Shoo, Fiscal Deficit Hawks
A fiscal deficit in times of brisk growth is a beast altogether different from one during a slowdown
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Shoo, Fiscal Deficit Hawks
A fiscal deficit in times of brisk growth is a different beast from one in times of slowdown
T K Arun
In the misty mornings of peak winter, a flock of sharp-beaked, joyless birds take flight in the Capital: the Fiscal Deficit Hawks, who swoop down on North Block, where harried finance ministry officials race against time to prepare the Union government’s annual Budget, to screech sharp orders to slash the fiscal deficit. Dovish champions of growth quail before their self-assured severity. This year, at least, these pests have to be banished, to free the Budget of the by dire predictions of rating downgrades, inflation, isolation within the G20, brimstone and fire, in case the fiscal deficit stays high.
Don’t Mind the Gap
Let us begin by appreciating the fiscal deficit is a shape shifter. A fiscal deficit in times of brisk growth is a beast altogether different from a fiscal deficit in times of slowdown. In the coming year of a global slowdown, India has the responsibility to take advantage of the slack in commodity and capital goods prices the slowdown would produce and step up capital formation in the domestic economy, so as to boost growth in the present and create the infrastructure for sustaining growth in the future.
Why is the fiscal deficit a concern? It represents a claim by the state on the non-state sector’s savings. If the non-state sector were busy carrying out its own investment plans and had little savings to spare for the stat sector, such a claim on its savings by the state, articulated through the credit mechanism, would produce excess demand and inflation. But what if the non-state sector were in no position to invest and had lots of savings to spare for the state to lift off its hands, there would be no excess demand, hence, no inflation.
Not just that, once state spending creates demand for the non-state sector’s output, the non-state sector’s exhausted animal spirits would get re-energised, and if the demand is perceived to be strong enough and sustained, the non-state sector would add capacity to meet the anticipated demand.
In other words, one key differentiator between a good fiscal deficit and a bad fiscal deficit is the context: is the non-state sector languishing or is it in rude health and in no mood to surrender its savings to the state? In the context of slack non-state investment, a large fiscal deficit will directly boost growth and crowd in non-state investment, besides. In a context of vigorous non-state investment, a fiscal deficit would create inflation and crowd out private investment.
What is the likely investment mood of the private sector in the coming year? By all estimates, growth is scheduled to slow across the world, including in India. Export demand would be tame. Private sector investment appetite would be anorexic. Should the finance minister worry about snickering rating agency types or step up the Budget’s allocation for capital formation?
Let us appreciate that ‘capital expenditure’ is a little deceptive. If the government pays off past debt, it would be capital expenditure without capital formation in the economy. If the government hands out loans to, say, state governments for them to repay their debts faster, again, there would be a big step up in capital expenditure without adding to capital formation.
It is capital formation that would generate demand and crowd in private investment, not just any sort of increase in capital expenditure. The Budget should explicitly target stepped-up capital formation.
A fiscal deficit that funds investment is more effective in boosting growth than a fiscal deficit that shores up consumption. In dire circumstances, the state might need to borrow to step up subsidies. India is moving out of the pandemic’s shadow, but a jump in demand for MNREGA doles in November suggests lingering distress that might warrant continued support for make-work programmes.
Another hawkish concern about the fiscal deficit is inter-generational equity. The fiscal deficit created now translates into a higher debt burden that future generations have to service. Is that fair? It is more than fair.
Debt from the Future
India is a fast-growing developing country, not a mature economy that celebrates a 2% growth rate. Future generations would be far richer than we are today. They can afford to service any debt they are saddled with. Further, they would have a moral obligation to, provided today’s fiscal deficit goes to finance the means of producing future prosperity.
The government should stop subsidizing electric vehicles. The savings on fuel are sizeable enough to incentivize rational, voluntary adoption of EVs. The government needs to step up expenditure on the greenest energy of all, nuclear power. India’s thorium-based fast-breeder programme has been malingering for no reason. It needs funds. Defence production and modernization, including better cyber capability for offence and defence, need funds. Research on carbon capture for use is a priority. Mining the data generated by the goods and services tax to identify new tax sources calls for funds. These represent unavoidable increases in state spending, in addition to conventional infrastructure, physical and social.
This is the time to nurture the tiger with the savings the private sector is too timid to handle on its own, not the time to be distracted by screeches in the sky.