1/ Interesting insights on the Indian economy in this note by Sajjid Chinoy. "India has broken the link between COVID proliferation & mobility much earlier & more successfully than many countries." Private sector activity levels jumped back up to 95% of pre-COVID levels by Oct.
2/ This is being complemented by the long-awaited pick-up in central government spending. Even as state government spending continues to contract, central government spending has surged.
3/ "A second phenomenon playing out in tandem, however, is labour market scarring...The recovery appears to be led by capital and profits, not labour and wages."
4/ "A third phenomenon visible across sectors is larger firms enduring the crisis better and gaining market share at the expense of smaller firms."
5/ This increases the prospect of a "K-shaped" recovery in which HH at the top of the income pyramid are protected while those at the bottom see permanent hits to income and jobs.
6/ "Upper income households have benefitted from a one-time stock effect, on account of higher savings for two quarters. What we are currently witnessing is a sugar-rush from those savings being spent."
7/ "While markets are focused on the consumption revival, the key will be whether the private sector starts re-investing and re-hiring, and thereby sets the economy onto a more virtuous path." Any investment revival will depend crucially on demand dynamics.
8/ All of this sets up lofty expectations for the 2021 Budget on Feb 1.
1/ As a Washington, DC resident for the better part of two decades, I experienced a visceral reaction to the events of January 6. Here's my attempt in @htTweets to make sense of them hindustantimes.com/opinion/americ…
2/ I think there are, for me, 4 big takeaways. First, the Trump era serves as a vivid illustration that institutions are ultimately only as strong as the social norms that underpin them, and the individuals who mobilise to support them hindustantimes.com/opinion/americ…
3/ Second, democratic accountability cannot be limited to the ballot box alone. Desperate talk of the need to protect the country from Trump to avoid further chaos in his final days only underlines the series of missed opportunities to hold him to account. hindustantimes.com/opinion/americ…
1/ As the US election nears, our team is surveying Indian-American college students (and a parent) for a study on inter-generational differences in policy/political attitudes. If you're part of a campus organization or would like to get involved, email us: siaa-survey.com
2/ Here's a short video explaining our study's approach and why we think this survey is important:
3/ Or you can check out a short podcast @KhariBiskut, @sameer_nd & I recorded where we talk about our survey effort and what makes it unique: siaa-survey.com
1/ In the latest issue of the Journal of Economic Perspectives, @AmartyaLahiri has one of the most comprehensive assessments of #demonetization I have seen to date. The piece is ungated and can be found here: pubs.aeaweb.org/doi/pdfplus/10…
2/ The bulk of the piece focuses on whether demonetization achieved its three stated goals:
1) Seizing the black wealth created through undeclared income
2) Increasing the tax base
3) digitizing the economy & reducing the reliance on cash
Lahiri analyzes all three.
3/ Because 99% of the currency was returned, we know that the direct method of capturing unaccounted wealth did not work. When it comes to indirect methods (tax), neither demonetization nor GST pushed the indirect tax/GDP ratio off its recent trend path.
1/n Very interesting results from CSDS-Lokniti 2019 pre-poll. First, Modi's popularity has rebounded. Is back at May 2017 levels (and even higher than May 2014) lokniti.org/media/upload_f…
2/n Anti-incumbency sentiment against Modi government seems to have ebbed somewhat lokniti.org/media/upload_f…
3/n While Balakot does not rate among top priorities for voters, there is evidence it is *shifting* perceptions and behavior. Awareness of Balakot strike is blunting unemployment factor lokniti.org/media/upload_f…