Showing posts with label Crisis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Crisis. Show all posts

Sunday, May 17, 2020

Lockdown Economics: Pandemic Fiscal Policy



   There is widespread misunderstanding of the economic nature of the lock-down and the effects of monetary and fiscal policy during a lock-down . This note attempts to clarify the different elements, so that correct policies can be devised, with particular reference to Indian lock-down. However the analytical approach and several conclusions are equally applicable to other countries which have imposed a lock down or Social confinement of citizens in their homes.

Equilibrium: Essential Goods & Services

   The Indian lock-down, closed all economic activity, except Essential goods and services, through an order of the Union Govt under the Disaster Management Act. The bulk of Essential commodities consist of food and beverages and its entire supply chain up to the consumer including related transport and sale. Essential services also included Government administration, electronic communication & media services. We estimate, that these constituted 40% of Gross Value Added and about 55% of employment. Except for administrative glitches and minor disruptions, this part was almost fully functional(>90%), with Demand matching Supply at approximately levels prevailing before the pandemic. Consequently it can be assumed that both incomes and tax revenues originating in this sector of the economy are also at levels prevailing before the pandemic.

Equilibrium: Non-essential Goods & Services

   With the rest of the economy closed there is no production and supply of "non-essential" goods and services. With supply zero due to Govt imposed lock-down, there is excess demand for the goods and services in this part of the economy but it's not expressed, in the market, because the markets are shut by Govt order. So effectively there is a demand-supply equilibrium at zero. Note that even the govt is unable to actualize the demand for non-essential goods and services because supply is shut.
Assume, for the moment that there are no legal obligations on the economic agents in this part of the economy. Then both incomes (of workers and owners of capital) would be reduced to zero, as would all the tax revenues of the Govt's from this sector of the economy. Private individuals would still have to buy essential Goods and services to survive. Those who do not have liquid funds would therefore be desperately in need of transfers to survive. It would be the primary duty of govt to provide such transfers to ensure survival of those with no or little savings to fall back on. Those with accumulated savings would use these savings to purchase essential commodities and thus become net disasters. The savings of their counterparts in the essential goods and services sector would however increase, because they would be unable to spend that part of their income which they normally spent on non-essential goods and services. The net effect is likely to be a decline in private saving rate given the relative size of the two parts of the economy.

Govt Fiscal Balance

Govts revenues from and expenditures on non-essential goods and services would also be zero. As taxes on essential goods and services are generally less than on non-essentials. On the expenditure Govt would continue to pay its govt employees as they are considered essential. It would not, however be able to purchase any goods and services to carry out projects and programs so these would halt. Given the relative size of wages and commodity purchases by the Govt, the net effect of the lock down is likely to be an increase in the deficit from pre-Pandemic levels, but not by big amounts. To the extent, Welfare transfers increase to ensure survival of workers and self employed in the non-essential commodity sector, the deficit would increase further, but there is an upper limit, given by the normal consumption of essential commodities by the poor. Any further increase in transfers to the poor or transfers to the non-poor will have No effect on the economy. ie fiscal stimulus is irrelevant to an economy in lock down.

Legal Asymmetry & Force Majeure

The key problem for the economy in lock-down is asymmetric legal contracts and Government policy and rules which impose asymmetric obligations on employers. Examples of the former are rental agreements, loans taken with obligation to pay interest and repay debts. Examples of the latter are labor laws which keep employers from reducing work hours and wages or fire them, or arbitrary decisions of State Governments to keep paying full wages to employees who are sitting at home due to lock-down. The lock-down therefore creates a threat of mass bankruptcy of firms (SMEs & Household enterprises) in the non-essential sectors. The govt must suspend such asymmetric contracts, so that mass bankruptcy is prevented.

Fiscal Policy during Lock-down

  The central bank's obligation is to provide enough short, medium term liquidity, but the Govt has to backstop this through risk sharing and credit enhancements of lending to firms under threat of bankruptcy. Any transfers to firms and individuals who have sufficient savings to meet their normal demand for essential goods and services, do not have any effect on aggregate effective demand, only on the ability to restart their business after the lock-down is lifted.
   To summarize, targeted Govt transfers to those who do not have enough family savings to maintain their normal expenditure on essential goods and services. Beyond this no govt stimulus is possible. The only effect of any other govt transfers is to reduce net debt creation and/or stave of bankruptcy of firms. The only feasible objective of Govt during a lock-down, is to ensure no individual goes hungry and to Stave off Mass bankruptcy in non-essential goods & services. Monetary policy has to work closely, in tandem with Fiscal policy to achieve the latter policy by providing enough liquidity to the banking system and securities markets that underpin and anchor the payments and credit system and to every systemically important segment of the financial market (NBFCs, Mutual Funds) to ensure that liquidity problems in any institution, don't translate into insolvency and contagion.

