Pages

Showing posts with label Financial Inclusion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Financial Inclusion. Show all posts

8 December 2019

The results of the NSO survey 2017-18 are truly bizarre

Surjit S Bhalla
Some results of the National Statistical Office’s consumer expenditure survey (CES) for 2017-18 have been leaked. It is hoped that the official release (not endorsement for the reasons enunciated below) of the unit-level data will follow soon, so that researchers, analysts, politicians and even former prime ministers can evaluate for themselves how bad the NSO data really are.
The previous NSO survey on employment (PLFS) estimated the population in 2017-18 to be 1,074 million, when even mathematically challenged individuals estimated it to be upwards of 1,300 million (actually 1,339 million). That error of a 265 million under-estimation is a national record for the highest under-estimation of such a basic number — most NSO surveys have under-estimated population by around 5-10 per cent. The underestimation in 2017-18 at 20 per cent is a record.
This under-estimation has consequences for a major policy variable of interest — jobs and job growth. The unemployment rate is not affected by the estimate of aggregate population; but the number of jobs is affected. Most scholars have estimated employment generated by the PLFS data to decline by around 18 million in the number of jobs in 2017-18 relative to 2011-12. This is according to the usual status of employment, a measure which counts both half-time work (employed for 30-182 days) and full-time work (employed for more than 182 days) as full-time employment. In a detailed (forthcoming) paper on employment, Tirtha Das and I find that the desired full-time jobs (defined as principal status) increased by eight million between 2011-12 and 2017-18 — an increase not that different from what was obtained in the high growth years of 2004-5 to 2011-12 (a 14 million increase, but over seven years).
It is much easier to count people as employed or not employed, than to ask about their monthly per capita expenditure. This is where the world record is on the way to being established. The CES survey for 2017-18 shows that the per person real monthly expenditure (mpce in NSO parlance and not income as mistakenly assumed by some) declined from Rs 1,573 in 2011-12 to Rs 1,514 in 2017-18 (data converted from 2009-10 prices to 2011-12 prices to make it consistent with other data)
In my book, Imagine There’s No Country, I had documented how there was a declining trend in the amount captured by the surveys over time. Household surveys (S) were capturing less and less of consumption as revealed by an alternative calculation — the national accounts (NA). While the two definitions (survey and national accounts) are not identical, they are broadly comparable.
The average S/NA ratio, around the world, was in the mid 80s in the 1980s, that is, if the NA estimate of per-capita consumption was 100, then the household survey would estimate it to be 85. It is worth remembering that the S/NA ratio in India in the 1950’s and 1960’s was upwards of 95 per cent. Too high to be true? In a manner of speaking, yes. For then, the household survey provided the estimate of consumption for national accounts.
But, with time, economies became complicated, and the national accounts data moved with the times, became more sophisticated and captured the trends in the economy much better than the surveys. Survey organisations like the NSO refused to move. In 1983, the S/NA ratio in India collapsed to 63 per cent from the high 70s level just a decade earlier. It was to be 30 years later (in 2012) when the world reached the low 60’s average.
That year (2011-12), India recorded a 55 per cent ratio for S/NA. Just six years later (2017-18), the S/NA ratio in India has collapsed to just 33 per cent — the second lowest ever recorded around the world for economies without hyper-inflation (when S/NA ratio really gets distorted) and with populations above 10 million. The worst ever was Nigeria in 2009 with a S/NA ratio of 27.2 per cent.
There is yet another comparison one can make. The two most recent consumption surveys in India, just six years apart, yield a decline of 22 percentage points. This is the second worst sequential decline in the world. The worst was Pakistan in 2001 when the S/NA ratio was 46.9 per cent, down 26.9 percentage points from the 73.8 per cent estimate recorded in 1998.
The secular decline in NSO has now persisted for some 50 years and marks a sad occasion for an institution that was a trend setting statistical institution in not only the emerging economies, but in the world as well. In the early 1950s, the world famous statistician P C Mahalanobis was its head.
I was privileged to be a member of the first National Statistical Commission of India headed by an internationally renowned economist Suresh Tendulkar. I was sent to Calcutta by Tendulkar to interact with the NSSO and to find out why the Indian S/NA ratio had sharply declined and what could be done to improve survey response. I met with little success and came back frustrated with the ancient techniques being followed by them.
The most recent statistical commission chairman, P C Mohanan, was a colleague. He has been quoted as not being surprised with the decision of the government to not accept the findings of the latest record-low NSO survey. His view is that the government is suppressing reports that are not “favourable”.
If I thought that the NSO consumption surveys were misleading and not acceptable in 2002 and 2006, I can be forgiven for thinking that the surveys are even less acceptable today. The results of the NSO survey 2017-18 are truly bizarre — a decline in average real consumption of 0.6 percentage per year between 2011-12 and 2017-18, when the NA consumption estimate is of a positive 5.8 per cent annual growth. As discussed above, the NSO estimate for 2017-18 is so out of the box that it is actually out of any (reasonable) ball-park. If the government does not accept the findings of the survey (as has been suggested by a recent press release) then a genuine reform of the NSO can actually begin. Even if it does not return to its previous glory, a reformed NSO can become a respectable institution. That will not be easy, but it is a path worth embarking upon.
I have been surprised by how many respected analysts have pointed to the “findings” of the NSO 2017-18 and are relating it to the slowdown in the economy in 2019-20. Some of these very same “analysts” were cheering the RBI/MPC a year ago when it raised the repo rate to 6.5 per cent in June 2018, the very last month of the 2017-18 survey. Their reason for cheering the MPC — growth was too high, so high that it was leading to high and accelerating inflation. Both views cannot be right, and it is worse than disingenuous to hold both views simultaneously. The so-called experts have to make up their mind — if growth was disturbingly high in June 2018, then it cannot under any stretch of the imagination be argued that the CES 2017-18 survey is even close to being right.
Not every government report should be accepted. Just like individuals fail exams, and editors reject papers (and columns), sometimes, institutions fail to produce a credible report. But, I do believe that the unit-level data should be released. Let the world, and experts, find out for themselves how truly informative and credible the NSO CES data really are.
This article first appeared in the print edition on November 27, 2019 under the title ‘Rebuilding credibility’. The writer is executive director IMF, representing India, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh and Bhutan.

