Union Budget 2021 to Set Course for Economic Pick Up after COVID
Indian economy is now expected to see a faster
turnaround given the impending rollout of vaccine, increased mobility and less
disruptions to business operations as the economy opens up but a lot will also
depend on the upcoming Budget
for 2021-22 to steer its course. India, which had in 2019 overtaken the UK to
become the fifth-largest economy in the world, was knocked off course somewhat
due to the carnage that the pandemic and the ensuing strict lockdown unleashed
-- businesses were shut, consumption slumped, investments took a hit and jobs
were lost.
The combined effect being that the
economy got relegated to the sixth spot in 2020.
The Budget for the next fiscal
starting April 2021 that Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman will present a month from now will
be the starting point for picking up the pieces after the economic destruction.
The government's spending plans
particularly on infrastructure and social sectors as well as relief to sections
hit by the pandemic and lockdown will dictate the pace of recovery, analysts
said.
India's economy had been losing
momentum even ahead of the shock delivered by the COVID-19 crisis. The rate of
GDP growth sank to a more than ten-year low of 4.2 per cent in 2019, down from
6.1 per cent the previous year.
The pandemic bought a human and an
economic catastrophe for India, with nearly 1.5 lakh deaths. Though the deaths
per million are significantly lower than in Europe and the US, the economic
impact had been much more severe.
GDP in April-June was 23.9 per cent
below its 2019 level, indicating that nearly a quarter of the country's
economic activity was wiped out by the drying up of global demand and the
collapse of domestic demand that accompanied the series of strict national
lockdowns.
And a 7.5 per cent decline in GDP in
the following quarter pushed Asia's third-largest economy into an unprecedented
recession.
As restrictions were gradually
lifted, many parts of the economy were able to spring back into action although
output remains well below the pre-pandemic levels.
While agriculture with bountiful
harvest has been a driver of India's economic recovery, the government's
stimulus spending in response to the COVID-19 crisis has been significantly
more restrained than most other large economies.
Sitharaman announced a total stimulus package
of Rs 29.87 lakh crore, or 15 per cent of GDP. That equals
the total spending envisaged in the government's budget for the year to March.
But the actual fiscal cost has been estimated at around 1.3 per cent of GDP,
including 0.7 per cent for the incentive programme
whose expense is spread over five years.
Most saw this spending as grossly
inadequate.
The limited cash spending was on
account of the government not generating enough revenue to even pay states for
their share of GST. Revenue collections were hurt by the lockdown.
Yet, high-frequency indicators,
including exports, automobile sales, energy consumption and manufacturing
output have shown an uptick, which some have seen as an indication of a 'V'
shaped recovery.
Rating agencies and analysts have
raised their expectations of GDP growth in fiscal to March 2021 with RBI
predicting a small positive growth in the January-March quarter.
According to Dun & Bradstreet,
only 30 per cent of active businesses in India were still disrupted at the end
of November 2020 compared to 95 per cent in April 2020 when the nationwide
lockdown was imposed.
"Continued government support
will be crucial to sustain and propel growth momentum - which has picked
up," said Arun Singh, Global Chief Economist, Dun & Bradstreet. "During the first six months of
the fiscal year (April to October 2020), government expenditure was 48.6 per
cent of its budgeted estimate. We expect the remaining budgeted expenditure to
be spend with other off-budget spending."
This along with the execution of
various policy initiatives will propel growth momentum in H2 FY21.
However, credit disbursement to the
industry has not picked up yet and this remains a cause of concern.
"This does not bode well for
the industry at a time when domestic demand has not yet stabilised
and external demand remains weak," he said.
India Ratings and Research (Ind-Ra)
said policymaking is facing the twin challenges in collating reliable
high-frequency data and interpreting the same as the impact of the COVID-19
pandemic is proving to be an unprecedented disaster.
An appropriate understanding based
on reliable data is critical to ensure effective policy intervention, it said,
adding a low base in current fiscal will make even a moderate improvement in
the first couple of quarters of next financial year as decent year-on-year
growth.
"The projected GDP growth does
indicate that the worst is over, but it still does not indicate whether the
economy has recovered the lost ground and/ or surpassed it," it said,
adding the economy will be able to just recover the lost ground in FY22 and
surpass the FY20 GDP level in a meaningful way only in FY23.