US$ 5 Trillion Economy–An idea greater than the target

    19-Mar-2021
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Rajiv Mishra , Economic Advisor , Department of Economic Affairs
Presented at the seemingly tail end of the pandemic and at the beginning of the inoculation drive, Budget 2021-22 has lived up to the expectation of being a growth budget. Not only does it have the growth levers to take forward the economy to its pre-pandemic growth path but the clarity as well on the distribution of these levers between the public and private sector.
It further has the sense to build capacity now to sustain high growth later along with the sensitivity of being an inclusive growth strategy. In addition, the budget has bold reforms to increase the growth potential of the economy. Is the budget a harbinger for the economy to grow to US$ 5 trillion by 2025 ?
India can take two different paths to becoming a US$ 5 trillion-economy by the target date. One is the accounting way often cited by those who attempt to discredit the target. Making it as mechanical as it could get the target is shown to be achievable by projecting a high growth of nominal GDP, comprising a large inflationary component, and a strong currency. Intuitively this can happen when a sustained deluge of capital inflows partly appreciates the INR and partly augments the forex reserves.
Increase in reserves injects liquidity that in the absence of sterilization fuels inflation in the economy. The final outcome includes bloated reserves, an over-valued currency, high inflation and most disconcertingly low growth and employment. It is doubtful whether even this weak outcome can endure as inflation-targeting central bank stamps out high inflation and capital flows are wary of high inflation-low growth economies.
The other path to arriving at the target is the real way that the Budget 2021-22 elaborates under the pillar of Physical and Financial Capital and Infrastructure. A strong infrastructure push driven by the public sector increases the investment rate in the economy. The multiplier then comes into play raising income and consumption levels. Higher consumption in turn induces private investment through the investment accelerator.
The induced private investment further amplifies the income and consumption levels as the multiplier once again comes into play. The budget thus pushes a capex stimulus that brings in a multiplier-accelerator interface to set in motion an investment-income-consumption spiral in the economy. This real way increases the growth of real GDP, creates job opportunities and keeps inflation low and stable to raise the standard of living.
It also accommodates an appreciated currency by blunting its adverse impact on export competitiveness through productivity gains. The pillars of Reinvigorating Human Capital and Innovation and R&D in the budget include strategies to increase total factor productivity in the economy.
In the next 2-3 years high real GDP growth rates will be a rarity in most of the economies of the world as they slowly recover from the impact of the pandemic. IMF also, in its January, 2021 update of the World Economic Outlook, has only marginally raised the projected growth of world output in 2021 and beyond.
With world incomes growing slowly the export stimulus to India’s GDP growth will take some time to go into overdrive. Clearly the domestic market holds the key to India’s growth in the next few years with enhanced domestic manufacturing gradually meeting the demand for goods and services otherwise imported. In this regard the Productivity Linked Incentive Scheme (PLIS) will herald a new chapter of Make in India to boost domestic production. As domestic manufacturing moves up the global technology frontiers, productivity gains will ensure that output is competitive enough to penetrate world markets.
At 6.8 per cent of GDP, the budgeted fiscal deficit will fund a large capital outlay to take the economy forward, the real way. A moderate fiscal consolidation plan allowing the glide path of fiscal deficit to reach 4.5 per cent in 2026 portends large capex budget in the next few years as well. High real GDP growth rates are on the anvil to quickly make the economy a US$ 5 trillion one. There could be a slippage of a year or two in reaching the target.
However, as long as growth happens the real way, a US$ 5 trillion-economy should be seen as an idea to pursue for all-round development of the country and not a numbered target monitored in an accounting way.


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