Indian Economy - News & Discussion Oct 12 2013

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panduranghari
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Re: Indian Economy - News & Discussion Oct 12 2013

Post by panduranghari »

disha wrote:So before you sir repost on my post and again advice to negate all the "indices of the western world" - "and remove all the pegs to the US Dollar"., please come up with a better index.
Your question is a valid one. But it should be rephrased better. I would ask 'if there is a flaw in the current index, why cant the flaw be eliminated and a better index be designed'?

We should question the premise of why GDP is used to measure the wellness of the economy. Not that I have spent a lot of my life doing that, but I certainly have in the past 4 years reassessed the basic assumptions of the economy system - that we live in. USA has the biggest GDP in the world. But it has not translated to equitable life for the citizens.

The way I understand it is thus- there is a physical plane and there is a monetary plane which overlays the physical plane. The physical plane and monetary plane are currently detached from one another. This is due to the combining of the functions of money and loss of honestly in money.

Many speculate or try saving in the stock market because the modern economic theory has made us believe in the fiat financial system to always deliver a higher payoff tomorrow than today. How long can such a game go on ? I do not know.

Measuring GDP and comparing GDP to measure the well ness of the nations economy is to put in crude terms a 'dick measuring contest'. Magazines like Forbes publish net worth of individuals claiming how 'Dollar' rich they are. This is just extending the sovereign dick measuring contest to individual level. GDP is a very 20th century invention, which arose from US capitalism and when US capitalism (in the current form) dies, it will die with it.

Here is a very good article about the uselessness of measuring GDP from WSJ - LINK
Imagine deciding which nation produces what in a global supply chain. Or correcting price for quality improvements. The mind boggles......GDP may or may not measure human happiness, but it does measure growth and on the rate of growth in output no small part of human satisfaction depends. The unspoken corollary is that, if growth falls short of some politically desired minimum, it’s incumbent on government to spend money and/or to print it.
If you really want to understand why GDP is a useless indicator - read Murray Rothbard. Perhaps this article would do http://mises.org/library/recessions-dont-do-list
Murray Rothbard wrote:“It is certainly legitimate and often useful to consider net incomes and net savings, but not always illuminating, and its use has been extremely misleading in present-day economics.” Consumption spending is overemphasized and investment and saving is dwarfed relative to their overall importance in maintaining and expanding the structure of production.
Now what would be better indicators for measuring economy?

Frederic Hayek recommended Gross Domestic Expenditure (GDE) or the new Gross Output (GO). Perhaps you could critique this?
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Re: Indian Economy - News & Discussion Oct 12 2013

Post by Arjun »

negi wrote:http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/budg ... 416622.cms

Read the comments there there is not a SINGLE comment which is pro budget that is how bad it is.
Haven't bothered to click on the link - but if it is as bad as you say it is, that reflects on the perniciousness of AAP Delhi mentality than anything else....If even middle-class Indians are suckers for this souped up version of 'gimme freebies' culture that one previously associated with the lower classes during election time - they deserve to be stuck with AAP and "Inquilaab Zindabaad" (that original warcry of Waste Bengal commies) :roll:
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Re: Indian Economy - News & Discussion Oct 12 2013

Post by panduranghari »

chetak wrote:The enormous power of the US comes not from it's weapon systems or it's armed forces but from it's huge tax base. .
That's very inaccurate. It comes from international use of dollar as the reserve currency.
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Re: Indian Economy - News & Discussion Oct 12 2013

Post by pankajs »

http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/mar ... 419446.cms
FMC-Sebi merger sounds death knell for 'dabba' market
NEW DELHI: The proposed merger of FMC with Sebi to create a unified markets regulator has sounded a death knell for the illicit 'dabba trading', estimated to have a turnover of up to Rs one lakh crore a day.

Prevalent across Gujarat and many other parts of the country, dabba trading primarily involves illicit off-market trades in many commodities, while stocks are also traded in this illegal market.

In commodities alone, the overall dabba trading clocks turnover to the tune of Rs 50,000-1,00,000 crore a day, while the volumes for illicit stock trades outside the purview of stock exchanges also run into tens of thousands of crores.

While regulators and enforcement agencies have been trying hard to curb this menace for a long time, the lack of a unified regulatory mechanism has so far made it difficult to fully control this problem.
......
"Unregulated or dabba market, which is estimated to be 8-10 times of the regulated commodity derivatives market... will be curbed," he said.
Quite a boost it will provide even if a fraction moves to the exchanges. No wonder MCX jumped 10%+ yesterday.
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Re: Indian Economy - News & Discussion Oct 12 2013

Post by A_Gupta »

An inoculation against libertarian economists like Rothbard:
http://aeon.co/magazine/technology/on-t ... -internet/
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Re: Indian Economy - News & Discussion Oct 12 2013

Post by pankajs »

http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/ind ... 418350.cms
Gross Bank credit growth down to 10 per cent in December quarter: RBI Data
MUMBAI: Gross bank credit grew by 10.1 per cent in the December quarter as against 14.2 per cent growth registered in the year-ago period, according to the RBI data.

Aggregate deposits grew 10.9 per cent in the period which was slower than 15.4 percent registered in the year-ago quarter.

"The deceleration in aggregate deposits as well as gross bank credit was broad-based and observed across all population groups," RBI said.
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Re: Indian Economy - News & Discussion Oct 12 2013

Post by James B »

pankajs wrote:http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/ind ... 418350.cms
Gross Bank credit growth down to 10 per cent in December quarter: RBI Data
MUMBAI: Gross bank credit grew by 10.1 per cent in the December quarter as against 14.2 per cent growth registered in the year-ago period, according to the RBI data.

Aggregate deposits grew 10.9 per cent in the period which was slower than 15.4 percent registered in the year-ago quarter.

"The deceleration in aggregate deposits as well as gross bank credit was broad-based and observed across all population groups," RBI said.
This is concerning even after PMJDY.
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Re: Indian Economy - News & Discussion Oct 12 2013

Post by panduranghari »

del..
Last edited by panduranghari on 01 Mar 2015 23:56, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: Indian Economy - News & Discussion Oct 12 2013

Post by pankajs »

http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/wea ... 422681.cms
PFs to invest minimum 5% of funds in equity market: Finance Ministry
The new investment pattern for provident funds, to be notified shortly, will prescribe "investment of minimum 5 per cent and up to 15 per cent of the investible funds in equity and equity related instruments," Finance Ministry said in a statement.

The modified norms, it said, seeks to provide greater flexibility to subscribers to maximise returns as also to provide long term resources to productive sectors in the economy.

