The recent months, especially from May 2013, have
seen a rollercoaster ride of Indian economy. With the sharp reduction of GDP
rate to below 5 percent, almost by 50 percent from the near double digit growth,
and the free fall of the Indian Rupee by as much as 20 percent to Rs 68 to a
Dollar, compared to a very stable foreign exchange regime for more than three
years, experts have begun to suspect the tenability of the Indian economy as a
sustainable global economic power. The various measures by the Indian
Government and the Reserve Bank of India to control inflation, seemingly at the
cost of growth, read liquidity of the banking system, have been ineffective in
arresting the slide of the Rupee. With the movement of foreign institutional
investors (FII) funds away from India, the stock markets also began
experiencing decline and volatility. When economic behavior gets influenced by
testy times, the common man and retail investor is distressed.
Macroeconomic behavior is governed by an as
yet unexplained combination of three factors, namely, internal fundamentals of
economy, linkages with external global economy and sentiment of national
governance. On May 22, US Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke first talked
about tapering the USD 85 billion worth of bond buying every month (called Quantitative
Easing, or QE). This announcement pushed global markets, especially the
emerging ones, into a tailspin, leading to a depreciation of most currencies vis-à-vis
the US Dollar. India was probably more sharply impacted than others. Internally, the growth rates of various
economic segments declined to recent historical lows while the current account
deficit (CAD) moved up to a record high of USD 88 billion and the trade deficit
also peaked to USD 92 billion. In terms of governance, the Reserve Bank and the
Finance Ministry were perceived to be in dissonance. That said, the unpredictability of economic
behavior is illustrated by the more recent positive trends.
Green shoots
After the new Reserve Bank Governor, Dr
Raghuram Rajan, took charge on September 4, 2013 there has been a significant
improvement in the economic sentiment, accompanied by improvements in certain
internal economic fundamentals and assurances of global macroeconomic stability.
Dr Rajan was seen to be less hawkish in approach towards a tighter liquidity
regime, principally. US Fed also helped matters by discounting any immediate
possibility of tapering the QE. Simultaneously, India began to post healthier
economic results with CAD down to USD 60 billion and trade deficit down to USD
80 billion. Foreign investments began to perk up to USD 13 billion while the
banks started bringing in dollars to an expected level of USD 20 billion under
the FCNR-B route. A bountiful monsoon began
pointing to bumper agricultural output in the coming months. As a result, stock
market index, SENSEX, rallied to the record high of 21,207 points on November 1
while the Rupee recovered to hover around Rs 62 to US Dollar.
The Finance Minister says that green shoots
are here and there, everywhere. He states that the core industrial sector grew
8 percent in September with continued growth momentum, and stalled industrial
and infrastructural projects worth several billion dollars are being unlocked
to progress. He says also that the call money rates have been going down as a
result of the rollback of tight liquidity measures. The Reserve Bank Governor
also believes that things will only get better in India. He places his optimism
on increased agricultural production, acceleration of projects and enhanced
exports. It is remarkable that over a period of just six months, the sentiment
on the Indian economy should worsen first and improve so dramatically. The developments
point to the earlier thesis of the blog post that an unexplained mix of
internal economic, external global and national governance factors influence
the macroeconomic behavior. There is a
need to resolve the inter se influence proportion of the three factors and
enabling a more sustainable macroeconomic framework that enables a stable
investment and growth climate for industries and investors, retail and institutional.
Rajan’s theory
Dr Rajan, in a recent interview to Mint,
has stated that India needs two transformations; one of more investment and less
consumption, at least of certain things and the second of more savings,
especially financial savings. The interview which has been preoccupied with the
banking sector issues threw no further light on the way Rajan would detail out
the two transformations. The author believes that the elemental proposition by
Dr Rajan would need to be expanded further, in a perspective of the three
factors discussed earlier. An economy would be robust when the internal
fundamentals are strong and sustainble (weight, 60 percent), external linkages
are pro-market and positive (weight, 20 percent) and the governance is fair and
proactive (weight, 20 percent). The internal fundamentals and external linkages
are self-supporting in the sense that external funds would flow into stronger
than weaker economies. The governance of a nation sets a fair policy and
execution framework that distribute pains and gains of growth equitably.
The two transformations outlined by Rajan are
also interlocked. More investments are
supported by more financial savings while lower consumption provides for more
productive uses of physical and financial assets. Speculative use of capital,
be it in commodities or stocks, and speculative investments into assets, be it
real estate or gold, lead to asset bubbles which eventually explode causing
much damage to the economy. Similarly, excessive resort to borrowings without
accountability to efficient use of funds and excessive lending to businesses or
individuals without control over viability result in non-performing assets
(NPAs), which is one of the major problems of the Indian economy today. That NPAs
are at 10 percent of the total bank borrowings or that the prices of real
estate exponentially jump up in a matter of two or three years indicate that
the Rupee is being less efficiently used than ever. The governments, central and state, and the
banks need to find a way of better capital management by the users, including
recapitalization of the banks.
Un-stalling projects
Both the Reserve Bank and the Finance
Ministry are aligned on the objective of moving forward the stalled projects. Unfinished
projects, especially those in power, transport and other infrastructure
sectors, not only lock up huge doses of capital but also lead to escalation in
costs besides stalling core and peripheral industrial activity. The time span
for an infrastructure project in India is upwards of 10 years, and in the case
of some power and steel projects, is upwards of 20 years which is simply
unacceptable. While the Government has set up a project management group to
monitor large projects, it is important to de-risk the projects at the
conceptualization stage itself. Timely execution of projects strengthens India’s
internal economic fundamentals, which is one of the most important aspects of
providing macroeconomic stability. In several cases, there tend to be only a
few bottleneck areas that need to be resolved such as access to feedstock,
provision of land or economic tariff that can be resolved by inter-ministerial
groups.
The issue of projects in commercialization
which have turned non-performing is more challenging. Despite all the
disclosures that exist for public limited companies, the real causes of sickness
are never understood and are rarely addressed by managements and lenders or
investors squarely. While the Finance Minister has held that there are no sick
promoters but only sick companies the issue may have to be restated as that there
are neither sick promoters nor sick companies but only sick managements. The ability
of the managements to stand up to their owners, be they private promoters or the
ministries, in pursuance of orderly management of businesses is a key factor. Equally
important would be the ability of the managements to benchmark their
performance against contemporary management principles. The abundance of penny
stocks in the Indian stock markets and the 20 to 30 percent decline in the
benchmark indices of small and medium cap stocks is reflective of an endemic deficiency
in management in Indian industry and business.
Enabling predictability
Clearly, there is so much development and
growth potential in the Indian economy, the mere exploitation of which would
help strengthen the fundamentals of the Indian economy. Reinforcement of
domestic markets and industry with infrastructural support would enable both
microeconomic and macroeconomic stability. Efficient use of capital on the back
of generation of financial savings would help the country rein in deficit. The twin
transformations suggested by the Governor of the Reserve Bank and the growth of
green shoots anticipated by the Union Finance Minister would be ushered in only
with an integrated economic policy that is executed in synchrony by the Reserve
Bank of India and the Ministry of Finance. The overall management efficiency in the country’s
institutions and entities needs to be substantially upgraded, including making
key managerial personnel accountable to the Boards and making the Boards
themselves independent and erudite under the provisions of the new Companies
Act 2013.
Posted by Dr CB Rao on November 3, 2013
1 comment:
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