Given unprecedented inflation in advanced economies, one has to question their policy choices through the pandemic. While the shock to energy and food prices from the European war is a proximate cause, excessive fiscal stimulus during 2020 had fragilized these countries.
For example, UK could soon see inflation north of 20%. These levels are unheard of, last seen many decades ago. This will deal a severe blow to real disposable incomes and household savings. bloomberg.com/news/articles/…
What must be noted and remembered is most of the "policy experts" and economists were building pressure for India to follow the same playbook in 2020: go for a huge fiscal stimulus, even as the country went into a total lockdown. Slam brakes and accelerator simultaneously!
But the Government's strategy always was: Wait, watch and then respond economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/economy/p… ...rather than getting carried away in the moment thus taking hasty, irreversible and damaging decisions.
Let's start with freshly minted Nobel laureate, Abhijit Banerjee.
"I’m not sure the government is calling it right. Is it possible to spend an extra 2% of GDP on this right now? Probably - many countries have borrowed 10 times that amount, so why not?" theweek.in/news/biz-tech/…
In a chat with Rahul Gandhi, Abhijit Banerjee "urged the Indian government to take a clue from the US, where the Trump administration has announced a stimulus package equivalent to around 10% of the country’s GDP." [May 2020] qz.com/india/1851665/…
"We really haven’t decided on a large enough stimulus package. We are still talking about 1% of GDP." That was Abhijit Banerjee in discussion with Rahul Gandhi in May 2020 thehindu.com/news/national/…
Arvind Subramanian too was part of this loud chorus. While not nearly in the same "academic league" as Banerjee and Rajan, he too aped Rajan and said "err more on the side of prioritising the present" [May 2020] indianexpress.com/article/india/… and spend 5% of GDP livemint.com/news/india/cho…
The mainstream business press too would not relent. Here is the @Mint_Opinion editorial from March 29 2020, not even 2 weeks into the first lock down:
The editorial went on: "This would be a gamble, no doubt, as inflation could prove costly later. But the odds of India’s success will only lengthen as more time is lost. Whatever has to be done must be done fast."
!!!!!
Despite the intense pressure from media and intelligentsia, the Government stuck to its strategy of taking a responsible, calibrated approach. We are where we are today because of that careful, and yes, lonely, approach! Huge props to PM @narendramodi,FM @nsitharaman and team!
India's response prioritized relief to those who needed it most - we did not slam the accelerators and brakes together, but secured the needy sections of society through food provisions, cash transfers
,stabilized MSMEs by credit and liquidity extension
Contrary to the prevailing consensus - spend, spend, spend! - FM @nsitharaman said in September 2020: "Open to further stimulus...every time we have announced one, it has been after much deliberation and aimed at specific sections." moneycontrol.com/news/india/ope…
Here is another "expert" who tried to push India to adopt the inflation-stoking, scam-ridden strategy of Western countries.
India needs large fiscal stimulus, says Kaushik Basu financialexpress.com/economy/covid-… He served as CEA during UPA Govt - a similar era of high inflation and scams
There were voices of reason, wisdom and temperance. @APanagariya had said in April 2020: The Government "needs to resist those calls [for large stimulus] and take a more measured approach". timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/india-sh… He has proved to be spot on!
"Many in the west believe that spending will save the economy in the wake of Covid-19. @APanagariya argues debt must be kept under control if economies are to survive the crisis, and that India is showing early signs of getting it right." [July 2020] iai.tv/articles/spend…
Another such bold voice was that of @LHSummers, who blasted the $1.9T US stimulus as "the least responsible economic policy in 40 years" thehill.com/policy/finance…
Summers too has proved to be prescient and correct.
While the intellectual-media complex doesn't impose consequences upon history sheeter "experts", we should remember who said what, and be careful of future prognostications and suggestions made by individuals who would be quickly discredited had they been in any other field.
It is also notable that some of these worthies are now openly participating at political forums.
