Friday, May 6, 2022

Recession - Far and yet Near.

 Opinion: On edge with recession fears https://telanganatoday.com/opinion-on-edge-with-recession-fears

Recession? Near and yet Far.

B. Yerram Raju

Several economists, in the wake of Russia-Ukraine war and the rise of global inflation index, have been talking of recession. It is important to understand the meaning of recession. It occurs when there is contraction of demand for goods and services consecutively for two quarters; employment falls precipitously; consumption declines; both exports and imports fall; credit markets shrink and finally, the GDP declines. This means that all the macro-economic indicators show an alarming trend.

In layman’s language, when your neighbour loses his job, it is recession, while depression is, when you lose your job. Before going into the macro-economic indicators that prompted such prediction, the discussion is timely because price stability is viewed as necessary precondition for growth by the authors of the Currency and Finance Report (RBI), 2021-22. This is the wake up call to the Monetary Policy Committee meeting on May 2 and 4 calling for a rate hike close to the rate hike in Fed-US.

Impact of global recession is seen in the backdrop of Covid-19 variants making aggressive re-entry unnerving many economies. Externalities like Russia-Ukraine war, collapse of Sri Lanka in our immediate neighbourhood, strained global value chains added fuel to fire. Fuel prices are not likely to relent in the short term and edible oil prices are touching the roof.

A bit of History

Unprecedented banking crises in the past triggered recession both in advanced economies and emerging economies. Advanced economies: Herstatt crisis in Germany, Japan in 90s, Norway in 1988-92, Spain in 1985, Sweden in 1985, UK in 1995, USA in 1980s to early 90s, and emerging economies: Brazil 1994, East Asian Crisis in 1997 hitting Korea, Thailand, Malaysia, Vietnam, and the subprime crisis of 2006 hitting the whole world are examples of recession if we leave 1930 recession way behind. The Economist, London in its special report of May 16,2009 said: ‘the dirty secret of the golden age of finance was that it was obscenely easy to make money.” Interest rates rose and housing prices fell.

Rate Hike:

Latest hike in the basic rates announced by Governor Shaktikant in a huddle on May 5,2022 shocked the stock markets. Lenders, rating agencies, and investors commented that this hike is just the beginning in the wake of unrelenting inflation for the past three quarters in a row.

Gross Domestic Product:

The most important macroeconomic factor is decline in GDP {[C+I+G+(x-m)], where C= consumption; I=investment; G=Government spending; x= exports and m=imports} . Total goods and services produced in the economy declines. Currency and Finance Report (CFR 21-22), mentioned that economic growth slowed down since the second half of 2016, taking the average of GDP growth between 2017-20 fiscal to 5.7 percent. There is understandable decline post 2020 due to Covid-19 that saw irrecoverable loans in all segments, rents prohibited for more than a year in several states in 2020-21, unoccupied hotels and unmoved airbuses hitting tourism and aviation industry, several drivers losing their jobs and cabs parked in sheds with a steep fall in fuel consumption.

Inflation:

One must begin with inflation. Data released four days after the MPC's April 8 decision showed Consumer Price Index (CPI) inflation saw a seventeen-month high of 6.95 percent in March. Wholesale inflation index rose to a four-month high of 14.55 percent the same month.  This data was in the RBI’s pages even three weeks before. Should it be behind the curve in announcing the rate hike for so long? A question that would have few answers from the powers that be. Money Control, a financial blog, vents its disappointment over the RBI Governor’s statement:” CPI inflation has been above the medium-term target of 4 percent for exactly two-and-half years. In these 30 months, CPI inflation has been above 5 percent 27 times and above the 6 percent upper bound of the RBI's flexible inflation target 16 times. So, to state now — after not saying anything in the last two years — that inflation expectations could get unanchored is a tad disconcerting.”

Unemployment:

CMIE data released almost simultaneously reveals that urban unemployment rate was 9.22 percent, and rural unemployment rate was at 7.18 percent.

International Trade

Trade balances were hit badly all over the world. Thanks to seizing the right opportunities, India’s trade balances moved to $400bn in April 2022. Several measures taken under Atma Nirbhar Bharat Abhiyan (self-reliant India) started yielding results. Startups swelled to encouraging levels. Thanks to agriculture and pharmaceutical sectors, the economy looked up during the covid time. There were no deaths due to hunger. More than 4.58crore population had been vaccinated – first, second, and precautionary and child vaccines together. To keep the export markets diversified, PM Modi is on Europe tour. This may also signal export markets that India is keen to see that the war between Russia and Ukraine ends sooner than later.

India’s consumption, growing at 12 percent pre-pandemic, nose-dived during the pandemic. But it recovered fast and is at 17 percent with a likely 10 percent annual growth in the next decade, according to Managing Partner, Boston Consulting Group. E-commerce is on the rise. It is likely to reach US $130bn by 2026.

For recession to set in there are certain conditions: Foreign capital should flee; people’s confidence should evaporate; stock markets should take a deep dive continuously; melt-down of global markets; tumbling currencies; flight of assets to safety; financial institutions blowing cold on credit; increasing government interventions in every sphere; federal politics on hostile note; and trust deficit in the governments. Banks will be on the nervous hook. Banks have always been on a weak wicket because of their inherent mismatch between the assets and liabilities. After digitalization, the risks went beyond their normal reach and added to that are the crypto currencies and cybercrimes.

