The fiscal policy assumes centre stage in policy deliberations as the continuous
fiscal imbalances and rising levels of public debt pose risks to the prospects
for macroeconomic stability, and accelerating and sustaining growth. Appropriate
and timely fiscal policy measures can promote growth by setting efficient and
effective use of scarce resources and by creating the right incentive signals.
The well designed fiscal strategy would help to move an economy like India towards
a higher growth path without high inflation or inter-generational transfers of
the burden of public debt. India’s democratic system and federal structure
present challenges to fiscal policy that are also common across all federal
democracies and are well recognised in theoretical terms. The fiscal experts in
India and outside contributed from time to time in revealing the strengths and
weaknesses of the India’s fiscal policy and suggested future course of action.
Set against the above backdrop, the book under review, which is a selection of
10 papers presented in a conference jointly organised by the International Monetary
Fund and the National Institute of Public Finance and Policy highlights various
aspects of India’s fiscal policy, its sustainability and its impact on the
other sectors of the economy and draws lessons and priorities taking into account
the international experiences. The book examines how India’s fiscal
situation evolved over the years, the role played by reforms, Central-State fiscal
relations, risks of high public debt and the critical areas for reforms. It explores
ways of meeting challenges including reduction of public debt and adoption of
sound fiscal policies which assumes critical role in realising the economic ambitions.
Interestingly, India’s economy has grown rapidly since the beginning of
the 1990s despite a large and growing fiscal imbalances and debt levels and it
would be of great interest to examine whether India has found a way to reconcile
sustained expansionary fiscal policies with relative macroeconomic stability.
The analysis indicates that the India’s fiscal policy requires immediate
attention in order to have sound and sustainable fiscal situation in the long
run as high growth and low interest rate may not be able to take care of the problem
of long term debt sustainability nor risks of a crisis in the short and medium
term. The focus on the budget deficit alone may be misleading as the problem of
off-budget and contingent liabilities is serious and needs to be addressed. Keeping
in view the growth implications in long run, there is a need to examine public
consumption, investment, taxation and deficits in a framework that recognises
that these are all endogenously determined, along with the growth rate.
As the fiscal imbalances continue to exist and debt level is rising, the reforms
mainly aimed to enhance government revenues are critical. While there is ample
room for improving the structure of indirect taxes, in particular, improved tax
administration and enforcement remains one of the most critical areas for reform.
Tax reform is an essential step towards increasing government revenue, as well
as reducing microeconomic distortions. On the expenditure side, the quality of
expenditure at both Centre and State level has deteriorated, and the same needs
to be addressed on priority basis. Institutional reforms such as improvements
in the intergovernmental transfer system, borrowing mechanisms for State governments,
and budgeting practices and norms are all technically possible and may well be
politically feasible. The opening chapter, ‘Fiscal Developments
and Outlook in India’, by Indira Rajaraman focuses on the factors underlying
the continued weak fiscal position during the previous one and half decades as
well as the prospects of recent fiscal reforms. The author identifies that the
impact of trade liberalisation measures and their associated loss of tariff revenue
remained the major factor underlying the weakened fiscal position since the early
1990s. Unlike other countries which undertook tariff rate reductions, India did
not compensate the loss of revenue by a commensurate increase in domestic taxes.
The author is of the view that buoyant growth in India is essential for fiscal
reforms to be possible and this requires that the kinds of physical and social
infrastructure should go up in both quality and quantity. The author finds two
strands to the fiscal imbalance path in India. First, high interest rates on public
debt which started rising sharply in the 1980s and details the political economy
pressure that fuelled this rise. Second, non-interest fiscal indicators which
worsened sharply in 1998 with the real wage hike introduced that year for government
employees and pensioners raising the consolidated salary bill substantially. An
econometric exercise investigates whether this event was endogenous to the political
economy. The regression equations show an election year response, which has become
more marked in the last 30 years. The author recognises the importance of two
major reforms, i.e., the reforms of the interest rates guaranteed under
the NSSF and passage of the Fiscal Responsibility Legislation. The issues
relating to the scope, nature and conduct of fiscal policy, particularly in the
context of maintaining macroeconomic stability and enhancing growth, assume importance.
