Economy
Arun Kumar Das
May 09, 2020, 11:52 AM | Updated 11:52 AM IST
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An industry chamber has urged the government to announce an immediate stimulus package of Rs 15 lakh crore to revive the economy crippled by the COVID-19 pandemic.
Pointing to the growing economic costs and possibility of large-scale job losses in the absence of industry-specific support, the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII) has urged the government to announce an immediate stimulus package of Rs 15 lakh crore, which translates into 7.5 per cent of Gross Domestic Product (GDP).
“The Covid-19 curve trajectory as of now required a fitting containment response and the Prime Minister’s decision for continuation of the lockdown is necessary to avert a larger humanitarian crisis,” said Chandrajit Banerjee, director-general of CII.
The COVID-19 pandemic has severely crippled the economy. The lockdown, which was necessitated to arrest the spread of the contagion, has come at a huge economic cost. By the time the third phase of the lockdown ends, we would have lost almost two months of output.
An immediate substantive stimulus is required from the government in the form of support to the poor and support to industry, especially Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSMEs).
“With economic activities being restricted for over 50 days now, the negative impact on the economy is expected to be even more significant than what we had earlier anticipated. This needs to be offset by a large fiscal stimulus so that jobs and livelihoods are protected,” said Vikram Kirloskar, president, CII.
The broad elements of the stimulus include cash transfers amounting to Rs 2 lakh crore to Jan Dhan, Aadhaar and Mobile (JAM) account holders, in addition to the Rs 1.7 lakh stimulus already announced.
“A key fallout of this economic slowdown would be the human cost in terms of loss of jobs and livelihoods, which need urgent government intervention,” said Chandrajit Banerjee, Director-General, CII.
It should be ensured that the migrant labourers are kept within the purview of the proposed cash transfers, Banerjee added.
Further, in order to provide enterprises the immediate support to pay salaries to its workers and avoid any job losses, CII has suggested a provision of Rs 2 lakh crore for additional working capital limits to be provided by banks, equivalent to April-June wage bill of the borrowers, backed by a government guarantee, at 4-5 per cent interest.
To support the estimated 63 million MSMEs which have been battered by the pandemic, CII has suggested a credit protection scheme for MSMEs whereby 60-70 per cent of the loan should be guaranteed by the government, i.e. if the borrower defaults, government should repay the bank up to the amount it has guaranteed, so the risk to the lender is limited.
This will encourage the banks to lend to the ailing sector so that their working capital needs are met.
In addition, CII has suggested the creation of a fund or Special Purpose Vehicle (SPV) with a corpus of Rs 1.4-1.6 lakh crore which will subscribe to NCDs/Bonds of corporates rated A and above.
The fund can be seeded by the government contributing a corpus of Rs 10,000-20,000 crore, with further investments from banks and financial institutions.
This will provide adequate liquidity to industry, particularly the stressed sectors such as aviation, tourism and hospitality.
In order to create a significant multiplier impact on boosting demand in rest of the sectors and enhancing long-term productivity, funding public infrastructure has been found to be a potent option.
In this regard, CII suggested an allocation of Rs 4 lakh crore be made on a public works programme that will create job opportunities.
The work should be initiated with the involvement of state governments, so that implementation bottlenecks can be overcome.
Specifically, the spending can begin with the completion of projects that have already begun, such as roads which are stalled after 80 per cent of the job is complete.
CII has also suggested an allocation of Rs 2 lakh crore to be earmarked for bailing out state-run electricity distribution companies that have been accumulating losses and burdening the state-exchequer.
Further, to protect our financial sector for meeting the credit needs of the real estate sector, as well as to absorb some shocks from potential insolvencies in the sector, an allocation of Rs 2 lakh crore for bank recapitalization is required.
This will help public sector banks manage any surge in their NPAs.
In order to finance the broad elements of the stimulus package laid out above, CII suggested Rs 4 lakh crore support from the subscription of government paper by the RBI, given the fact that inflationary pressures remain muted in view of depressed demand conditions.
A lower amount of Rs 2 lakh crore can be borrowed by the government from the secondary market, so that bond yields remain moderate.
Further, substantial reduction in expenditure of around Rs 4 lakh crore is possible by reducing some of the discretionary expenditure such as centrally sponsored schemes.
These are some of the avenues that would finance the package.
“Clearly, time is running out for a fiscal stimulus package to rescue the economy. Delayed fiscal relief for enterprises reeling under the lockdown will make it harder for them to recover,” Banerjee concluded.
Arun Kumar Das is a senior journalist covering railways. He can be contacted at akdas2005@gmail.com.