These guidelines with regard to investment funds will apply on Non-Government Provident Funds, Superannuation Funds and Gratuity Funds.

The investment pattern of the Employees Provident Fund Organisation ( EPFO), which is the largest non-government provident fund body, is decided by the central board of trustees (CBT), headed by Labour Minister.

As per the modified investment norms, the limit for parking funds in Central Government Securities, State Government Securities, Government Guaranteed Securities and units of gilt Mutual Funds, will be reduced to 50 per cent from 55 per cent.
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Re: Indian Economy - News & Discussion Oct 12 2013

Post by pankajs »

http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/new ... 422526.cms
Finance Ministry for consolidation of PSU banks
"Government wants to encourage bank boards to restructure their business strategy and also suggest way forward for their consolidation and merger with other banks if it is win-win for both," a Finance Ministry release said.

In order to improve the governance of public sector banks, it said, the government intends to set up an autonomous 'Bank Board Bureau' with professional members.

The board would be responsible for search and selection of heads of PSBs, as also for non-official directors of the banks. This, it said, would be an interim step towards moving in the direction of having a Bank Investment Company, which will be a holding company for PSBs.
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Re: Indian Economy - News & Discussion Oct 12 2013

Post by pankajs »

http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/ind ... 422500.cms
MUDRA to regulate, refinance all micro-finance institutions
NEW DELHI: The government today said that Micro Units Development and Refinance Agency (MUDRA) Bank to be set up with a capital of Rs 20,000 crore would regulate and refinance all micro-finance institutions.
......
The MUDRA Bank would primarily be responsible for laying down policy guidelines for micro/small enterprise financing business, registration of MFI entities, regulation of MFI entities, accreditation /rating of MFI entities, laying down responsible financing practices to ward off indebtedness and ensure proper client protection principles and methods of recovery.
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Re: Indian Economy - News & Discussion Oct 12 2013

Post by pankajs »

http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/new ... 420351.cms
Budget 2015: Gold deposit scheme can fetch Rs 1 trillion, says SBI Research
MUMBAI: Describing the proposed gold deposit scheme as "game changer", the SBI's economic research department has said it will help attract at least Rs 1 trillion in deposits on the precious metal.

"The proposed introduction of a gold deposit scheme is a big positive and conservative estimates show that the monetary value of gold deposits mobilised may be at least Rs 1 trillion," it said in note today.

It will be a "game changer" by incentivising the banks to hold a part of the deposits as part of the mandatory cash reserve ratio or the statutory reserve ratio. This may free up resources for productive or lending purposes, it said.

The conservative estimates show even at a 30 per cent strike rate, the monetary value of gold deposits mobilised may be as much as Rs 3 trillion, it said.

According to the note, the new scheme will help depositors of gold earn interest and jewellers to obtain loans on their metal accounts.
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Re: Indian Economy - News & Discussion Oct 12 2013

Post by hanumadu »

http://indianexpress.com/article/opinio ... illusions/

Lard Meghnad Desai comes off as a totally different person here from the ndtv debate.

Posting in full. The article makes many great points and the entire article is worth posting in bold. People who say that agriculture is essential for employment or land acquisition is depriving the poor should read this. Especially the part that most people who depend on agriculture are landless labour or marginal farmer whose wages are a pittance. They can come out of poverty by only working in factories built on that land.
The Budget can take care of itself. What about the nation? We all expected a radical transformation of the country given the promises and the possibilities the election victory of the BJP conjured up. But radical is a two-faced word. It means root and branch change. But what sort of change? Are we going forward to take control of our destiny in the 21st century and aiming to be one of two or three most powerful and prosperous countries? Or are we still battling between a vision of an India which will hark back to the glorious days of Congress Socialism, with low growth, ameliorating but not eradicating poverty, suspecting all private business and creating ever more white elephants of the public sector?

All sorts of illusions have been on display in and out of Parliament. The Land question has paralysed proceedings. The previous government had passed a Land Acquisition Bill which imagined an India of poor starving farmers about to be deprived by rapacious Big Business. Hence land acquisition for any purpose was made expensive, time consuming and virtually impossible.

They knew they were not coming back so this was a scorched earth policy. Of course the BJP supported the Bill. This is because the most powerful illusion in Indian politics is that farmers are poor. They should go on cultivating their land at any cost to them and to the economy. As Rahul Gandhi (remember him?) promised the tribals of Orissa to preserve them in their abject poverty, the UPA land Bill was meant to stop all non-agricultural development which required land. The nation had to stay poor to keep Socialism alive.

Farmers are not poor as a group. There are poor farmers and in the Vidarbha region, there have been farmer suicides which have been investigated. But the majority of farmers i.e. land-owning cultivators are not poor. Just look at the ones in Jantar Mantar with their fancy head dresses.

These are landlords, not kisans. There is no income tax on income from agriculture, the only business to enjoy that privilege. There are poor sharecroppers and landless labourers. But they are not affected by this Bill. They would be better off if a factory was built on the land which affords them a lousy wage at present. They would get round-the-year employment. But the Opposition wants to protect the landed gentry pretending they are poor and hence we have the spectacle of Parliament and Anna Hazare defending the untaxed .

Politics is built on rhetoric. No BJP politician can say that farmers are not poor. Yet the state of agriculture is such that while land-owning cultivators are well off there is a lot of poverty in the rural areas. The reason for this is not far to seek. The productivity per worker in agriculture is one-tenth of that in manufacturing or services. India will prosper if it takes people off the land and gives them better jobs elsewhere. That, of course, requires land. Prevent the transfer of land and the poor will stay poor.

It would be easy for the BJP/NDA government to concede and go back to the old Act. Moderation is popular. But then the radical transformation of the economy will have to be put off for another generation. The essence of governing is to be able to make tough choices, face unpopularity in the short run to win lasting success. Give up at this early stage and you never regain initiative.

The PM needs to say that the country needs rapid economic growth, more and smarter urbanisation, secure and sustainable jobs, efficient infrastructure, decent housing with adequate sanitary facilities, education which gives children the skills of literacy and numeracy, and makes them cyber savvy in private or public schools .

He has to say that profits accrue from efficient delivery of goods or services and only by having many profitable businesses in agriculture, industry and services will we remove poverty. Every country which is rich today was once poor and agrarian. It got rich by using land for industry.