The paper, ‘India: Macroeconomic Implications of the Fiscal Imbalances’,
by Kalpana Kochhar examines both the evolutions of fiscal imbalances and key developments
in major macroeconomic variables in order to assess the macroeconomic impact of
the growing fiscal imbalances. Keeping in view the persistent fiscal imbalance
and indebtedness, arguably, the fiscal situation is the single biggest threat
to macroeconomic stability. The rising fiscal imbalances and debt reflects a weakening
in revenue mobilisation, persistent deficit at Centre and State level and narrowing
of the gap between real interest rate and growth rate. The author interestingly
finds that on account of high fiscal imbalance there were hidden costs on the
economy in terms of the foregone potential for even higher economic growth than
that has recently been experienced. The large and increasing fiscal deficit led
to a crowding out of productive public expenditure and constrained the scope for
further structural reforms and liberalisation and rooms for macroeconomic policy
manoeuvre – adversely impacting the growth prospects. In order to avoid
the crisis, the author feels that there is strong need of revenue mobilisation
efforts and reorientation of expenditure away from subsidies and towards physical
and social infrastructure projects. India’s medium term economic prospects,
among others depend critically on progress with the closely intertwined tasks
of fiscal consolidation and structural reforms. The rising level of fiscal imbalances
and resultant high level of debt may create a vicious circle inducing a fall in
the ratio of private to total credit, rising inflation and falling economic growth.
In this regard, William Easterly in his paper, ‘The Widening Gyre: The Dynamics
of Rising Public Debt and Falling Growth’, examines that fiscal policy variables
affect growth and finds suggestive evidence, in line with the previous literature,
that fiscal policy variables – or variables affected by the fiscal policy
such as budget deficit, inflation and the share of private in total credit do
affect growth. Sustainability of public debt has emerged as an important
issue in public policy discussions and academic debates among policy makers, economists,
credit rating agencies and multi-lateral institutions. It has been widely recognised
that unsustainable debt often tends to impact on Governments’ ability to
undertake developmental activities and also may crowd out the private investment.
Richard Hemming and Nouriel Roubini in their paper, ‘A Balance Sheet Crisis
in India?’, use a balance sheet approach to assess India’s
vulnerability to a crisis as a result of its high fiscal imbalances. The authors
explore the question of the financeability of a country debt position, the vulnerabilities
associated with the way in which India’s public debt is financed and the
experience from other emerging market economies which face high debt ratios in
recent years. The authors find that India’s debt is clearly financeable
over the short term, reflecting such important strengths as modest rollover/liquidity
risk, lack of currency mismatches and limited liability dollarisation, small current
account imbalances and low external debt, financial repression and capital controls.
In principle, these are insulating factors to the large deficit and high share
of debt to GDP. The paper concludes that a failure to tackle fiscal consolidation
in the near term will only increase India’s vulnerability in the future.
Peter
S. Heller in his paper, ‘India: Today’s Fiscal Policy Imperatives
Seen in the Context of Long-Term Challenges and Risks’, provides an alternative
perspective on why India needs to move soon to address the fiscal imbalances.
A continuation of current fiscal policies, the level of fiscal deficits and character
of government expenditure, would put India on an unsustainable course in terms
of the constraints that it would impose, in the future, on the role that public
sector would be able to play in effectively addressing these longer term challenges.
The author emphasises on undertaking the appropriate reforms in order to placing
fiscal house in order today so that India have sufficient fiscal leeway in the
future to address the long term fiscal challenges including those of demographic
developments in the population at large, the demographics of civil service and
military pensions, the imperatives of social insurance reforms and urbanization
patterns and the effects of the globalization. The paper states that India now
has a fiscal policy framework that neither offers that futures fiscal leeway,
nor provides an appropriate expenditure programme that is responsive to the obvious
and immediate needs of the economy of the coming decades. Current fiscal policy
is recognised by most analyses as unsustainable. An important policy message may
be drawn from the paper is that India should be cautious about how it formulates
new policy commitments so as to avoid excessive preemption of future budgetary
resources and thereby avoiding the mistakes of industrial economies.
