Economy being attended by 'very incompetent doctors': Chidambaram
Tearing into the Modi government over India's economy, Former finance minister P Chidambaram on Monday said it was close to collapse and was been attended by "very incompetent doctors."
Tearing into the Modi government over India's economy, Former finance minister P Chidambaram on Monday said it was close to collapse and was been attended by "very incompetent doctors." Initiating the debate on the Union Budget for 2020-21, Chidambaram said rising unemployment and falling consumption was making India poorer. The economy is facing demand constraints and is investment starved, he added. The economy is facing fall in consumption and rising unemployment, Chidambaram said. The former finance minister said fear and uncertainty prevailed in the country.
Chidambaram said the chief economic advisor to the BJP government for four years, Arvind Subramanian has stated that the economy is in the ICU. But "I would say the patient has been kept out of ICU and incompetent doctors are looking at the patient," Chidambaram said.
"It is dangerous to have a patient out of ICU and being looked upon by incompetent doctors. What is the point standing around and chanting slogan 'Sab ka saath, sab ka vishwas'," he said, adding every competent doctor the Modi government could ever identify has left the country. He said a list of such people included former RBI governor Raghurman Rajan, former CEA Arvind Subramanian, former RBI governor Urjit Patel and former NITI Aayog vice chairman Arvind Panagariya.
"Who are your doctors, I want to know," he said, adding the government considers Congress as untouchable and doesn't think of any good about the rest of the opposition and so doesn't consult them. Chidambaram charged that instead of putting money in the hands of people, the Modi government "put money in hands of 200 corporates" by way of corporate tax. He said Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman in her 160-minute budget speech did not talk of the economy and its management.
"You are living in echo chambers. You want to hear your own voice," he said. Listing problems with the Modi government, Chidambaram said it refuses to admits in mistakes, lives in denial and has predispositions.
The demonetisation of old 1000 and 500 rupee notes as well as hurried implementation of the Goods and Services Tax (GST) are "monumental blunders" that ruined the economy, he said, adding the Modi regime is predisposed to protectionism, a 'strong' rupee and is against bilateral and multilateral agreements.
"It is living in denial," he said, adding the economic growth has fallen for hereto unseen six consecutive quarters. He wondered on the narrative Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman was trying to give after reading out a 160-minute budget speech with few pages left unread. Her budget neither made any reference to the Economic Survey nor picked up a single idea from it, he said.
Chidambaram, who is credited with presenting a 'dream budget' more than two decades back, said the GDP growth has declined for six consecutive quarters, agriculture is growing by just 2 per cent, while consumer price inflation has risen from 1.9 per cent in January 2019 to 7.4 per cent in a matter of 11 months. Also, food inflation is at 12.2 per cent. Bank credit is growing 8 per cent with non-food credit rising by 7-8 per cent and credit to industry by just 2.7 per cent. Credit to agriculture has declined from 18.3 per cent to 5.3 per cent and that for MSMEs from 6.7 per cent to 1.6 per cent. Overall industrial index showed just 0.6 per cent growth.
"Every major industry is either near zero or in negative zone," he said, adding thermal power plants are operating at just 55 per cent of the capacity as factories have either closed or are on the verge of closure.
"That gives you a good picture of the state of economy. You don't require MRI," he said. "You are in management for six years. How long can you blame previous managers." He charged the government with burying unfavourable reports such as the labour survey that put unemployment at 45-year high of 6.1 per cent at end of 2017-18. Also, consumer expenditure has falling to 3.7 per cent between 2011-12 and 2017-18. Drilling holes in Budget numbers, he said the 2019-20 budget projected a nominal GDP growth of 12 per cent but ended with just 8.5 per cent. Fiscal deficit was targeted to be shrunk to 3.3 per cent of the GDP but ended by at 3.8 per cent and in the next fiscal it is being targeted at 3.5 per cent.
Revenue deficit was targeted at 2.3 per cent in fiscal ending March 31, 2020 but ended up at 2.4 per cent and in the next it will rise to 2.8 per cent, he said, adding capital expenditure in the next fiscal will shrink to 0.7 per cent from 1.4 per cent in the current.
(With PTI inputs)