India After the Global Crisis: Shankar Acharya; Orient Blackswan,
Hyderabad, 2012, Rs. 425.
The book titled ‘India after the Global Crisis’ by Prof. Acharya is a
collection of short essays, originally appeared in various columns of ‘Business
Standard’, focusing on India’s performance right from the emergence of the
US crisis in 2008 and till now when the world economy is facing the brunt of
the EU Sovereign debt crisis. In this book, the author draws a vivid picture
of India’s resilience in the face of global economic and financial crisis in
2008 following a robust growth, a gradualist and conservative approach
of Reserve Bank of India (RBI) towards capital account convertibility and
domestic regulation of banks and other financial intermediaries. With the
resurgence of the sovereign debt crisis and the dismal performance of the
advanced countries, there is a remote chance of the crisis being over in the
near future. Given this overall economic outlook, the book draws attention to
the fact that it would be a serious error to think that India could revert back to
its growth performance as in the pre-crisis years in the medium term as there
is a clear indication of worsening macroeconomic performance in terms of
low growth, high inflation, high current account deficit and fiscal deficit and
a fall in the rate of domestic investment. For India, to ensure a high growth
momentum, the government must have the political will and intention to
face and meet up the challenges specifically in areas of reduction of fiscal
and current account deficits, enhancing domestic saving and investment,
expansion of job opportunities and reforming the stringent labour laws,
improving efficiency of the education and healthcare system, acceleration
of agricultural growth, bringing norms and transparency in the allocation
and conservation of land, water and other natural resources, providing
infrastructure for further development of manufacturing and service sector
of the economy.
The aforementioned issues have been discussed in a comprehensive and
analytical way in each of the chapters in the book. The author divides the
book into seven broad parts, each part consisting of a collection of short
essays focusing on the concerned issue of that part.
In part I, the author talks about the ‘Global crisis aftermath’ which
consists of eight essays and focuses on the immediate impact of the global
crisis. The first essay gives a summary of a lecture by Andrew Sheng,
Convener, International Advisory Panel to China’s Regulatory Council
(CRBC), which emphasised on the financial dimension of the crisis ranging
from excess liquidity, leverage, complexity in creating derivative products
and excess greed. In the second essay, author gives a view of the scenario after
the US crisis and discusses why even after a slow recovery, both in the West
and Asia, the crisis is far from over and there is a long way to go to ensure
strong global recovery. The impediments in the global recovery, according
to the author, lies in the nature of recovery in major economies, with BOP
deficit countries spending more as fiscal stimuli, the weakness of the banking
system in the US and other western nations. For India also, a falling IIP and
merchandise export along with dismal performances of other sectors makes
recovery a challenging task. In the third essay, the author brings attention to
the need for a single principle forum like the G20 rather than continuing with
multiple forums to deal with the global economic issues more effectively
and at a faster pace. The fourth essay is all about the “exit” timing that each
nation has to decide after the crisis of 2008. The author argues that time has
come for India to exit its expansionary fiscal and monetary policy and points
out to the fact that although there has been a progress in the tightening of the
monetary policy, government of India is still in the need to do so in terms
of fiscal deficit reduction by reduction in subsidies and upward revision of
excise rates and implementation of GST. The fifth essay is again a summary of
a lecture by Martin Wolf who discusses the issues that led to the global crisis
ranging from liberal monetary policy, innovations in financial sector, failure
of financial regulation, global imbalances in external accounts of countries.
He pointed out the forthcoming threat to globalisation and the possible shift
of economic power from West towards Asia. The sixth essay, provides a
detailed description of Greek problems and the emergence of the Euro crisis
and argues that in both the cases of European recovery and the larger sovereign
debt crisis India will have to face large macroeconomic challenges the extent
of which is difficult to assess now. One way to face this challenge is to “exit”
from the expansionary policy towards a more contractionary one, which he
argues, marks the departure from the so called Keynesian economics and this
is illustrated in the seventh essay. The final essay in this part focuses on the fact that one reason for such global imbalances in the current set up is due to
the gradual shifting of power from Western countries, who ruled the world
for decades, and the gradual emergence of China and Asian economies.
Part II deals with essays related to ‘Economic Growth’. It comprises
five short essays. The first essay portrays a gloomy picture of Indian economy
and draws a comparison of the current economic condition with that of 1997.