To sum it up, credit is due to the Government of India for its responsible and smart handling of the economic fallout of the Covid pandemic 👏
But the commentariat wants to deny India's leadership the great credit due to it. The too-clever-by-half Ruchir Sharma photoshopped out India from an FT piece
even has he noted "pandemic stimulus has backfired in emerging nations."
“There is no free lunch. If you are going to monetise (the deficit), that will have some impact on macro fundamentals… We cannot pretend to do policy as if there are no costs.” - @SubramanianKri in May 2020!
>@surjitbhalla noted that India has not only structured its stimulus response correctly, it had gone a step further by using the crisis to implement important economic reforms. indianexpress.com/article/opinio… [June 2020]👌
>@TheJaggi summarized India's response in an excellent October 2021 column for @SwarajyaMagswarajyamag.com/ideas/covid-re… "Common sense economics often trumps expert advice, especially when that advice comes from experts with a bias against the Modi government." #Modinomics
The lesson for us is: weigh and grade carefully who had said what in the hour of grave crisis. Choices have consequences.
"Experts" should be held accountable for the views, policies and ideas that they propagate.
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Zero tax on long-term gains and dividends was a disastrous tax policy. The objective of taxation should be to have the tax base be as wide as possible. Exempting entire sections from paying taxes only causes those who are paying taxes to cough up at even higher rates.
Not just that, zero taxes on listed equities - vast majority of which is secondary market purchase, not in primary issue - is a clear disincentive for financial participation in private equity, which comparatively was very heavily taxed. Private equity actually funds businesses.
This clamour around Budget time from every segment for reduction in taxes is frankly disgusting. Direct taxes in India still need a lot of rationalization and reforms. Argue for system-wide changes that make everyone better off, instead of trying to grab your own benefit.
Table 5 of the Economic Survey lays out in detail all the welfare measures taken through the Covid crisis, along with the results thereof. #EconomicSurvey2022
This has been India's approach, all through the pandemic. Strong safety nets targeted (thanks to @UIDAI and @India_Stack) at those who need it most, and an iterative approach that adapts to evolving situations.
Macro is strong and stable - even if global conditions worsen from here, India is in a good position to weather storms. #EconomicSurvey2022
In November 2020, a journalist wrote a piece titled "Why I Am Losing Hope In India". The screed was shared widely by the usual suspects, offering an extremely negative prognosis on how the India story might be on its last legs.
Let us assess how things have turned out over the last ~15 months for India and the Indian economy.
Entrepreneurship: 2021 was a record year for IPOs and for new unicorns minted.
India continued to see net investment from institutional investors, even as other Asian countries saw significant net outflows - reflecting investor confidence in Indian business.
At @rmponweb’s recent conference, I had the privilege of being a co-panelist with former Finance Secretary Shri Hasmukh Adhia ji. Shri Adhia has had a close association over 2001-2018 with @narendramodi and described his leadership style in detail. A 🧵 for all to know and learn.
Caveat: This thread 🧵 is from my notes and recollection of Adhia ji's speech - I don't think a video recording has been put out as yet. Any errors or misattributions are entirely mine 🙏
>@narendramodi listens a lot. He hardly speaks during presentations and meetings, he is never distracted, and he absorbs what is being presented. Normal people tune out or lose focus after some time, but not him.
First, opposition politicians and some media sellouts panned the vaccines, spread doubts and fears about their efficacy baselessly. Some called the vaccines “BJP vaccines”.
Does anybody think that *any* Indian Govt. would be so irresponsible as to just launch any vaccine publicly for use by hundreds of millions of people without due process and due diligence?
Some poisonous editors, compromised journalists and vicious politicians did exactly that.
One Uttar Pradesh leader panned the “BJP vaccines”. Chhattisgarh held back Covaxin usage for 2 months. Hardly any top leaders of Congress or other opposition parties declared they are taking / have taken the vaccine or posted photos to create public confidence in the vaccines.