Phased Unlocking: Transition From Lockdown To Normalcy

While phasing out the Lock-down the most important distinction to keep in mind, is between individuals as consumers and individuals as workers, professional service providers, mangers and owners of businesses & companies. It is possible to minimize transmission of Corona Virus while speeding economic recovery, by a combination of quicker freeing of production and supply and slower normalization of interpersonal and social freedom.
 The second important dimension, which is critical to efficient and cost effective transition, is that between Contact Services, which contribute about 10% of Gross Value Added (GVA) and employment, and Manufacturing, mining, construction & allied services(MMC&AS) , which contributes 50% of GVA and about 35% of employment. By their very nature, former involve mass contact with many other individuals in confined spaces, while in the latter, supply chains are fragmented and spread out geographically. A similar two speed approach to these two sub-sectors of non-essential G&S, is necessary to optimize the trade-off between health and income. The overall goal is to minimize spread of virus through social contact while resuming economic & income generating activity while taking all necessary and feasible precautions at the workplace, in transport of workers and in sale of goods.
  The third dimension of the transition is the definition of confinement/quarantine zones which must be isolated, red zones in which all Contact services must remain locked down even as MMC&AS is freed to ensure that supply chains function smoothly and orange zones where social activity remains severely constrained eg by night curfew and green zones where even personal services can be liberalized.
Given some version of these policies, what is the economic nature of the transition? While the problems of personnel stress among the poor and the threat of mass bankruptcy among in business and trade begins to ease it does not disappear; the latter becomes less widespread but more acute in selected industries, requiring a narrower focus. The new problems relate to the fragmentation of supply chains, and divorcing of workers from workplace, resulting in local and/or regional pockets of demand-supply imbalances in markets for goods, labor and working capital. While RBI has to focus attention on working capital & credit, the Union Govt has to focus on smoothening inter-state flow of goods and allied services and the State's on ensuring the intra-State flow of goods & services(within State), with close cooperation of the Union Govt on both matters.
With lockdown remaining in contact sectors, the question of stimulating demand in this sector does not arise. Demand & supply are both closed by Govt intention and feat. The critical issue in MMC&AS, is one of fragmentation of demand and supply and not of a shortage of aggregate demand. The aggregate imbalance will become clear, only after national supply chains in all industries are functioning smoothly will the aggregate demand picture become clear.
During this period Governments normal project, program & developmental activities will and must resume. However, it's unclear to what extent these need to be stepped up beyond levels budgeted in February. By the nature of the transition outlined above, there will be much greater need for flexibility on the part of both State and Union Govt. There would be a need for speeding up projects in certain geographies where there's excess supply and to slow down activities in geographies where there is excess demand, to smooth imbalances instead of aggravating them.

Fiscal Stimulus Post-normalization

We can however, anticipate the nature of the aggregate imbalance, which will need to be acted on as supply chains start functioning normally. This is the sharp reduction of income in the contact sectors, and its effect on demand in the MMC&AS. Thus the issue of fiscal stimulus will become relevant as the issues arising directly from the economic lockdown are resolved.
Govt should prepare a three pronged strategy. One is revenue-negative tax reform which gives a boost to demand in short term, raises entrepreneurial optimism and the buoyancy of the tax revenues. This can be done jointly with States through the GST council by simplifying and reforming the GST and by the union govt alone by simplifying and rationalizing the Direct Tax Code. Both these will immensely benefit the SME sector which faces the greatest thereat of bankruptcy during the transition. Replacement of the entire subsidy system by an Aadhar linked, mobile payment based Direct Cash Transfer system, will greatly enhance the ability of the Union and .state governments to ensure that those most effected by the Pandemic receive the most assistance form the government in the most timely manner. The third leg of the stimulus will be targeted expenditures and short term subsidies for those contact services, in which fears of contagion continue to depress demand, even after lockdown has been completely lifted. These subsidies should provide capital assistance for creating a new environment of safety to calm fears of consumers. 
 

