On Saturday, several weeks after his party got crushed in a local Delhi election, Modi chose a more incremental route with a wider deficit projection to boost growth in Asia’s third-biggest economy. He’s spending more on infrastructure to spur an investment cycle, buying time for longer-term moves on taxes and subsidies to make the country more competitive.
India’s financial health now hinges on Modi’s ability to kickstart projects, better target subsidies, increase asset sales and pass stalled legislation -- objectives that in the past have fallen short of plans. Since taking office he’s failed to win parliamentary approval for a bill to
increase foreign investment in insurance, raising doubts about how much he can accomplish.
Investor Reaction
Investors had mixed reactions, with the benchmark S&P BSE Sensex changing direction at least 12 times after Finance Minister Arun Jaitley concluded the almost 90-minute budget speech on Saturday while the bond and currency markets were shut. The equity index fell 0.1 percent as of 11:40 a.m. on Monday, paring Saturday’s 0.5 percent rise; the rupee was little changed at 61.8250 a dollar and the yield on the 10-year sovereign bond rose to 7.76 percent from 7.72 percent.The highlight was a fiscal deficit target of 3.9 percent of gross domestic product -- wider than the 3.6 percent he committed to earlier, while down from 4.1 percent the previous year. Other key steps included a corporate tax cut, more money for roads, bridges and power plants, and increased allocation for a program that guarantees rural jobs.
While the slide in oil prices since mid-2014 had given the government space to scrap diesel-price controls and increase tariffs on local natural gas, the administration in its budget didn’t follow up with bolder steps to wind down fertilizer, cooking gas and liquid petroleum gas subsidies.
The missed opportunity leaves the fiscal deficit vulnerable should oil rebound, after a tumble in crude in excess of 40 percent since June.
Less Sweet
“India is in a sweet spot currently, but what happens when that window closes?” Tushar Poddar, a Mumbai-based economist at Goldman Sachs Group Inc., wrote in a note on the budget.Also missing was any detailed timeline for pressing ahead with the enactment of a national sales tax -- “disappointing,” according to Deutsche Bank AG economists Taimur Baig and Kaushik Das.
Meantime, a record shift in funds to India’s 29 state governments also leaves less cash for Modi’s federal government. The combined federal and state government deficit is about 6 percent of GDP, about twice the average in Asia, according to Goldman estimates.
“The budget underscores our view that government finances are likely to remain a constraint on India’s sovereign credit profile,” Atsi Sheth, the senior vice president for sovereign risk at Moody’s Investors Service, said in an e-mail. “Fiscal consolidation appears difficult to achieve even by a government with a considerable parliamentary majority and during a period of accelerating economic growth.”
Economic Outlook
India’s economy is forecast to expand as much as 8.5 percent in the next fiscal year, the fastest pace among the world’s biggest emerging markets. The finance ministry has cautioned, however, that those figures are based on a revised method for calculating gross domestic product, and that the economy is still recovering after a slowdown in manufacturing in recent years.Despite the higher fiscal deficit target, Modi appears to have done enough to allow central bank Governor Raghuram Rajan to continue reducing the benchmark interest rate. Rajan had said he was looking for “high-quality fiscal consolidation” in addition to softer inflation before he lowers the rate again following an unscheduled reduction to 7.75 percent in January.
Central Bank
Jaitley said he’d make legal changes to set up a monetary policy committee and set a target for the central bank to keep inflation at less than 6 percent. Interest-rate swaps show investors expect about 75 basis points of rate cuts in India by the end of 2015, the steepest decrease after Turkey among 14 emerging markets tracked by HSBC Holdings Plc.“It’s very clear that there have been very limited populist measures announced and the focus is largely on the capital spending side,” said Upasna Bhardwaj, an economist at ING Vysya Bank Ltd. in Mumbai. “That bit is something which the RBI should focus on and that should continue the monetary policy easing cycle.”
Softer inflation and a lower current-account deficit provided the government room to slow down fiscal consolidation and step up public investment, Arvind Subramanian, the government’s chief economic adviser, told Bloomberg TV India.
“This does a very reasonable job of balancing a tight situation frankly,” he said of the budget. “Markets should view it as a job well-done rather than a breach.”
Implementation Woes
Still, investors have reason to be cautious. Opposition parties that control parliament’s upper house have vowed to block Modi’s executive orders to ease land purchases, boost foreign investment in insurance and allow commercial coal mining. That doesn’t bode well for approval of a national goods and services tax that Modi wants to implement in April 2016.While the 25 percent jump in expenditure on roads, bridges and ports may look good on paper, implementation is key. Actual infrastructure spending in the year through March is set to rise 3 percent, short of the 21 percent increase budgeted a year ago.
Divestment is another area where the government’s figures look optimistic. Even though asset sales this year reached only about half of the budgeted amount, Modi plans to more than double the take in the year starting April 1.
“They’ve packed the budget pretty tightly hoping nothing bad happens and they can reach their disinvestment target,” said Madan Sabnavis, chief economist at CARE Ratings in Mumbai. “They’re relying on that. They’ve taken a lot of chances.”
To reduce the subsidy bill, Modi is expanding the use of biometric cards and direct cash transfers to ensure benefits go to the 59 percent of Indians who live on less than $2 per day. Even so, the decline isn’t very significant given the fall in oil prices, said Jahangir Aziz, chief economist at JPMorgan Chase & Co. in Singapore.
“If oil goes back up, inflationary pressures go back up,” Aziz said. “Global conditions are weaker and easier than they were in 2014, and you’re skipping the opportunity.”
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