The poor move from land to workshops and factories to get out of poverty. There is no other way.
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Re: Indian Economy - News & Discussion Oct 12 2013

Post by hanumadu »

http://indianexpress.com/article/opinio ... r-again/2/

Another article by Tavleen Singh on land acquisition bill and other hare brained laws promulgated by UPA.
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Re: Indian Economy - News & Discussion Oct 12 2013

Post by Suraj »

For something that upset a lot of people in the past, there seems no mention of it at all since the budget: the power to set interest rates is being taken away from the hands of the RBI governor. Instead, it will be set by a committee comprised of members of the Finance Ministry, and the RBI. So, rather than the RBI governor having authority over this, he now has just his own vote on that committee. I'm surprised no one mentioned this considering even R Jaggi did so.
Budget 2015: Interest rate will be decided by a panel comprising representatives from government and RBI
Finance Minister Arun Jaitley announcing in his budget speech on Saturday that the Centre has just concluded a formal agreement with the central bank to this effect.

"To ensure that our victory over inflation is institutionalised and hence continues, we have concluded a Monetary Policy Framework Agreement with the RBI, as I had promised in my budget speech for 2014-15," the minister said, referring to the framework which clearly states the objective of containing inflation within the 6% mark. Jaitley added, "We will move to amend the RBI Act this year, to provide for a Monetary Policy Committee."

Allaying apprehensions that there could be some opposition to the proposal from the central bank as some feel that it could lead to some dilution of its autonomy, Jaitley said: "The Monetary Policy Framework Agreement has been signed by the Governor of RBI so I don't see how they will be opposed to it."

The decision to develop a monetary policy framework follows from the recommendation by the Urjit Patel committee, which had suggested that RBI target to bring down retail inflation to 8% by January 2015 and 6% by January 2016.

"The proposal for a monetary policy committee is a key aspect of the new framework. In line with international best practices, it is likely to provide greater transparency on the decision-making process," said Saugata Bhattacharya, chief India economist at Axis Bank.
This is a very good change, among many in the budget that went essentially unnoticed. Rather than GoI being at the mercy of the RBI head's idiosyncrasies.
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Re: Indian Economy - News & Discussion Oct 12 2013

Post by RamaY »

Hari Seldon wrote:^^Agreed.

The tax slabs should have been revised. Better still, linked to inflation.

Its hard-working law-abiding salaried folks who're filling up tax coffers and not because they want to or see value in it (TDS is responsible).

Every rich crook you can think of you know is hiding income (thanks to no TDS) worth several multiples yours and effing getting away with it. The least Modi sarkar can do is have show trials of some big fish and jail the turds. Hmmpg #feelingGrumpy
HSji

1/ Actual Corp Taxes in 2014-15 are Rs 4,26,000 Crores against Income tax revenue of Rs 2,79,000 Crores.

2/ Jetli's budget speech tells us that Corp taxes are 30% but actual realization is only 23% after rebates.

3/ Our total tax revenue is Rs 12,50,000 Crore i,e $208B or 10% of GDP. That shows that the average income tax is about 10% of middle class incomes (I can give you the details if you want).

4/ So corporates (whatever that means) are paying more than double the taxes than the middle class where as the down trodden and farming sectors aren't paying any tax. And we have tax defaulters.
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Re: Indian Economy - News & Discussion Oct 12 2013

Post by SaiK »

the down trodden pays or not pays is not the contention, but what have we got for the trodden to move up the chain and start paying taxes is what the enablement and empowerment all about.. no?
Melwyn

Re: Indian Economy - News & Discussion Oct 12 2013

Post by Melwyn »

Subramanian Swamy's account of this budget is worth reading.
Not only does he analyzes the technical aspect but also the aam-aadmi/middle class impact.
As many have noted, middle class did not get much out of this budget and will be disappointed.

A framework for recovery and growth
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Re: Indian Economy - News & Discussion Oct 12 2013

Post by RoyG »

Suraj wrote:For something that upset a lot of people in the past, there seems no mention of it at all since the budget: the power to set interest rates is being taken away from the hands of the RBI governor. Instead, it will be set by a committee comprised of members of the Finance Ministry, and the RBI. So, rather than the RBI governor having authority over this, he now has just his own vote on that committee. I'm surprised no one mentioned this considering even R Jaggi did so.
Budget 2015: Interest rate will be decided by a panel comprising representatives from government and RBI
Finance Minister Arun Jaitley announcing in his budget speech on Saturday that the Centre has just concluded a formal agreement with the central bank to this effect.

"To ensure that our victory over inflation is institutionalised and hence continues, we have concluded a Monetary Policy Framework Agreement with the RBI, as I had promised in my budget speech for 2014-15," the minister said, referring to the framework which clearly states the objective of containing inflation within the 6% mark. Jaitley added, "We will move to amend the RBI Act this year, to provide for a Monetary Policy Committee."

Allaying apprehensions that there could be some opposition to the proposal from the central bank as some feel that it could lead to some dilution of its autonomy, Jaitley said: "The Monetary Policy Framework Agreement has been signed by the Governor of RBI so I don't see how they will be opposed to it."

The decision to develop a monetary policy framework follows from the recommendation by the Urjit Patel committee, which had suggested that RBI target to bring down retail inflation to 8% by January 2015 and 6% by January 2016.

"The proposal for a monetary policy committee is a key aspect of the new framework. In line with international best practices, it is likely to provide greater transparency on the decision-making process," said Saugata Bhattacharya, chief India economist at Axis Bank.
This is a very good change, among many in the budget that went essentially unnoticed. Rather than GoI being at the mercy of the RBI head's idiosyncrasies.
International best practices? Ha, she's a banker who wants interest rates to come down despite excessive government spending. It's those international best practices which plunged the so called rich nations into financial instability.
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Re: Indian Economy - News & Discussion Oct 12 2013

Post by SaiK »

http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/lead/a- ... 948767.ece

“The Indian economy has declined because of the peculiar Indian ‘invention’ of a perfidious financial derivative called Participatory Notes.” The Finance Minister ought to have abolished PNs in this Budget to stabilise the economy. I do not know if Mr. Jaitley was even shown this legitimization of PNs which is in the fine print of the Budget documents.

After a decade of economic decline, wrongly attributed to the global economic meltdown, recovery and growth need a different policy today, using a new framework of objectives, priorities, strategy and resource mobilisation measures. The Union Budget is a serious attempt to have such a framework in place

Budget-making today is a tough call for a Finance Minister trying to reverse the past decline caused by the UPA’s policies. The Indian economy, for example, decelerated from an 8.4 per cent growth rate in GDP in 2003-04 to 4.8 per cent in 2013-14. The UPA’s decade of economic decline has been wrongly attributed to the global economic meltdown especially during the last six years of the decade.

Therefore, recovery and growth need a different policy today, and require choosing a new framework of objectives, priorities, strategy and resource mobilisation measures in constituting a budget.

