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Some plain speak on policy
By S. Swaminathan
The ``Report on Currency and Finance 1998-99'' unveiled by the
Reserve Bank of India on Thursday maintains the sturdy traditions
of independent counselling of the Government by a state-owned
central bank. Barring puritan theorists who revel in arcane
controversies about the autonomy of the RBI, analysts of the
interface between monetary and fiscal policy in India, over the
years, have almost uniformly been impressed by the mutual
vibrations between the monetary authority and the Government.
While in the pre-1991 period, the general tenor of the annual
reports on currency and finance was one of plaintive concern on
the part of the RBI, over the deterioration in fiscal discipline
of the Government, the RBI has in more recent years shifted gears
in favour of prevention of the Government from taking the central
bank for granted in the matter of ways and means advances. The
elimination of automatic monetisation of fiscal deficit through
the discontinuation of the practice of issuance of ad hoc
treasury bills was indeed a crucial reform put through during the
stewardship of the RBI by Dr. C. Rangarajan. That this step has
not resulted in any firm reversal of the trend for the gross
fiscal deficit to overshoot official estimates, year after year,
is but a confirmation that fiscal policy continues to be a
captive of the ``soft state'' where it relates to non-development
expenditure.
Structural blocks in fiscal correction
The Report on Currency and Finance 1998-99 brings some semantic
innovation to the debate on fiscal correction. The overall fiscal
deficit, according to the RBI, consists of two components - the
cyclical and the structural factors. While the first component
has a lot to do with the dynamics of the economy and with the
growth of the GDP, the latter broadly encompasses the relative
inflexibility of expenditure (administration, interest charges
and subsidies) and the stickiness in revenue generation, as
evidenced by the stagnation (or decline?) in tax revenue as a
percentage of the GDP.
All this is not a startling revelation. But what is instructive
in the new dissection of fiscal deficit is that the Government
cannot hope to solve the impasse on the fiscal front except
through the reduction of the public debt (thereby bringing down
the interest commitments) and the augmentation of tax revenue
through a determined course of taxation of the services sector
which now accounts for almost 48 per cent of the GDP.
The RBI has brought up the question of disinvestment not as a
far-fetched fiscal antidote to the snowballing of public debt but
as a strategic withdrawal of the Government from areas of
activity which do not constitute its core competencies. The
manner in which the RBI has posed this issue gives reasonable
grounds for optimism that a clear re-engineering of Government
for more effective action on infrastructural development and
larger public investments in education and health and for the
provision for basic amenities for the poor would become feasible.
But on the need for widening the tax base by bringing in
agriculture and the services sector, the inherited political
culture of undue solicitude for the farming community and sheer
cowardice vis-a-vis a strongly organised group of service-
providers (the truckers, for example) need to be overcome. It is
for the RBI to offer its sage counsel. Will the political
establishment take up the gauntlet?
The exchange rate for whose comfort?
The RBI has indeed done well to disabuse large sections of the
export community of the abject supposition that the role of the
RBI in management of the exchange rate for the rupee is that of
keeping the currency at as low a level in relation to the U.S.
dollar as would impart competitive strength to Indian exports
(through lower international prices). Far from saying that large
inflows of foreign capital could result in an appreciation of the
rupee, the RBI has pointed out that exchange intervention would
be necessary in such a contingency even though the inflationary
consequences of monetary expansion could hurt the competitiveness
of Indian exports. In the ultimate analysis, the strengthening of
the external sector would depend on export growth based on cost
competitiveness and international marketing strategy which
responds quickly to changing tastes and preferences in the global
markets.
The perspective on interest rate
With inflation rates hovering over 2.5 per cent (as measured by
the WPI), questions have been raised as to why the RBI has not
asserted itself in favour of a reduction in interest rates in the
system.
On the face of it, the position that the RBI has taken, namely
that in a regime of deregulated interest rates, it is for the
commercial banks to take the initiative in reducing their lending
rates, is unexceptionable. But the rider in the RBI postulation
is that most banks cannot afford to reduce their lending rates,
given their own structural rigidities (as evidenced by the wide
margins they need to keep themselves in a state of profitability)
apart from deposit rates which cannot be brought down without the
risk of a decline in their rate of growth. But in the Report on
Currency and Finance now released, the RBI appears to be
seriously concerned with what might be called, ``a secular
stagnation'' in bank deposits. Nor is this all.
The RBI report speaks of a decline in the relative importance of
the banking sector in resource mobilisation for the commercial
community. For one thing, the corporate sector seems to be
weaning itself away from reliance on high-cost bank credit and
moving towards equity finance, both domestic and external. For
another, the phenomenon of non-performing assets (NPAs) largely
related to mandated lending to the priority sector, seems to be
compelling banks to adopt ``prudent'' (or rather prohibitive)
standards in new project appraisals. This in addition to the fear
psychosis created by the ``vigilance system'', is perhaps
operating against substantial new lending by the banks. All this
would explain why banks are becoming increasingly redundant, at
any rate, for large and medium-sized corporates. On what could be
the way out of structural debilities in the banking system, there
is alas no new wisdom in the RBI report!
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