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01
February 2019
Budget
(The Total Investment & Insurance Solutions)
India’s government pledged
750 billion rupees ($10.56 billion) to support poor farmers and reduced the tax
burden for the middle class on Friday, as it looked to rally support from
voters with the final budget before a general election.
Heading
into polls that must be held by May, Prime Minister Narendra Modi is facing
discontent over depressed farm incomes and doubts over whether his policies are
creating enough jobs.
And
with opinion polls suggesting that the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)
could lose its parliamentary majority, the government delivered a budget to
shore up support in the countryside, where two-thirds of Indians live, and
among the urban, salary-earning middle class.
The
interim budget for 2019/2020 offered direct cash support of 6,000 rupees to 120
million poor farmers and allocated more funds for a rural jobs guarantee scheme
and rural development, like building roads and homes.
Vying
with an opposition that has also trumpeted budget-straining populist measures
to support from poorer voters, the government said it would launch a pension
scheme for workers in the unorganised sector, which employs some 420 million
people.
The
budget proposals also reduced the burden for the lower middle class, by
exempting people earning up to 500,000 rupees from income tax from an earlier
cap of 250,000 rupees.
Still,
the measures announced on Friday were aimed at putting money into pockets
quickly.
“This
is not just an interim budget, this is a vehicle for the developmental
transformation of the nation,” Acting Finance Minister Piyush Goyal told the lower
house of parliament, as BJP lawmakers thumped their desks and chanted “Modi,
Modi”.
“India
is solidly back on track and marching towards growth and prosperity,” said
Goyal, who delivered the budget in place of Finance Minister Arun Jaitley, who
was in the United States for medical treatment.
India
was expected to expand 7.2 percent this fiscal year, Goyal said, keeping its
slot as one of the world’s fastest growing major economies.
But
a report in the Business Standard daily the previous day belied the government
bullishness over the economy. It said that the government has been withholding
an official survey that showed India’s unemployment rate at its highest in
decades.
Garima
Kapoor, an economist at Elara Capital investment bank in Mumbai, said the budget
favoured farmers, older voters, workers in the unorganised sector, small and
medium sized businesses and middle class families.
“The
budget is clearly farm-focused, with the elections in mind,” Kapoor said.
The
interim budget for 2019/20 allocated 600 billion rupees for a rural jobs
programme and 190 billion for building of roads in the countryside.
The
big giveaways resulted in fiscal slippage, for a government that has been
seeking to drag down its deficit.
The
budget would put the fiscal deficit for the year ending on March 31 at 3.4
percent of gross domestic product (GDP), slightly higher than the targeted 3.3
percent.
Goyal
set a deficit target of 3.4 percent for 2019/20, instead of the earlier target
of 3.1 percent, but he went onto project the deficit would come down to 3
percent in both of the following two years.
“Overall,
the government presented an expansionary budget and prioritised populism over
fiscal prudence,” analysts at investment bank Nomura said in a note, calling it
an election budget.
India’s
fiscal slippage also drew a warning from credit rating agency Moody’s Investors
Service.
“Taken
together, it doesn’t really bode well for their medium-term fiscal
consolidation targets,” said Gene Fang, associate managing director at Moody’s
sovereign risk group. “From that perspective we would say, on balance, it’s
credit negative.”
But
Fang said the budget announcements did not change the rating agency’s stance on
India. Moody’s rates India at “Baa2” with a “stable” outlook.
Analysts
were skeptical about the government’s ability to even meet its upwardly revised
fiscal deficit targets for the ongoing and upcoming fiscal year, noting that
the government’s revenue projections, especially from the goods and services
tax (GST) seem optimistic.
“Their
revenue estimates seem to be optimistic, particularly on the GST front, which
the government is budgeting at about 18 percent growth rate,” said Shashank
Mendiratta an economist with IBM in New Delhi, adding that forecast looked “very
aggressive.”
India’s
bond yields spiked amid worries over the fiscal slippage and the government’s
borrowing plans. The benchmark 10-year bond yield rose 14 basis points to 7.62
percent, while the rupee traded at 71.26 against the U.S. dollar, about 17 paisa
weaker than its close on Thursday.
The
country’s stock markets gained, however, on expectations that the budget would
boost consumption. The broader NSE index closed up 0.6 percent at 10893.65.The
Total Investment & Insurance Solutions
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