The Budget for 2015-16 presented on Saturday to Parliament by Union Finance Minister Arun Jaitley is a serious attempt to usher in such a new framework. An analysis of how far he has succeeded and what more remains to be done for a successful turnaround is the concern here in this article.

Participatory Notes

The Indian economy has declined because of the peculiar Indian “invention” of that perfidious financial derivative called Participatory Notes or PNs, otherwise known as the crony/crooked facilitator for black money-based portfolio investment. No other country would think of such a derivative.

The Budget does not treat PNs as a time bomb and to seek to abolish this derivative, as the Tarapore Committee had wanted. Actually, PNs have been even more legitimised by enhancing their status to that of FDI inflow.

“The Indian economy has declined because of the peculiar Indian ‘invention’ of a perfidious financial derivative called Participatory Notes.”

The Finance Minister ought to have abolished PNs in this Budget to stabilise the economy. I do not know if Mr. Jaitley was even shown this legitimisation of PNs which is in the fine print of the Budget documents.

He has introduced many new measures, such as a vastly increased agricultural credit facility, the new MUDRA Bank to fund the underfunded, especially Scheduled Caste/Tribe entrepreneurs, tax-free bonds for infrastructure development, ultra-large power plants of 4,000 MW, monetisation of hoarded gold by paying interest on gold deposit accounts in banks and ease of doing business in India by a digitisation of procedures. But this is not enough to kick-start the economy since Mr. Jaitley has not embedded such piecemeal measures in the larger picture of economic reform and budgetary restructure.

Looming crisis

Today, for example, there is a budgetary crisis looming on the horizon because the allocations for major heads of expenditure — government employees’ salaries, pensions, police, defence, subsidies, interests to be paid for past loans taken by the government, etc., and which now cover 98 per cent of the current and capital account revenues accruing to government — cannot be reduced without creating a political crisis.

These allocations are revenue expenditures, and hence not asset-building or investments for development projects.

Moreover, in the past, in the revenue budget, these expenditures far exceed the revenue. Thus, the revenue budget has been in huge deficit, and which is covered by taking more loans from public sector banks and creating a surplus in the capital account by trimming investment allocation.

In the Budget, we find this is continued because Non-Plan Expenditure has risen 11 per cent while Plan Expenditure has been stagnant. In a financially healthy economy, it should be the other way around — surplus on the revenue account, i.e., revenue exceeding expenditure, and a deficit in the capital account, i.e., investment exceeding amortisation.

This situation however cannot continue for long because loans from public sector banks to the government to pay for the overall deficit in the Budget have to be paid back. It will require a major recapitalisation of banks to meet the Basel III norms or else the public sector banks may go bankrupt by 2017. A time bomb is ticking here.

Being futuristic

The big picture we have to usher in is an Indian economy growing annually at 10 to 12 per cent by inducing the current household saving rate of 29 per cent of income to rise again to the rate of 36 per cent.

To become a developed country in the foreseeable future, India’s GDP will have to grow at 10 to 12 per cent per year for at least a decade. A 12 per cent GDP growth rate per year will mean a doubling of GDP every six years, and that of per capita income, doubling every seven years.

This level of the growth rate can take us to the league of the top three nations of the world, of the United States, China and India by 2020, and then aim to overtake China in the next decade thereafter. That should be a stated goal of every budget and not just a “balancing the books” exercise.

Technically, this is within India’s reach, since it would require the rate of investment to rise while productivity growth will have to ensure that the incremental output-capital ratio declines from the present 4.0 to 3.0. Productivity increases can be achieved by cutting transaction cost in the ease to do business and by motivating labour with incentives to work harder.

Further, if we reduce transaction cost by eliminating corruption, then the current incremental capital-output ratio will easily fall from 4.0 to 3.0.

Enthusing the middle class

This can also be sustained by directly, and not indirectly, enthusing the middle class — which today can be achieved only by abolishing personal income tax. {2018/19}

In this Budget, the middle class has little to cheer about. The morning-after announcement of petrol and diesel price hikes even while internationally, crude oil price continues to be in decline, has only further discouraged the middle class. India’s middle class urgently needs some good news.

India has many advantages to achieve a booming economy such as a demographic dividend, agriculture that has internationally the lowest yield in land and livestock-based products, and also, by WTO reckoning, the lowest cost of production, 12 months a year of farm-friendly weather, a highly competitive, skilled and semi-skilled labour force and low wage rates at the national level, the advantages of which have already been proved to the world by the outsourcing phenomenon. We have a young population — the average is 28 years when compared to the U.S.’s 38 years, and Japan’s 49 years — that is the base for it to usher in innovation in our production process.

Since the worldview of economic development has now completely changed, economic development is no more thought of as being capital-driven, but knowledge-driven. For application of knowledge, we need innovations, which means more original research, and more fresh, young minds out of the cream of youth to be inculcated with learning and to be at the frontier of research.

The unintended consequences of past policies should not make us squander this “natural resource” of youth we have acquired. Today, using proper policy application for the young, we must realise and harvest this demographic potential.

Thus, these goals have to be at the core of the economic agenda underlying the making of the Budgets. But for all that to happen, more vigorous, market-centric, economic reforms are necessary and need to be at the centre stage of the nation’s attention in a Budget and not be overwhelmed by what corporate-driven, media hype expects of a budget.

Looking ahead positively, the nation still has four more annual Budgets to see, and which will hopefully set the stage for India’s economic renaissance in the next decade.

(Subramanian Swamy is a former Union Minister of Commerce and Professor of Economics.)
i guess, that is exactly mates with what BRF was talking about BJP giving out only in the year 2018/19 time frame. so, we can be confident that income tax will be gone in 3 years time for desi hard workers.
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Re: Indian Economy - News & Discussion Oct 12 2013

Post by Gyan »

Prescribed Recipe for Indian economy being High Interest Rates, low fiscal deficit, increasing USD reserves is only good for US economy and not for India. Our imported economics experts are doing East India Company on us.
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Re: Indian Economy - News & Discussion Oct 12 2013

Post by SaiK »

https://www.myind.net/reserve-bank-indi ... toric-role

https://www.myind.net/reserve-bank-indi ... role-part2

The budget for 2015 presented by Shri Arun Jaitley on 28th February if combined with easing interest rates could become the harbinger of several positive things to come in the near future. Hope the RBI and Government of India will continue to work in tandem towards a higher purpose.
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Re: Indian Economy - News & Discussion Oct 12 2013

Post by pankajs »

Saab bike hua hain .... Saab IMF/WB/US ke trojan hain ... Either Modi is being taken for a ride or he is taking us for a ride ... Jai ho!

http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/new ... 424449.cms
Let rupee dip when possible for India's long-term economic wellbeing: Arvind Subramanian, CEA
NEW DELHI: The rupee could well be too robust for India's long-term economic wellbeing, Chief Economic Adviser Arvind Subramanian suggested, drawing a direct correlation between a strong currency and weakness in exports, the latter being a vital link in the government's economic revival strategy. He acknowledged there were sections that advocated a stronger currency.