The recent time is more challenging given the worst global economic outlook
and the high fiscal deficit. At the same time, some favourable conditions now
are the good financial health of the Indian corporate sector and high domestic
savings and investment. The author, however, argues that (Essay 10) that
the negative impact of the crisis is more on the equity aspect than on the
growth as it has affected many export oriented labour intensive industries
and has resulted in loss of employment, income and consumption. The next
two essays (Essay 11 & 12) discusses how the economy moved from a low
growth rate of 6 per cent to 9 per cent owing to high investment, saving,
fiscal consolidation and low interest rates. Thereafter, how the crisis led
to the fall in growth rates and resulted in high ‘twin deficits’ of fiscal and
current account balance has been elaborated. He further argues that growth is
further dampened due to lack of agricultural development which has grown
at an average rate of 3-4 per cent. This is,however, not reflective of the true
agricultural performance as some states like Gujarat have done consistently
well recording an average growth rate of 8-9 per cent. Thus, it is possible to
improve agricultural growth following Gujarat’s model but it requires vision,
commitment, political will, inter-departmental cooperation and coordination
about which the author appears to be skeptical.
Part III of the book focuses on the ‘Reform and Economic Policies’
where the author discusses the current policies and related problems and
underscores the need for reform to improve growth performance. The first
two essays (Essay 14 and 15) deal with the political set up of the government
and the much needed priorities for the government before the general election
and how the government responded to the problems in the post election
phase of 2009. As the author points out, the government was expected to
address certain issues in the post crisis period like a reduction in fiscal
deficit, reform measures to encourage investment intentions, deregulating oil
prices, encouraging financial inclusion, reforms in education system to tap ‘demographic dividend’ and provision of urban infrastructure. There was,
however, lack of reform initiative of the elected government in these fronts
as pointed by the author. According to him, a true signal of reform would
have been a relaxation of the stringent labour laws and stimulus to private
investment to start with. Continuing with his argument about the current
performance of the elected government and its policy priorities in essay 16, he
states that the elected government has put forward quite an extensive reform
package including security, communal harmony, growth, infrastructure,
social uplift, governance reform etc. But there are some major loopholes and
lack of initiatives in the formulation and implementation of these reforms.
In the next essay he takes a different perspective altogether and highlights
the role played by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), especially under the
period of the then governor, Dr. Y.V. Reddy and the Deputy Governor, Dr.
Rakesh Mohan, in protecting the Indian economy from the adverse impact
of the crisis. The author appreciates the conservative and cautious approach
followed by RBI despite pressures from various spheres to continue with
financial liberalisation. In the eighteenth essay the author tries to break the
ten most popular myths that govern the current economic policy formulation
of India, viz., higher minimum support prices are good for farmers, labour
laws protect labour, subsidies help the poor, the middleman causes many
economic problems, reducing fiscal deficit hurts growth, the exchange rate
only matters to exporters and foreign capital inflows are always good for the
economy. In the last essay of this part, the author explains the twelfth plan
approach and states that there are major weaknesses despite serious policy
effort, the weaknesses ranging from realism of 9 per cent economic growth
rate, less emphasis on employment challenges and more emphasis on policy
impediments and finally lack of innovative reforms in the social sector.
The part IV of the book is devoted to employment and health related
issues in the Indian economy. In this part, most of the essays are primarily
focused on the employment situation in India. The author argues that it is the
unorganised informal sector which has experienced increase in employment
while there has been a fall in organised sector employment. Moreover, the
share of agriculture in total employment has not declined much despite a
fall in the share of agriculture in GDP which indicates a slow shift in the
composition of labour force from the agricultural sector to the non-agricultural
sector. As the cause for this mismatch, the author cites the inefficient labour laws in India as a major reason which discourage further labour demand
from the manufacturing sector. If this continues, as he argues in essay 22,
the concept of demographic dividend will become a bane for the economy.
He draws reference from the ‘India Labour Report 2009’ which shows that
much of the work force increase will happen in the backward states with
low employment opportunities. This will give rise to migration pressures and
illegal activities. This situation has arisen and problems may persist in the
future due to the wrong approach of the current government in the name of
‘inclusive growth’ (essay 24). The author argues that restrictive labour laws
and high government expenditure on programme like NREGA have done
little to improve inclusive growth, compared to other Asian countries. In fact,
such policies have led to prevalence of unorganised sector employment and
high government expenditure.