Conclusion

   Economists should be very careful in prescribing or demanding a Fiscal stimulus which will have no positive outcome, but can do great harm by diverting Government's attention from problems it must address during a lockdown and while phasing out the lock down and transitioning to normalization. Once the economy returns to a semblance of normalcy normal fiscal issues return to the fore, and will have to be addressed along with critical need for reforming the fiscal system to promote growth recovery and return to its potential.

Sunday, March 29, 2020

Implications of Pandemic & Consequent Economic Crisis: What to Do About It


Questions from Asit Ranjan Mishra, Senior Editor, Mint

Q1-How do you assess the economic fallout of Covid-19 outbreak on Indian economy?
A1: There is an unprecedented shock to every economy in the World, including the Indian economy. There are three aspects. One the Lock-down, which is unprecedented even when compared to that in the key economies involved World War 2. It practically immobilizes the work force and thus reduces production to zero in 80-90% of economy. The #Lock-down in China, the first globally, were also an unprecedented disruption of production-inputs, the supply of intermediate goods, given China's role in so many critical Global supply chains and its monopolization of so many products. The contagion fear before the lock down, which will remain after the lock down, constitutes a huge demand shock for contact services which involve dense collections of people like air, rail & bus transport, Tourism, Restaurants & Hotels, Entertainment, Malls & retail markets.

Q2- From the standpoint of a shock to the economy as well as the financial market, how similar or different do you think the Corona virus outbreak is vis-a-vis the global financial crisis of 2008.
A2: The Pandemic is a Real Supply cum Demand shock to the economy, which will affect the financial system. The Global financial Crisis was a financial system collapse, which propagated into the Real economy. In that sense they are opposites. However, once the effects reach from one to the other, lots of similarities emerge with respect to the financial elements of the current crises and how to deal with them. The real elements are different and so will the fiscal measures to deal with it have to be different.
    As in the previous Financial Crisis, the Monetary Authority has now to ensure, that the Financial System keeps functioning smoothly and liquidity issues don’t undermine Solvent Financial institutions and result in Contagion from insolvent companies and financial organizations. RBI must ensure that key Institutions (like Banks) have enough liquidity, critical financial markets, like those for Foreign exchange, have adequate liquidity and Critical Instruments like Government Security do not show any upward spikes in rates. The last also requires close Monetary-Fiscal Co-ordination. RBI has also to ensure undue rise in risk premiums on undeveloped markets like those for CPs, by ensuring enough general liquidity and negative real Repo rates. RBI as an institution has sufficient experience from the Global Financial crisis to deal with these issues.

Q3-Forecasters and rating agencies like Moody’s have revised downward their growth estimate for India to 2.5% for 2020 calendar year? Do you find such estimates plausible?
A3: We are in the process of estimating the likely GDP growth in 2020-21.  Analytically, it's useful to divide the economy into three parts and three phases. These are the (a) Essential Commodities and Services, (b) The Contact Services in which fears of epidemic will continue to reduce Demand, and the (c) Rest of the economy. The phases are (1) The lockdown phase and near Lockdown conditions, (2) The phase of gradual recovery (3) Restoration of economy to "normal" growth.
     Right now, the available forecasts seem to be heavily dependent on assumptions about when the Pandemic will peak. Uncertainty will remain high, till the SARS Corona Virus 2 Pandemic has peaked in India, USA, EU and China.

Q4-How do you see the economic relief package announced by the government and the financial package by the RBI? Will they be enough under the current circumstances?
A4: Both packages are rightly designed to deal with Phase 1(as defined above), the impact of the Lockdown, which covers 80-90% of the economy, and the succeeding 4-6 weeks. The best part is the assurance that the Govt now has its ear to the ground and using information to design and modify packages. The challenge is therefore shifting to effective implementation. As States are responsible for both Health and Welfare and effectiveness of Health and Social welfare measures depends on the States, who are present at ground level.

Q5-Do you think India should announce a large stimulus package including a bailout for Indian companies affected badly?
A5: Fiscal stimulus is completely the wrong thing to do in a lock-down, when there is no supply of or demand for any commodity or service, besides essential commodities. During this period, Fiscal measures must focus on ensuring survival of citizens, by ensuring access to free food and health Services, for those who do not have cash. 
    Once the lockdown is over and we enter phase 2 (as defined above). Fiscal measures must be targeted at industries and sectors which are most severely affected by the Epidemic (Contact Services mentioned above). Next in line must be industries and sectors which were already badly hit by the growth recession and whose situation has worsened because of the Pandemic. In this context, elimination of Cesses & Surcharges in both GST and Personal Income Taxation, will play an important role.