Government asserts that and the RBI reinforces its argument in that growth is here to stay as banks, corporate enterprises and agriculture are all looking up. Credit from institutions for the second month in a row saw a rising trend. But unlike in 2006 crisis, Indian financial system is not a closeted financial system but exposed to global value chains.

Globally, forex markets nose-dived. Commodity markets are on continuous decline. Industrial production everywhere wears a disappointing look due to the war and continuing Covid-19 variants making economies nervous. Volatility exists in all the stock markets. Several FIIs are keen to pull back their investments.

It is this backdrop that still makes economists nervous to feel that recession is very likely.  India is far and yet near. It’s export thrust in the wake of volatile forex markets is enough cause for worry. Further, the freebies, rising public debt, indiscrete valuations of public assets put to sale, large official haircuts in official IBC resolutions need rethinking if India would escape recession. Next two months in a row, we may witness rate hikes to contain the galloping inflation.

The views expressed are author’s own.

 


Saturday, April 30, 2022

Inflation - the hydra

 

Inflation – the hydra

B. Yerram Raju

Times of India Blogpost dated 29.04.2022.

Sweltering heat makes us look to June’s first monsoon showers as much as the monetary policy of the RBI looking at taming the inflation as its uppermost task. When Bloomberg mentions that the world is experiencing a synchronised inflation outbreak that previously seemed related to the US and Europe, and that producer prices are rising in Japan, South Korea, India, and all economies are feeling the heat of fuel and food prices, it has to be viewed seriously.

I tried to look at it from what is happening in the working class both in urban and rural areas in our country. Several state governments are indulging in competitive populism, notwithstanding the ever-rising fuel prices.

My house cleaner has a couple of acres of land in Mahbubnagar district of Telangana. She gets her minimum wages when she abstains from the work in our house, at least four days a month and seven days at least once in a quarter. Her logic: Every office has one Sunday and two second Saturdays as holidays. Why should I not get the same? She works as house cleaner for ten houses with an average income of Rs.2000 per month per household. She gets free ration; free medical treatment in the government hospital if she or her family members have illness or accident. Her husband is a fruit-seller on bicycle. His net income is Rs.15000 a month and recently he got a loan of Rs.10000 under the street vendors’ scheme that helped him buy a cooler to the house. She has put both her sons in a social welfare residential school. She is also not bothered about income tax though her family income exceeds the taxable income. She has Aadhar card and felt needless to have PAN card! She is least bothered about inflation.

In a chat with her, I and my wife realized that most house cleaners are in the same boat as her and they only have to pay rent. Some of them are also expecting to move to their own two-bedroom flat promised by the government. I went to a village on the way to a temple in Sangareddy district. That was a shandy day. Hence most villagers are in shandy either as buyers or sellers. I got down from the car, a little uncared for the anger of my wife. She knows that when I get down on such errand, I would take at least thirty to forty-five minutes to be back.

I enquired from around twenty persons regarding the price-rise. They mentioned only two things: one, Fuel price and two, Oil price. No others mattered to them. At least one person in every house has a motorcycle. Every family has a piece of land either owned or leased. They are bothered about the wages for the farm labour. They sky-rocketed. They are planning to go for farm machinery either in groups or go for hiring it to reduce farming costs. They are bothered more about increasing unrest in villages due to family feuds.

Inflation therefore has not figured much in the conversation. Rise in wages is an issue but related to inflation. Not that the rising inflation indices – consumer price indices crossing the RBI headline boundaries – is not a worry. The fact is that there are several factors that do not get into inflation accounting. The rents in urban areas are on the rise despite a boom in real estate and housing and cheap housing loans.

If interest rates rise, the cause will not be so much the inflation as the non-performing loans in the retail sector, protracted corporate loan recoveries after severe haircuts, under the most permissive route of Indian Bankruptcy Code proceedings.

Union government has a responsibility to look at the fuel prices beyond the revenues that are earned out of them. Most of the states have genuine concerns over the cess and it is time to be transparent and remove all the cess as the purpose for which cess is levied and spent are never coordinated. For example, look at the similar rise in fuel prices globally in 2014 and 2015 and the domestic prices. Can we get back to the comparable barrel prices and retail prices of fuel and gas?

Once the interest rates rise, the scope for real interest rates to pare up and comfort the savers exists and the hapless senior citizens will have a sigh of relief. Real interest rates are currently negative and hopefully the June monetary policy of the RBI will bend the hydra.

*Author is an economist and risk management specialist and the views are his own.

https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/blogs/fincorp/inflation-the-hydra/

 

 

Thursday, April 21, 2022

 Cumbersome Guarantees and Insurances for MSEs Need Redress

This Blog was published in the Times of India ( see the link below)

Micro, Small, and Medium Enterprises (MSMEs) are extolled as the engines of employment, growth, and key to the supply chain management of medium and large corporate enterprises, leading exporters, manufacture over 6000 products. They have been redefined during the first Covid-19 disruptions to the economy in terms of investment and turnover, replacing the earlier definition restricted to investment in plants and machinery. This sector is next to agriculture which employs the largest number of persons. 98% of enterprises are micro, mostly owned by proprietors or partners. Even partnerships are to a large extent family partners.