"Part of the community out there...wants a strong exchange rate, but that would be very detrimental to our exports," Subramanian told ET in an interview on Sunday. "No country in history has grown at 8-10% for 30-35 years without roaring exports. And remember that a flat exports to GDP ratio also reflects the fact that the external environment is actually less favourable to absorbing exports than it used to be."

However, he also said that the nuanced manner in which strong currency flows need to be managed is linked to the need for higher reserves, which in turn would mean a strong currency. "One of the lessons from China is that foreign exchange reserves have been a big source of (power) — $4 trillion. It's allowed China to behave like the World Bank and the IMF put together," he said.

"I think we should be targeting $750 billion to $1 trillion of reserves. I am not actually advocating that but I think one needs to think in those terms if we are a rising power," Subramanian said. He said achieving all these ends would be a complex exercise.

"The way you accumulate reserves is by actually having a very competitive exchange rate. When capital is coming in, the challenge is...going to be to prevent it (rupee) from going up," he said. "I think we have to be opportunistic, when there is a chance to allow it to drift down, maybe a little bit it drifts down but when a lot of capital is coming in, intervene to keep it stable. So we have to be very pragmatic in our approach to the exchange rate. And the more successful we are, the more complicated it is going to be."

He also warned about money flooding into India from overseas. "Surfeit rather than scarcity of capital can be the problem going forward," Subramanian said. "If you see in 2014 the rupee has become uncompetitive by about 9%, 6.5% of that is because of capital inflows... It is going to be a problem..." Prime Minister Narendra Modi wants to drive up investment, put growth on the fast track, turn the country into a global manufacturing hub with the 'Make in India' initiative and generate jobs as he looks to lift millions out of poverty. Making sure that the strategy works for India will mean getting the many moving parts to work in harmony.

'RBI HAS DONE A GOOD JOB'

"I think so far RBI has done a good job of balancing capital inflows," Subramanian said. "One of the points we make in the Economic Survey is that while the current account deficit coming down is a good thing, there is a flip side... the money that comes in is going to put more of pressure on the exchange rate."

That would make Indian exports uncompetitive in the global market, he said, echoing concerns he voiced in the Economic Survey that was released on February 27.

"During India's rapid growth phase between 2002-03 and 2008-09, the ratio of exports of services to GDP increased dramatically, from 4% to nearly 9%," the survey said. "In contrast, manufacturing exports were less buoyant. After the global financial crisis, however, the roles seem to have been reversed; manufacturing exports seem to have done better than services exports. More worrisome, however, both have slowed down in the last five years which does not augur well."

He also drew attention to the plethora of trade pacts being concluded between various countries and blocs that excluded India.

"There is this whole trade challenge, which I would say is just a manifestation or a twist on the whole 'Make in India' challenge, (by) which I broadly mean... how we can be globally competitive?" Subramanian had cited the macroeconomic trilemma in the survey in this regard. This refers to monetary policy independence, a fixed exchange rate and capital controls and how it's not possible to manage all three together.

'BE CAREFUL OF ECBS'

India should be careful about the kind of overseas money it gets, he said. Foreign direct investment should be allowed in "without restriction" but India should be wary about external commercial borrowings (ECBs), given the experience of infrastructure companies.

"If you look at what happened in 2008-09, these infrastructure firms borrowed ECBs, their revenues were in rupees, a complete mismatch, so ECBs are something we have to be very careful about," he said.

There's a global consensus on the approach to capital account liberalisation. "I think that's what we should do as well. We should do it very gradually, in a very calibrated fashion," he said. Subramanian also pointed to the law of diminishing returns that applies to low-cost manufacturing centres. Such economies grow rapidly, become rich and then slow down — as with China.

"As countries become richer, they tend to slow down, that's the theory of growth. We are going to grow faster because we are poorer. So the fact that we are going to overtake China is good but it's a reflection of how in level terms we are poorer than China."
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Re: Indian Economy - News & Discussion Oct 12 2013

Post by Singha »

does RBI have some kind of constitutional standing that keeps it outside the diktats of the executive (Govt of the day)?
today also the junior finance minister makes a statement that budget has set the stage for a lowering of interest rate...but it seems the GOI cannot directly 'ask' the RBI to this or that but merely put pressure and 'suggest strongly' ?
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Re: Indian Economy - News & Discussion Oct 12 2013

Post by wig »

Singha ji,

the RBI is constituted under legislative fiat; the Reserve bank of India Act, 1934. I think the RBI came into existence in 1935. it is now wholly owned by the GOI It has a board of members nominated from various sectors of society and geographical areas in terms of provisons of section 8(1) b, c, d of the said Act. the principal functions as far as I can recall are to regulate the issue of Bank Notes and keeping of reserves with a view to securing monetary stability in India and generally to operate the currency and credit system of the country to its advantage.
The board in my very humble opinion is reasonably independent, though it is nominated by the Govt.
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Re: Indian Economy - News & Discussion Oct 12 2013

Post by Singha »

which is a bit strange because ultimately it is an arm of the Govt, the govt runs the finance ministry, the trade policy, the forex strategy, and the buck stops at the PMOs desk and govt controls even the N-button.

its these quasi-Govt bodies that can go rogue under the right leadership and cause a lot of headaches how to handle them within the bounds of the procedures.
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Re: Indian Economy - News & Discussion Oct 12 2013

Post by pankajs »

I think RBI policy has broadly been in line with the GOI's policy till date. Wait for the next RBI policy meet and the direction will become clearer.
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Re: Indian Economy - News & Discussion Oct 12 2013

Post by Suraj »

This budget took a lot of things out of the RBI's purview. Among them:
* Power to set interest rates. Previously decided by RBI governor. Now decided by a committee comprised of FinMin and RBI officials.
* Debt management cell moved from RBI to government hands.
* Forward markets committee moved from RBI to SEBI, which is a more sensible entity to manage this.
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Re: Indian Economy - News & Discussion Oct 12 2013

Post by Virupaksha »

