Showing posts with label digital India. Show all posts
Showing posts with label digital India. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 5, 2020

Hopes, Aspirations and Disappointments - Union Budget 2020


Hope, Aspirations and Disappointments

Nirmala Sitaraman starts on Aspirational Note. The two hour forty minute long budget speech creating record could perhaps prove the dictum: ‘if you fail in logic resort to rhetoric.’ Let me deal with the hopes and aspirations first and then with the disappointments later.

It has for first time addressed the farm sector comprehensively providing end-to-end solutions but leaves no assurance for income in the hands of the farmer. Allied activities get a boost. If a farmer were to hold a few animals in the backyard, a fishpond and a small poultry in addition to crop farming or horticulture, he has everything in the budget to cheer. There is every chance to cross-hold risks among the farming and allied activities.

States should follow the intent and modify the Agricultural Marketing laws to make way for the responsible aggregators and technology. Warehousing facilities in the Agriculture Market Yards and cold storage facilities would insulate the farmer from fluctuations in returns to the farm produce.
FM has announced Rs.15lakh farm credit amidst unwelcoming banker in the rural areas and banks that have learnt the art of showing up in figures that they do not deliver to the intended customers. It is heartening to see the push for Primary Agricultural Credit Societies that were almost forgotten for decades. NABARD that has half of its fleet serving Mumbai Headquarters should have been restructured for focused attention on farm credit. She should have forsaken tolerance for not achieving priority sector targets to take the RIDF window. This is a lost opportunity.

While the erstwhile lost focus on Education, Health and Hygiene has been regained with appropriate budget allocations and set a new direction through internships in higher education, unless infrastructure for primary education and teaching skills are enhanced the foundations will remain weak. Introducing internships in higher education has potential to make education fit the employment bill. We may hope for a correction through the National Education Policy the Government is planning to introduce.

The District Teaching Hospitals and para medical services planned will sow the seeds for sustainable health interventions. This just marks only a good beginning as the effect can be felt only after five years.

With the measly allocation for MNREGS and not linking it to the farm sector the budget left a void. It failed to kindle the appetite for consumption, the trigger for growth. The consumer is not left with much surpluses either for increased investment or consumption. Growth impulses are not generated significantly.

MSME sector has got a new direction with the introduction of sub-ordinated debt or equity funding but it remains to be seen whether the Banks that failed them in credit would meet the new equity route and help scaling up process. TReDs and GEMs are not new interventions to talk of. Unless all the government departments and PSUs enroll on these platforms, MSM|E vendors would not get their due. For those moving to organized way of doing business with just 5% in cash are exempt from audit up to Rs.5cr turnover.

In the last budget, the FM made a reference to U.K. Sinha Committee Report, but she skipped it now. Neither Distressed Asset Fund to ensure that no viable manufacturing MSME downs its shutters, nor Fund of Funds found allocation in the Budget. In a slowdown, it makes lot of sense to ensure that no viable manufacturing MSME exits so that the workforce engaged therein would not add to the unemployed. 

Economic Survey 2020 made a very detailed analysis of the banking in the financial sector. FM did not seem much worried over the increase in frauds and poor credit risk of the Banks. Although it is heartening to see that no further capital allocation is made cutting into taxpayer’s purse, it is disappointing to see the absence of reforms in this sector. It would have been most appropriate to reduce the Government equity in these banks and usher in better governance than now. Bad banking and good economy are not good companions.

Banks irrespective of their size, in the current status will pull down the growth of the economy. The only solace is to the depositor whose Rs.5lacs is insured instead of just a lakh of rupees thus far. NBFCs are empowered to recover their bad debts through the SARFAESI Act provisions on par with Banks.

Extraordinary push to the digital economy with District Cyber Parks, AI, MML and ITES in addition to Travel and Tourism is likely to enhance the contribution of the Services sector. Start up, Stand Up India and Make in India have not thus far led to increase in the contribution of manufacturing sector and this budget also did not make significant strides to reverse the negative growth. Telangana State seemed to have provided inspiration on this count.

Agriculture sector alone may not reverse the slow growth of the economy. Employment intensity has little scope to increase. Unless 20% credit -GDP ratio is attained with better risk appetite among banks, recovery from slow growth is doubtful.

If both the government and private entities depend on market for raising the resources as indicated in the Budget, revised estimates of the budgeted revenues and expenditure fall short of growth expectations. The Budget failed to institute a monitoring mechanism for implementation of the ambitious projects. States should be taken into confidence while formulating the Budget as it is the States that should catch up and cooperate for the aspirational goals and ambitious announcements to turn into actions.