Access to credit for the sector is the Achilles Heel. To provide easy and better access the GoI and SIDBI have set up Credit Guarantee Trust for Micro and Small Enterprises in 2000 (CGTMSE). Even during the pandemic, GoI introduced Emergency Credit Linked Guarantee Scheme under Atma Nirbhar Bharat Abhiyan with CGTMSE holding the baby.

But did the sector gain much from the insurances and guarantees in their existing shape? This needs a probe.

Insurance:

When the small-scale industries of Yester decades used to take out insurance cover for the plant and machinery against fire, riot, and risks, through the liability jointly owned by both the credit institution and the borrowing enterprise. After universal banking was ushered in, several banks took to Bank Assurance. A transparent joint insurance policy gave place to a policy that just lists the names of the borrowing MSME firms with the amount insured. The firms are ignorant of their liability under such policy and its renewal terms annually.

There is no evidence of any insurance claim of such bank insurance of enterprise machinery as a primary asset response. On the other hand, as several MSMEs noted that banks have over-booked insurance premium amount upfront with every loan sanction – whether term loan or working capital. Never did such insurance pay off for the MSE in trouble.

Both the MSMEs and the Banks have debated their mutual deficiencies in several media discussions, and they are plagued by mutual distrust.

While the redefinition helped many scale up their enterprises and move to exports quickly, there were lakhs that shut their doors during the pandemic. The impact of redefining has been such that a negative 1.8% MSE outstanding loan in FY20 has moved to 4.8% year-on-year by the third quarter as the existing.

Guarantees:

The 'strength' of a guarantee that allows credit to the enterprises without collateral or third party, is context-dependent: it depends on its nature, the legal environments that are relevant, current practices, and the context when the lender exercises his right. Yet, for twenty years, institutional credit to the sector leaves a gaping hole of Rs.279 trillion according to the International Financial Corporation (2015) study.

RBI mandated Banks to extend credit to micro-enterprises under CGTMSE up to Rs.10lakhs per enterprise. While the CGTMSE can extend guarantees to MSEs up to Rs.2crore, the covers range from 75 to 85 percent of the loans. During the last three years (2018-21), even retail loans and the service sector are being covered with guarantees while the extent of such guarantees is limited to 50% of retail loans. One hundred Member-Lending institutions (MLIs) that include 23 NBFCs are availing of the facility and yet several of them express serious reservations over such ailment.

Annual Report of CGTMSE for Fy2021 reveals that 47 percent of guarantees pertained to loan amounts of less than Rs.10lakhs (mandated by the RBI to extend without any collateral); 18% are in the range of loan amount of Rs.10lakhs-25lakhs; 14% are in the range of Rs.25lakhs-50lakhs; 12% are in the range of Rs.50lakhs-100lakhs, and 9% are in the range of Rs.100lakhs-200lakhs. Rs.45,851crore have been provided guarantee cover during the year 2020-21.

MLI concerns:

The guarantee portfolio increased after the retail, hybrid-collateral, and NBFCs joined, as these three constituted 49% of the guarantees extended during FY 21. It is the 1.18crore of the 6.3crore MSMEs that need a guarantee more than the rest. MLIs opine that the guarantee premium of 1-1.25 percent involved a lot of paperwork, follow-up for receiving the claim amount that too, after declaring the asset as NPA.

Banks have to prove that they have taken all the measures that include issuing legal notices, follow-up on recovery, provisioning for the loans, and proceeding against the borrowers under SARFAESI Act where the assets are partially guaranteed. These factors lead to a lack of trust by the CGTMSE both the MSEs and Banks.

The Way Forward

MSEs in manufacturing that forms an important component of sustainable supply chain management of Industry 4.0 need different forms of credit acceleration and insurance mechanism.

While the Banks should evaluate the credit risks of such enterprises on transparent parameters and extend credit to MSEs along with counseling, mentoring, and follow-up, the enterprises should digitize their operations and derive benefits from a large number of schemes recently floated by the Ministry of MSME, GoI.

Since fourteen states take 88 percent of MSE outstanding credit, and these MSEs reported less NPAs than their elder brothers in the corporate sector, each enterprise can be insured for various risks that include, fire, riot risks, natural calamities, the pandemic-like situations, plant and machinery, storage, other supply-chain disruptions, and cash flows on a graded scale. Once the enterprise pays the premium based on the risk it chooses to cover, and such risks are well-measured, insurance will ensure that the enterprise will be a going concern, and banks can extend the needed help duly assessing their risk cover as well. It is time for a change the guarantee is looked at and replaced it with Insurance, for which purpose, the GoI may appoint a High-powered Committee.

The policy should be transparent and discussed with the stakeholders in at least ten of the fourteen MSME-dominant states before introduction.


https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/blogs/fincorp/cumbersome-guarantees-and-insurances-for-mses-need-redress/