Suraj wrote:This budget took a lot of things out of the RBI's purview. Among them:
* Power to set interest rates. Previously decided by RBI governor. Now decided by a committee comprised of FinMin and RBI officials.
* Debt management cell moved from RBI to government hands.
* Forward markets committee moved from RBI to SEBI, which is a more sensible entity to manage this.
The first was by urjit patel committee of RBI (note: not govt) which asked for a target band of inflation of 2-6% and it had asked that rbi should only deal with that singular goal instead of worrying about growth and other issues.

for those wanting urjit patel committee for dummies
http://mrunal.org/2014/02/economy-rbi-u ... -of-2.html
http://mrunal.org/2014/02/economy-urjit ... -of-2.html
Last edited by Virupaksha on 02 Mar 2015 13:34, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Indian Economy - News & Discussion Oct 12 2013

Post by Virupaksha »

Singha wrote:which is a bit strange because ultimately it is an arm of the Govt, the govt runs the finance ministry, the trade policy, the forex strategy, and the buck stops at the PMOs desk and govt controls even the N-button.

its these quasi-Govt bodies that can go rogue under the right leadership and cause a lot of headaches how to handle them within the bounds of the procedures.
technically rbi is not under executive. its acts provides it limited independence from executive.
RBI decides forex strategy, not govt.

for example, cag, cec are constitutional bodies. They are technically part of executive but are very highly independent. But IB, ministries etc are completely executive.

There is a reason why the coal and telecom scams came out showing the rot in the UPA govt. They were both exposed by cag, which controlled the rogueness of the govt. Checks and balances.
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Re: Indian Economy - News & Discussion Oct 12 2013

Post by nawabs »

Monetary policy to now target inflation to be 6% by Jan 2016

http://www.business-standard.com/articl ... 287_1.html
The Finance Ministry and the Reserve Bank have agreed to inflation rate targeting under which the apex bank will aim to lower retail inflation to 6% by January 2016 and further to around 4% by March next year.

The monetary policy framework agreement as signed on February 20 is to "primarily maintain price stability while keeping in mind the objective of growth".

"The Reserve Bank will aim to bring inflation below 6% by January 2016. The target of financial year 2016-17 and all subsequent years shall be 4% with a band of (+/-) 2%," the agreement said.

While the agreement gives a free hand to the RBI Governor to decide on the monetary policy measures to achieve the inflation target, it also requires the RBI to give out to the Central Government a report in case the target is missed for a period of time.

The RBI is also required to make public every six months a document explaining the sources of inflation and the inflation forecast for the period between 6-8 months.

In the Budget, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley had said a monetary policy framework would be put in place to keep inflation below 6%.

"To ensure that our victory over inflation is institutionalised and hence continues, we have concluded a monetary policy framework agreement with the Reserve Bank of India. The framework objective is to keep inflation below 6% and we will move to amend the RBI Act this year and provide for monetary policy committee," he had sai
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Re: Indian Economy - News & Discussion Oct 12 2013

Post by Haresh »

hanumadu,

Thanks for posting that article by Desai, could you copy the other one as well, by Tavleen Singh, I just get a huge advert across my screen.

He is absolutely right. My family are from Punjab. In the old days they were landless labourer's. They own some land now, not a lot. They mainly work for the richer farmers/landlords or look for daily wage jobs. Some of them are really despondent about the job situation. Land means nothing to them because they don't own a lot. What they are interested in is learning a skill. Brick layer, marble/stone mason, welding, wood carving, handicrafts.
My family hails from the Hoshiarpur district, famous for it's handicrafts. The problem is how do all these artisans get the products to the ports of Gujarat and Maharashtra? The road network is not up to scratch. They need land to build the road/rail infra to move the goods.
They used to vote Congress, not now, they want progress and would rather have the certainty of a factory job than the uncertainty of manual farm laboring.
"The nation had to stay poor to keep Socialism alive" I have met some of these so called "socialists" from the congress party. They are parasites, so are their children and they are carried on the backs of the poor of India, the poor like my relations.
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Re: Indian Economy - News & Discussion Oct 12 2013

Post by hanumadu »

Haresh wrote:hanumadu,

Thanks for posting that article by Desai, could you copy the other one as well, by Tavleen Singh, I just get a huge advert across my screen.
.
Happy to oblige sir.

http://indianexpress.com/article/opinio ... r-again/2/
On my desk as I write rests a copy of the land law that the last government bequeathed us. I dredged through its reams of dreary officialese more than once and concluded that when the BJP helped the Sonia-Manmohan government pass it in Parliament, its MPs did not read it. This is not an insult. It would be hard for any normal, healthy, educated person to read it without being utterly defeated by this convoluted, verbose document.

So if the Prime Minister wants to bring the changes without which this law will remain the major obstacle to India’s future progress, he must admit that it was a mistake to support the law in the first place. Then and only then will he be able to move forward. His government has been so defensive lately that it is as if Mr Modi has forgotten that he is the first prime minister in 30 years to have a full majority in the Lok Sabha.

Meanwhile those who have worked tirelessly, and perhaps with good intentions, to keep Indian farmers mired in subsistence farming forever are on the ascendant. At Jantar Mantar have appeared not just Anna Hazare and that eternal promoter of wrong causes, Medha Patkar, but even Congress MPs in peasant turbans. They did this perhaps to look like farmers. They failed. They just looked silly. But they succeeded in joining the raucous, ill-informed chorus that any changes to the ‘Right to Fair Compensation and Transparency in Land Acquisition, Rehabilitation and Resettlement Bill, 2013’ (phew!) will make it ‘anti-farmer’.

This is not just rubbish, but dangerous rubbish. As the sister of someone who, by Indian standards, is a rich farmer, may I put on record that the only time my brother has made any money is when he sells an acre or two. Most Indian farmers live on the edge of ruin because land reform has made agriculture unprofitable for most. And the reason why unemployment is the biggest problem in rural India is because agriculture has no capacity left to create jobs. So to try and make industry and infrastructure bad words, as the Finance Minister pointed out, is wrong.

Changes to this seriously defective law will not reduce the compensation that farmers get. They will reduce the decades that it could take to get 70 per cent of local residents to agree before land is acquired for roads, hospitals, schools or defence facilities. Incidentally, the change that the ordinance has forgotten to make is that this law interferes in private buying and selling of land as well. The middle class, urban protesters who currently occupy Jantar Mantar should tell farmers this and find out if they still support the law.

It cheered me to hear the Prime Minister remind us in his speech in the Lok Sabha last Friday that the Congress party won only 44 seats in the last election because the ‘aam aadmi’ noticed that the laws made on his behalf did not improve his life. Shame on the BJP for not performing its role as the main opposition party by not aggressively opposing the very bad laws the last government passed.