Q6-Do we have to revisit and reset the self-imposed redlines in fiscal policy such as fiscal deficit and debt to GDP ratio limits to revive the Indian economy?
A6: The Mantra of "Fiscal space" is completely irrelevant during the Crisis. The FRBM should be suspended or reformed to take explicit account of such crises. Ignoring Fiscal deficits during the crisis to institute temporary expenditure does NOT mean that irresponsible introduction of, and commitment to, schemes which will sink the deficit in the medium-long term.

Q7-Should a stimulus be more effective through direct and indirect tax cuts or direct cash transfers?
A7: Once the economy comes out of the crises mode and enters Phase 3, the primary policy issue will be how to speed its recovery back to its growth potential. In this context tax reforms (Direct Tax Code, GST) are far more important than expenditure reforms. Tax reduction must be considered as part of these tax reforms, to provide short term stimulus, while ensuring long term fiscal sustainability through improved voluntary compliance and higher buoyancy. Direct cash transfers will of course be necessary for those affected by crisis, but overall increases will be sustainable if and only if combined with reduction of leakages(inefficiency and corruption) in major subsidies like fertilizer and food corporation.

Q8-Is it the right time to revisit the idea of Universal Basic Income and guaranteeing social security to all the vulnerable people?
A8: The Universal Basic Income (UBI) concept, though it may be relevant for Developed countries, is irrelevant for India. A "Targeted" UBI is a contradiction of the term "Universal". We in India had developed the concept of Direct Cash Transfers(DCT) to the bottom 40% of the Population in the mid-2000s, pursuant to which we recommended the creation of a Universal ID (UID) to help target such transfers. With are Bureaucratic Socialist system heritage of evasion & corruption and abysmal conviction rates for illegal activity, a sustainable system requires close attention to incentives. We need a system of Net Income Transfers, which meshes DCT into the existing personal income tax system through an integrated, “Negative Income tax  (NIT)”.  The time to consider it will however be in 2021-22, after the economy is on road to recovery

Q9-Do you think Covid-19 will accelerate the process of deglobalization already visible through intensifying trade wars?
A9: De Globalization started after the Global Financial Crisis and is clearly visible in the declining World Trade to GDP ratio as well as in reduced Capital flows, particularly to Emerging Market economies. These trends will intensify and expand to include greater restrictions on low tech migrant workers.

Q10-How do you think economies may change the way they work, say two to three years from now? What policies will guide cooperation and competition among them?
A10: The Partial Economic Decoupling and Hight Tech decoupling set in motion by the Tariff War will accelerate. The decoupling will be between free, open democracies which follow rule of law domestically and accepted rules of country behavior internationally and those who merely pay lip service to these principles of acceptable behavior.

Q11-Do you apprehend more pressure now on global supply chains to withdraw from China?
A11: Yes there will be an accelerated diversification of Global Supply Chains from China, particularly in industries which China had monopolized through Subsidies, NTBs and mercantilist practices.

Q12- What of 2021 and beyond? Will the Indian economy be stuck in low level equilibrium of 5-5.5% for the next few years?
A12: That would be a disaster of unmeasurable proportions for the Indian economy and the Welfare of its people. Union and State Govts (e.g. GST council) use the current hiatus in economic activity to prepare a comprehensive calendar of Reforms to be implemented during H2 of FY21 and H1 of FY22. Besides comprehensive reform of GST and Indirect Code, it must include reform of External sector & Exim policy, Agriculture, Skilling (incl Apprenticeship), Regulatory reforms for promoting Educate in India. Land and Labor flexibility for Coastal/Special Export Zones & Import Substitution Zones, Electricity Distribution & pricing for Industry, and Manufacturing subsidies for Industries monopolized by Dictatorships who don't follow Global Rule of Law.
      A tragic once in a century crisis like this, also provides an unprecedented opportunity to transform the Indian Economy. We would be compounding the tragedy if we waste this opportunity. 
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Note: A version of this note appeared in Mint, Monday, 30th March 2020 t.co/TwKlSlWFro ).