In order to enhance the revenue performance, the strategies focusing on rationalisation
of tax rates, better tax compliance, improved efficiency in tax administration
and review of tax exemptions/incentives would be helpful. Over the last
decade, income tax rate at the Central Government level has undoubtedly been made
internationally comparable, central excise duties have been converted to a truncated
VAT (CENVAT) up to the manufacturing stage and custom tariffs on imports
have been sequentially scaled back to approach comparable international level.
The various exemptions, however, have affected the quality of tax administration
and revenue performance. For a couple of decades, services sector has grown rapidly
and now represent more than half of the GDP. In view of its increasing role in
GDP, the taxation of service sector assumes importance. It is imperative to introduce
comprehensive taxation of services at the Central level and the selected services
should also be seriously considered for appropriate assignment for taxation to
the States and local bodies. On taxation of services, India can draw important
lessons from Brazil, which was one of the first countries to introduce a comprehensive
Value added tax (VAT) on both goods and services in the mid-1960s. Parthasarathi
Shome in his paper ‘India: Resource Mobilization through Taxation’
finds that though there have been significant changes in the tax structures in
the 1990s, however, the insufficiency in streamlining the wide prevalent incentives
and exemptions has adversely affected the full potential of revenue productivity
in both individual and corporate income tax. It was recognised that competitive
sales tax reductions by States aimed at attracting investments had led to revenue
losses without commensurate gains. The author emphasises on the reforms on both
tax policies and revenue administrations. In their paper, ‘Subsidies
and Salaries: Issues in the Restructuring of Government Expenditure in India’,
Stephen Howes and Rinku Murgai find that while there are ways to reduce subsidies
through a combination of efficiency improvements and tough decisions, however,
attempts so far to reduce subsidies have met with little success. The paper examines
the agricultural power subsidy as a case study and situates India’s growing
subsidy bill within the context of a trend towards agricultural protectionism.
There is no assured path forward and sustained reduction in the expenses towards
subsidy will require institutional experimentation. The authors suggest that there
is potential of decline of salary bill of Government sector (Centre and State
Governments) by 2 per cent of GDP over the next decades – via both
wage and hiring restraint without sacrificing expenditure quality. There is also
a need to address the growing pension’s outlays. The usual emphasis on expenditure
restructuring through subsidy reduction is complemented in the paper by an equal
emphasis on salary bill reduction. The authors are of the view that a reduction
in the salary bill is not likely to come about by active downsizing but by a combination
of hiring and wage restraint. With regard to the power sector, the authors stress
the importance of privatization as perhaps the only way to bring commercial discipline
into the rural segment of the power sector, however, at the same time acknowledge
the associated risks and difficulties. Ricardo Hausmann and Catriona
Purfield in their paper, ‘The Challenges of Fiscal Adjustment in a Democracy:
The Case of India’, provide thought provoking views and find that
India’s tendency to run large deficit and accumulate debt has deep institutional
roots embedded in its highly decentralized democratic system. The paper mainly
studies three aspects of fiscal consolidation. First, it accounts for the lack
of symptoms of an impending crisis by pointing to some aspects. However, the lack
of symptoms is double-edged sword: it makes crisis less likely for any level of
debt, but society is less responsive to fiscal imbalances, thus making the eventual
problems much larger. Second, it analyses possible implications of the fiscal
responsibility legislation on India’s imbalances. Third, it studies India’s
federal system and the role of States in the fiscal adjustment effort. The authors
find that India’s ability to tolerate high deficit and debt without encountering
the types of crises experienced by many other emerging economies is a mixed blessing.