The land law is not the only bad piece of legislation that the last government bestowed upon us. There is the very flawed retroactive tax that made foreign investors flee in droves. There is a food security law that instead of improving the hopeless public distribution system adds to its burden by seeking to provide more than 70 per cent of Indian citizens with cheap food grain. There is a right to education law that instead of improving government schools allows officials to interfere in private schools. And there is the vaunted ‘flagship scheme’ of the last government, MNREGA, that instead of creating employment ends up as dole.

If these laws had made a real difference to the lives of India’s most disadvantaged citizens, would the Congress have been reduced to 44 seats? The sad truth is that far too many Indians, including far too many political pundits, have not noticed that India looks very, very bad compared to most other countries. We have roads, railways and ports that are among the most decrepit in the world. Our major cities look like vast shanties and in our villages, we have been unable to deal with such basic problems as sanitation and clean water.

The question we need to ask is that why did a decade of ‘pro-poor’ laws make no real difference to those Indians who remain ground down horribly by extreme poverty? The question we need to ask is why most Indians living in extreme poverty are farmers? If the Prime Minister does not continue to ask these questions loudly and aggressively, he will lose to the Jantar Mantar crowd. And if they win, Indian farmers are doomed to eternal poverty.
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Re: Indian Economy - News & Discussion Oct 12 2013

Post by panduranghari »

nawabs wrote:Monetary policy to now target inflation to be 6% by Jan 2016

http://www.business-standard.com/articl ... 287_1.html
I expect interest rates to be ratcheted up- substantially. I said this in Nov 2014.
panduranghari wrote: Markets are fickle. If interest rates dont rise soon enough voluntarily, then we will see a sudden unexpected rise in rates as it happened in Nigeria last week. Interest rate rise will kill realty. It will cause a lot of heart burn to the aam aadmi who is banking on the BELIEF that Modi is going to fix India.
.
But Arvind Subramanium wants to increase forex reserves at expense of inflation. I think he is wrong in this recommendation. This should be a red flag. Why would he make such a recommendation? Its net loss for india. Whose agenda is he promoting? On these forums, we have questioned his appointment.

Subramanium Swamy States in the Hindu that banks need to be recapitalised and fast. I did say this before 6 months ago. And Swamy is an economist. So even he can see this. I doubt Jet Li is not aware of this.

Take these 2 things together, my deduction is;

1. Rates rise, realty dies
2. Inflation drops, people reduce spending so banks hold more rupees.
3. Realty dying will increase NPA's of banks. This make recapitalisation even more urgent.
4. To counter this, gold has to be brought in. I don't think, they can use force. Temple gold is a easy target, but Modi may veto.

Interesting times.
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Re: Indian Economy - News & Discussion Oct 12 2013

Post by VinodTK »

India introduces sovereign gold bond, refines gold deposit scheme
India will introduce a sovereign gold bond as an alternative to physical gold, as well as a new Gold deposit scheme to replace its exisitng ones, India’s finance minister Arun Jaitley said over the weekend as part of the FY15-16 Indian Budget.

The bonds will carry a fixed interest rate, and will be redeemable in cash pegged to the face value of gold at the time of maturity. Other than giving investors a long exposure to gold, it also provides the advantage of earning a fixed interest rate as gold typically has no direct yield.

A new gold monetisation scheme will also replace the current Gold deposit and Gold metal loan schemes. Several reasons such as high melting costs and the long time horizon of investment have rendered the present schemes unsuccessful, and removal of restrictions on the minimum size of deposits is seen as making the scheme more accessible to the population.

The measures taken to monetise gold is likely to have little short-term effect on gold demand. Longer-term “effect on gold imports and onshore premiums [is] dependent on the success of these measures”, said ANZ Bank’s commodity strategist Victor Thianpiriya.

Lastly, the Indian government will also commence work on developing an Indian Gold Coin in its bid to address the lack of standardisation and quality control for physical gold products in India.

The Indian Gold Coin will carry the face of Ashok Chakra- a symbol depicting India’s highest peacetime military decoration- and “would help reduce the demand for coins minted outside India and also help to recycle the gold available in the country”, finance minister said.
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Re: Indian Economy - News & Discussion Oct 12 2013

Post by RoyG »

This gold import duty is extremely stupid. There is still quite a bit of gold coming into the country and it is making the underworld richer.

On the other hand, I fully support what the government is trying to do.

They wont say it, but they started the process of stockpiling gold bars to prepare for the next global financial crisis which will result in a severe down-scaling of the dollar for international trade/banking transactions.

I predict a rupee backed by gold to the tune of 40% sometime in the next decade.

We should also be prepared for oil shocks. Expanding the strategic oil reserve is extremely important.

Another thing we must do is setup our own SWIFT type of system and get our semiconductor industry going. All our banking servers should be manufactured and located within the country.

We need a very secure homegrown national operating system.

I am also extremely pleased with RuPay expansion project.
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Re: Indian Economy - News & Discussion Oct 12 2013

Post by Hari Seldon »

The reason there's import duty on gold (which, misfortunately enriches the underworld types) is that if there were no such duty, legal imports would surge so much that our trade deficits would likely careen out of control.

India's appetite for the yellow metal is legendary for good reason...
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Re: Indian Economy - News & Discussion Oct 12 2013

Post by RoyG »

It should be gradually scaled down as our deficit goes down and our economic productivity goes up. This oil/dollar business is a real headache. It has outgrown its usefulness. I hope that the SCO is able to take it down for good.
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Re: Indian Economy - News & Discussion Oct 12 2013

Post by RoyG »

Game changers in the Budget

S. GURUMURTHY

LIABILITY TO ASSET: “If, through the sovereign gold bonds proposed in the Budget, the government can generate gold stock as buffer stock, India can aggregate its demand for gold.” Picture shows people on the eve of ‘Akshaya Tritiya’ in Bengaluru. Photo: K. Murali Kumar
The Hindu LIABILITY TO ASSET: “If, through the sovereign gold bonds proposed in the Budget, the government can generate gold stock as buffer stock, India can aggregate its demand for gold.” Picture shows people on the eve of ‘Akshaya Tritiya’ in Bengaluru.
The process of monetisation of gold, the insurance and pension schemes and MUDRA are all potential game changers, but their success requires scaling up of execution

Even ignoring the reporting in sections of financial media which have reduced the Budget into mere ‘comics,’ the media debates on budgets increasingly make it difficult to separate the wheat from the chaff. Anyone who attentively heard the extensive TV debates on the 2015-16 budget and read the diverse opinions in dozens of newspapers would have been bewildered about constitutes the core thrust of the Budget. The media has headlined the Budget as ‘super budget,’ ‘full of big bangs,’ ‘prepped for take-off.’ This positive branding not withstanding, the question to ask is whether the first full-fledged budget presented by the Narendra Modi government has any game-changing potential. The answer is ‘yes,’ but the realisation of this potential will depend on how well the game changers are executed.

