In listening to US Ivy league trained economists, it strikes
me that they have either forgotten what they learnt in college and preached on
Wall street for 20 years or have been so traumatized by the Global Financial
crisis, that they have forgotten that real economy is about real interest rates
and real exchange rates!
Some analysis to remind them: Indian real interest rates
have risen sharply during 2014-15. This has had a negative impact on interest
sensitive sectors like real estate & housing and Motor vehicles.
By increasing the interest differential with the World, this
(incentivizes &) leads to short run capital inflows. This has led to an
exchange rate appreciation of 10% in 2014-15, despite the fact that part of
inflows has added to exchange reserves and despite a fall in inflation which
would normally result in real depreciation. The real appreciation has had a
strong negative effect on the tradeable sectors of the economy, particularly the
globalized corporates sector, which has slowed recovery from a cyclical trough. Though this sector’s growth recovery is
affected by the speed of Global recovery(ie of globalized sectors world wide),
misplaced Indian policy has nipped the incipient recovery in the bud.
Meanwhile fiscal policy has moved in a mildly positive direction, with a
slightly lower deficit and a slightly higher ratio of investment to
consumption. With the exception of one serious error on the taxation issue
(MAT), reform policies have seen moderate to good progress. One has therefore to attribute most of the
above effects to a hardening/tightening of (real) monetary policy during
2014-15 (by about 2% points). It follows that at a minimum, the (real) monetary
tightening must be reversed in 2015-16 and a greater effort made to reduce
government consumption (leakages) so more can be spent on infrastructure
investment. This will stimulate growth without affecting inflation.
Purely Indigenous analysts (as against ivy
league ones), seem on the other hand to have forgotten that the organized part
of the economy is not the whole economy, but just a fraction of it. Till a decade ago they talked about the dual
nature of the economy and how monetary and credit policy actions of the central
bank affected only the formal organized part of the economy. Even though the globalized part of the economy
and the formal financial system has gradually increased since 1990, the economic
and financial dualism hasn’t suddenly disappeared or become irrelevant. Thus
monetary and credit policies affect mostly the formal economy. Growth of the informal economy can be faster
or slower than the formal and its relationship to monetary policy is obscure at
best.
Because the 1990s reforms unshackled the formal, organized part of the
economy, it invested more and grew faster than the informal part of the
economy. Post-financial crisis, global trade and GDP growth collapsed.
Consequently, except for 2009, when there was a world wide injection of fiscal
and monetary stimulus, we should not be surprised to see the formal, globalized part of the economy growing slower than the informal. In fact
the continuation of the Indian stimulus in 2010 made the subsequent downturn
worse.
An interpretation based on a pure
dualistic, segmented financial market model of the Indian economy would suggest
that monetary policy tightening has reduced demand and capacity utilization in
the formal sector and pushed it towards deflation (as indicated by the IIP and
WPI respectively), while the informal sector has recovered gradually despite
changes in monetary and fiscal policy.
The actual picture is undoubtedly a little more complex than either the
Wall street-Chicago model or the Dual economy model can capture. That is why good
macro-economic practice, requires a mixture of theory, empiricism and intuition.
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