On the health issue, author emphasises the poor health condition of
the country (Essay 21 and 23). In the first essay, he draws reference from
a paper and argues that India suffers from the lack of ‘population-wide
preventive services’ to reduce exposure to diseases. The reason for this has
been the government policies to marginalize the health services into single
focus programmes. One state, however, has not followed this policy and has
been able to maintain a healthy situation of its health sector. Thus, the author
argues that it is possible to bring reforms in the health sector within a limited
budget provided there is speedy implementation of the reforms and strong
political will. This is further strengthened in the essay 23 where he shows
the dismal performance of India in health compared with other countries like
Bangladesh in terms of inadequate health services, predominance of private
healthcare, high medical expenses and lack of medical infrastructure.
Part V shifts focus to the government’s budget and fiscal policies since
2009 and states that measures warranted to address high fiscal deficit were
discernible in the Union Budget 2009-10. The same thing was observed in
the next budget where although some bold steps were taken like priority to
fiscal consolidation in terms of transparency in subsidy accounting but the
idea of fiscal deficit reduction seemed farfetched especially since most of
the projected revenue collection was from one-off items like disinvestment,
3G telecom auction proceeds, etc. Moreover, the budget plan to set up an
independent council for macro prudential supervision raises concern about the independence of the Reserve Bank. The author devotes one essay (essay
27) specifically to the draft of Direct Tax Code and comments that the
recommendations in tax cuts are irrelevant in the present context and will
do nothing but to add to the fiscal deficit with revenue falling significantly.
The last two essays again focuses on the pre and post budget issues (essay 29
and 30) and as the author points out, the essays needed to address are high
inflation, high current account deficit, employment problems, corruption
in the system and agricultural reform. It is argued that although there have
been efforts to deal with inflation and current account deficit through fiscal
consolidation but is not very promising given the current scenario. As far
as employment, governance and agriculture is concerned there is no such
convincing reform strategy in the budget plan.
In Part VII, the focus is on the external sector policies in the backdrop of
the rising current account deficit, appreciation of real effective exchange rate
and the RBI’s intervention policy in the exchange rate market. The author
expresses concern over the twin problems of rising current account deficit
and the appreciation of REER and states that to deal with these problems
either RBI has to intervene in the currency market or it has to moderate
capital inflows. He is wary of the fact that an appreciation of currency in
today’s time, when China and US are maintaining their currency at a lower
value, will not only hamper external sector but will also affect domestic
industries through weak exports (essay 35). As the author further argues,
the current indifference or silence about the appreciation may be due to the
‘dollar fixation’ of policy makers who sees only dollar-rupee parity as an
indicator. Author’s concern of high external deficit is discussed in the next
essay (essay 33) as well where he shows a greater rise in imports than exports
leading to higher trade deficits. Moreover, this trade deficit is being financed
by invisible earnings and portfolio inflows which are volatile in nature. With
US and other advanced economies going for monetary expansion, capital
inflows to EMEs like India and the following currency appreciation are
unavoidable. This needs RBI intervention in the forex market and capital
account management.
In the last part, the author gives a more general view of some of the
important events in the world economy immediately after the global crisis in
September 2009 starting from the emergence of G-20, China’s rise to global economic power, new elected government in Japan, election in Germany. He
dedicates one essay on analyzing Obama’s performance as President of the
US and finds an impressive performance given the complex domestic and
international inherited problems. Finally, he draws attention to some emerging
African countries which are developing gradually owing to the various policy
reforms, new technologies and rise of democracy and governance.
The book is a comprehensive collection of issues that India has been
facing during the crisis years and in the years that followed and how India
has shown resilience in the face of crisis. The author has also elaborated in
a simple and analytical way the problems, both in the domestic and external
fronts, that India is currently going through and the areas which needs
immediate attention from the Government side as well as the central bank. In
terms of structure of the book, however, since the essays were from different
time points, the synchronisation and the context of the chapters sometime
were getting lost. As far as the contents of the book is concerned, the author
has very nicely presented an overall view of the crisis from the perspective
of the Indian economy with some remarks which may be debatable like the
intervention of central bank in the forex market to tame appreciation, reform
of the labour laws, etc.
Soumasree Tewari* |