Paradigm shift

There is an unseen paradigm shift in this Budget. For the first time, an Indian government’s budget seems to focus on national effort as the core impetus for national development. This is not surprising as the Cabinet resolution on NITI Aayog directs the national policymaking body “most importantly” to “adhere to the tenet that while incorporating positive influences from the world, no single model can be transplanted from outside into the Indian scenario. We need to find our own strategy for growth.” Almost a decade back, Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors of the G20 nations had declared that “there is no uniform development approach that fits all countries” and “each country should choose the development approaches and policies that suit its specific characteristics.” Three years later, the World Bank conceded “we have learned the hard way that there is no one model that fits all.” Yet, for a decade more, India followed the economic model of the West till the NITI Aayog decided to correct the course. The game-changing elements in this Budget are in line with NITI Aayog’s philosophy.

The first expression of the India-centric approach is the innovative agenda to ‘fund the unfunded’ 58 million micro and small businesses in the non-formal sector. This sector, according to the Credit Suisse Asia Pacific/India Equity Research report of July 2013, is unique to India. While in other countries the informal sector is largely illegal, in India, the report says, it is non-formal because government policies have not reached it. These 58 million non-formal micro businesses generate millions of rural and semi-urban entrepreneurs and provide 128 million jobs. Two-thirds of these units are operated by Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes and Other Backward Classes. Yet, this Kamadhenu of job creation gets only 4 per cent of its credit needs from banks. The sector now borrows at usurious rates of interest of 120 per cent and beyond. While it is denied funds, the formal sector — which garnered some Rs.54 lakh crore since 1991 by way of foreign and domestic capital and loans — has added just a couple of million jobs in two decades. All governments since liberalisation had expected these millions of units to die of euthanasia in market economics. But they have posted the fastest growth among all segments of the Indian economy. But economic policymaking in India continued to ignore them. Mr. Modi is the first political leader to see the potential of this sector to drive up jobs. He also realised that the modern banking system is unsuited to fund this sector. In the last budget, the Modi government had announced a committee to structure a new financial architecture for this sector. The Reserve Bank of India reportedly opposed any new architecture. But this Budget has gone ahead and announced a new financial architecture, the Micro Units Development Refinance Agency (MUDRA), for the non-formal sector with a corpus of Rs.20,000 crore and budgetary support of Rs.3,000 crore for credit guarantee. MUDRA will come into existence by a separate law. This will fund the millions of entrepreneurs by an innovative financial architecture that will integrate the existing private financiers of small businesses as last-mile lenders. It is a completely indigenous, India-centric and innovative solution for the most job-intensive, yet totally credit-starved, segment of an economy unique to India.

Monetisation of gold

The second potential game changer is the beginning of the process of monetisation of gold — creating and circulating money based on gold. Modern economists would dismiss gold as a wasteful item; as a “relic of barbarism.” This might be the case in the U.S., which successfully proscribed private gold in the 1930s, made possession of gold an offence and turned it into a government asset. But Indians celebrate gold and the Indian government, unable to do what the U.S. did, has always been bewildered about how to handle this asset. The Budget policy to monetise the domestic gold stock is an Indian solution to a unique Indian economic phenomenon. Obviously, no Western idea can handle it. If, through the sovereign gold bonds proposed in the Budget, the government can generate a substantial gold stock as buffer stock, India can aggregate its demand for gold and use that power in the international market. If it builds a decent buffer stock, it can play the global gold market which, barring China perhaps, no other country can, because only in India private gold consumption is as high as a fourth of the world’s. Despite that, India has no gold refining and standardisation infrastructure. This new policy will help build this. The only concern is that unless full tax immunity is granted to gold to be lodged in bonds, the entire stock of black gold may not enter monetisation.

The next big idea is accident insurance for Rs.2 lakh at Rs.12 per annum; for life insurance at a premium of Rs.330 per annum and lifelong pension on an annual premium of up to Rs.1,000, each to be contributed by the beneficiary and the government equally. This ambitious plan aims to reach crores of poor Indians.

Scaling up execution

Each one of them is a potential game changer. But their success requires scaling up of execution. The MUDRA idea requires millions of private financial intermediaries, who are currently providing finance to non-formal businesses, to be registered and integrated into the new architecture as the last mile delivery instrumentalities. The insurance and pension idea also needs mobilisation of crores of beneficiaries into the network. The idea of gold monetisation also calls for a massive campaign to convince the millions of Indians possessing gold to look at gold bonds as equal to gold itself. These are great ideas but their success will need scaling up of the kind which Mr. Modi demonstrated when he got over 12.5 crore Indians hooked to the banking system through the Jan Dhan Yojana [JDY]. The RBI was reportedly not very enthusiastic, if not optimistic, about such extensive banking extension. But Mr. Modi reportedly insisted on 7.5 crore bank accounts and in less than six months. He could scale up the very execution mechanism of PSU banks, written off by elite Indians as inefficient, to achieve not just 7.5 crore accounts but 5 crore more.

Reaching and financially formalising crores of people was thought of as impossible till Mr. Modi could insist on and drive the JDY to a huge success. His high scale of success lends credibility to the massive reaches of human numbers proposed in the MUDRA, Pension and Sovereign Gold Bond schemes. With Aadhar cards and JDY accounts, the huge scale of operation assumed in the game-changing ideas in the budget do not seem over optimistic. If Mr. Modi succeeds in delivering credit through the MUDRA model to millions of non-formal units, he would do in India what Deng Xiaoping did to China through the 28 million Town and Village Enterprises. If Mr. Modi gets several crores of Indians hooked to the insurance and pension schemes, he could improve their life beyond recognition. If he brings hidden gold into national coffers through the sovereign gold bond scheme, he could transform gold from being a liability of India to its global asset.

Mr. Modi’s proven capacity to scale up the government to his level of ambition makes the game changing ideas in the Budget possible.

(S. Gurumurthy is a political and economic commentator.)

http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/op-ed/g ... 948760.ece
I have said the same thing. We are really going to take off if we can execute things properly. We are going to build a gold reserve. I think Modi is going to try and exert leverage over the gold market and try to dislodge the Chinese. This was a game changing budget. Stocks don't mean sh*t in the current Indian economic scenario.
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