It reflects the comparatively large and closed nature of its economy as well as
its deep domestic capital market and large, albeit captive, pool of domestic
savings. The last has allowed the Government to finance deficits with long term
fixed rate debt instruments. The authors recognise the recent institutional
reforms based on legal backing. The authors suggest a State level fiscal
consolidation plan including those of imposition of borrowing ceiling on States
to constrain their deficits and reforms to the system of intergovernmental transfers
to give a more stable and reliable source of revenue. In a federal set
up, stable and reliable sources of flow of funds helps in formulating the future
strategies at sub national levels governments. For sound fiscal management, however,
the efforts should be undertaken by both the Central and State Governments. The
federal budgetary systems bring especially difficult challenges. For example,
the Argentina made significant economic progress on a wide range of issues in
the 1990s. However, the complicated financial relations between the federal Government
and provinces crucially undermined attempts at fiscal control as the provinces
had little incentives to control their spending. Eduardo Refineppi Guardia and
Daniel Sonder in their paper, ‘Fiscal Adjustment and Federalism in Brazil’,
draws the lessons from the another large federal Brazil. The
authors emphasise that during the time of fiscal adjustment the fiscal-federal
system needs to be respected as an integral element of policy design, though the
system itself may need to be adapted if situation requires to maintain macroeconomic
stability and to achieve the objectives of fiscal adjustment. The authors emphasise
on major elements of a fiscal-federal system and the ways in which these were
adapted in the context of Brazil’ fiscal adjustment experience during the
late 1990s. Among others, these include assignment of revenue and expenditure
responsibilities between the Centre and the States and the rules determining the
control of sub-national debt. The paper assumes importance in the sense that it
sets priority for Indian policy makers to reconsider the scope for adapting their
own system. In the concluding chapter, ‘Fiscal Policy in India:
Lessons and Priorities’, Nirvikar Singh and T.N. Srinivasan assesses
India’s current fiscal situation, its likely future evolution and impacts
on the economy. The authors examine possible reforms of macroeconomic policy and
broader institutional reforms that will bear on the macroeconomic situation. The
authors also take into account the factors such as political feasibility of possible
reforms. They also examine both medium and longer run scenarios, fiscal sustainability
and adjustment going beyond conventional government budget deficits, to include
off-budget liabilities, both actual and contingent. The chapter concludes that
some short run fiscal adjustments are clearly necessary to avoid any possibility
of a crisis, but at the same time more fundamental adjustments- in the tax system,
the structure of the expenditure and the financial sector must be on the agenda
for reforms. The book, a major contribution to the fiscal literature, is
thought provoking, timely and pertinent to India’s fiscal affairs. The various
aspects of India’s fiscal policy, related issues, implications on growth,
feasibility of implementations of reforms in the existing democratic and federal
set up are well recognised and addressed. It provides adequate insights and suggests
a road map, taking into fiscal policy and its linkages with other macroeconomic
policies, for a sound and sustainable fiscal policy for India. The reforms in
tax administration, expansion of tax base through more services in tax net, introduction
of transparency in fiscal matters and channelisation of expenditure along productive
lines among others reforms are suggested to be initiated on priority basis. Several
fiscal policy measures have already been initiated in India during 1990s covering
most of these areas. Furthermore, the book provides very useful insights on the
optimal level of fiscal decentralisation for India. The discussion on linkages
of fiscal policy with other sectors and its implications including on growth is
very relevant and will provide valuable inputs to the policy makers in India to
further facilitate the fiscal reforms process with a view to strengthening fiscal
situation. Growth implications of the fiscal policy could have been addressed
more adequately taking into account the more disaggregated information and also
simultaneously the impact of taxation, expenditure and budget deficits components
on the growth. The analysis on India’s fiscal situation with an international
perspective and its linkages with other sectors provides adequate insights to
policy makers and provokes researchers to take further work in this area. In this
regard, a phase-wise analysis of various aspects of fiscal policy could have been
more useful to understand the strengths and weaknesses of policies in different
phases. The issues like rigidities in bringing expenditure to a lower level or
in channelising it towards productive lines apart from sustainability of public
debt, which continue to pose problems for the on-going process of fiscal consolidation
could have been addressed adequately. Keeping in view the problems as highlighted
in number of papers, there needs to be some short run fiscal adjustment to avoid
any probability of a crisis. In this context, the future course of action meant
for short run and long run could have been provided adequately keeping in view
India’s democratic and federal set up. Nevertheless, the book remains an
important contribution to the India’s fiscal literature. It may be concluded
that the book provides very useful insights for policy makers to undertake appropriate
and timely policy measures in order to strengthen fiscal position and avoid any
crisis in the short and medium term and for sustainable fiscal situation in the
long run. Rajmal* * Shri Rajmal is Assistant
Adviser in the Department of Economic Analysis and Policy of the Reserve Bank
of India, Central Office, Mumbai. |