Intention of the FM to keep more money in the hands of the people did not result in compatible actions. Overall on a ten-point scale the Budget scores a liberal six, more due to comprehensive treatment to the farm sector than other sectors.

Published in Telangana Today 5th February 2020.




Saturday, July 6, 2019

Digital India Budget - Less focus on manufacturing



This is truly the Budget for Digital India. Dramatic direction of the Budget could see the last year of the current political regime declare electronic voting doing away with huge ques and heavy deployment of security staff.

Economic Survey that marked a significant departure from the past to move to a $5trillion economy did not find its reflection in the Budget speech in any of the sectors, while targeting $3trn during the current year.

One welcome feature of the Budget is the recognition that rich can’t get away with the bounties. 2% tax on cash transactions of over Rs.1cr B2B and the untouched slabs at the upper end of Income bracket.

Women and Self-Help Groups have been recognized as economic citizens for the growing economy. Their share in the GDP contribution is set to move up with the trust imposed in them by the FM, through the interest subvention scheme, loan up to Rs.1lakh for one person in the SHG and Rs.5000 loan for every verified woman jan dhan account holder.

Jal Jivan Mission with a promise of drinking water all rural households – a replica of Mission Bhagiratha of Telangana, a World Bank acclaimed project – has been announced.

Social Stock Exchange is a novel initiative that will be a game changer if the logistics are well built.  
FM modified the Share Transaction Tax to only to the difference between settlement and strike price in case of exercise of options. Had she raised the STT rate to at least 1% she would have got direct revenue without tax administration expenditure into the treasury simultaneously reducing the Corporate Tax to 20% for corporates with turnover of Rs.400cr. This is a lost opportunity.

This is all that the Union Budget has for MSMEs:
Ø  Pradhan Mantri Karam Yogi Maandhan Scheme
Ø  Pension benefits to about three crore retail traders & small shopkeepers with annual turnover less than Rs. 1.5 crore.
Ø  Enrolment to be kept simple, requiring only Aadhaar, bank account and a self-declaration. 
Ø  Rs. 350crore allocated for FY 2019-20 for 2% interest subvention (on fresh or incremental loans) to all GST-registered MSMEs, under the Interest Subvention Scheme for MSMEs. 
Ø  Payment platform for MSMEs to be created to enable filing of bills and payment thereof, to eliminate delays in government payments.
Ø  Agri entrepreneurs and rural enterprises covering bamboo, khadi and honey clusters, 100 new clusters covering 50000 artisans and 100 business incubators covering 75000 entrepreneurs under ASPIRE would be a good start to boost rural entrepreneurship.

Finance Minister left many more for the Sinha Committee Report to take effect. There have been no provisions either for Fund of Funds (Rs.15000cr) or for the Stressed Asset Fund of Rs.5000cr mentioned in the MSME Report. It has also ignored the call for restructuring the CGTMSE away from SIDBI. Recognized inefficient functioning of SIDBI and the new role of mentoring, counselling, Advisory and non-financial services to the MSMEs assigned by the Committee has also not been even cursorily referred. SIDBI begs organizational restructuring sooner than later in the interest of the growth of MSME sector.

NBFCs heave a sigh of relief. But the Housing Finance Companies will hence forward be under the regulation of RBI. Rs.70000cr promised capital infusion in PSBs even after acknowledging the efficacy of IBC code in resolving NPAs should have been done with some accountability by the Banks that showed up over Rs.71000cr in frauds in 2018-19. This Budget has not touched reforms in the financial sector, the crying need of the nation.

Start Ups have all that they wished. This should promote innovation and entrepreneurship. Manufacturing Start Ups must prove that themselves as such, to avail the tax benefits.
FM targeted self sufficiency and exportability of the food grains, fruits and fish but the resources earmarked are far too inadequate. E-Nam and E-Markets have made limited inroads thus far and at the farm gate not much is programmed for change. Unless produce-wise aggregators reach the farm gate not much benefit will reach the farmer.
*The Views are personal. 
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Wednesday, December 21, 2016

Asking the Right Questions on Demonetisation


This is what many in the country – both economists and non-economists – are doing. Strange indeed that fiction should overtake facts when an eminent economist and a popular columnist, Bibek Debroy chose to counter Manmohan Singh-likes that are just handful in the country in a column in the Hindu dated 12th December, '16. The fact is that majority of the population were in support of demonetisation. I demanded for it even in 2011 for three reasons that the PM mentioned. There was one more reason at that time – to contain inflation that was razing at 8.5% then.The fiction is that 98.7% of households have bank accounts that too with the proportions mentioned by him.