetisation: Recessionary Conditions
Take Hold”. The
Citizen,http://www.thecitizen.in/index.php/NewsDetail/index/1/9457/39-Days-Demonetisation-Recessionary-Conditions-Take-Hold
Accessed on December 17, 2016.

2. Kumar, A., 2017a, “Economic Consequences of Demonetisation: Money
Supply and Economic Structure”, Economic and Political Weekly, January
7, Vol. LII, no. 1, pp. 14-17.

3. Kumar, A., 2017b, “What to trust on demonetisation: Official data
or grim reports in media?”,
Scroll.inhttps://scroll.in/article/827790/what-to-trust-on-demonetisation-official-data-or-grim-reports-in-media
Accessed on January 31, 2017.

4. Kumar, A., 2017c, “Economic Survey 2017: There Can Be No Solution
Without Admitting the Problem”, The
Wire,https://thewire.in/104631/economic-survey-2017-there-can-be-no-solution-without-admitting-the-problem/
Accessed on January 31, 2017.

5. Kumar, A., 2017d, Understanding the Black Economy and Black Money
in India: An Enquiry into Causes, Consequences and Remedies, New
Delhi: Aleph Books.

The author, a Professor of Economics (now retired) at the Jawaharlal
Nehru University, New Delhi, is the author of Understanding the Black
Economy and Black Money in India: An Enquiry into Causes, Consequences
and Remedies (Aleph Book Company, New Delhi).



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