4 December 2016

Demonetisation: Counterfeit Economics

Anand TeltumbdeStories of devastation and deaths, caused by Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s decision to demonetise ₹500 and ₹1,000 currency notes, are pouring in from all over India. In a country where 97% of all transactions (by volume) are done in cash, the summary demonetisation of 86.4% of its currency value was bound to create chaos. As I write, 70 deaths have already been reported. The entire informal economy that accounts for 94% of India’s workforce and 46% of its gross domestic product (GDP) has almost halted. The already distressed rural masses are aghast at their savings being reduced to worthless paper. Many of them have not even seen the inside of a bank. Long queues of people, clutching their hard-earned money, are seen in front of banks all over the country. The initial euphoria of the middle classes and Modi-philes also has melted away in the heat of this harsh reality. 

The harshest comment, however, has come from Manmohan Singh, who has perhaps the best possible credentials in the country, as ex-governor of the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), ex-finance minister and ex-Prime Minister for two terms, to assess this Tughlaq-esque action. Describing the implementation of the demonetisation drive as “monumental mismanagement” and a case of “organised loot and legalised plunder,” he said in the Rajya Sabha that it would drag down the country’s GDP by 2 percentage points. He is not alone; a host of economists, experts and think tanks revised their growth outlook for India downwards, some of them lowering it to a mere 0.5% for the six-month period ending 31 March 2017. Modi, however, would not budge and instead called all those who questioned this calamitous move as anti-nationals, reminding us of Samuel Johnson’s famous adage: “Patriotism is the last refuge of a scoundrel.”

No one has any doubt about the real motivation behind such outlandish bravado. It was meant to be a stratagem to bolster his image for the forthcoming elections in Uttar Pradesh, Punjab, Goa, and Manipur. All the pre-election promises remain undelivered, and most of his actions, including the so-called surgical strike, have flopped; people, bored by the empty verbiage and hyperboles, needed some dramatic action. The opposition parties were sure to remind people during the elections about Modi’s 2014 poll promise to get them ₹15 lakh each from the black money stashed in the Swiss Banks within 100 days of his being elected. This demonetisation was certainly meant to show that the government is determined to take courageous action to cleanse the economy. Alas, it has boomeranged on the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) badly. The unprecedented hardship it caused people has surely paved the way to the BJP’s Waterloo in the forthcoming assembly elections in some crucial states. This, despite its success in reducing the cash stacks of the opposition parties to trash, and thereby weakening them.
 
Counterfeit EconomicsModi claimed that demonetisation was done to attack black money and corruption, neutralise fake currency, and curb terror money. By now, many economists have competently exposed the fakery of these claims. As the data on raids reveal, the cash component of the disproportionate assets, inclusive of jewellery (counted as cash), has been just 5%. As such, the demonetisation has had an impact, if at all, on a minuscule percentage of illicit money. This small cash is held by the rich only as lubricant for the big machine that produces and reproduces black money. Black money is generated in overseas operations through under-/over-invoicing (businessmen), rentier operations (politicians, police, bureaucrats), and various means of hiding income (realtors, private hospitals, education emperors). There are many ways to convert black money to white, ranging from small-timers (many charity institutions that are only on paper indulge in these scandals) to the big fish who route black money through tax havens to India as foreign direct investments. These channels of production and reproduction of black money are not affected by the demonetisation of currency.

Fake money, if its incidence is alarming enough, may be curbed by demonetisation. However, as per the report of the Kolkata-based Indian Statistical Institute (ISI), it is only ₹400 crore or just 0.002% of the total currency value in circulation, not enough to threaten the economy. The ISI report never suggested demonetisation as a measure to counter counterfeit notes. If counterfeit currency was the concern of the government, the new currency being printed to substitute the demonetised ones should have had better security features. According to the RBI’s admission, the new ₹2,000 notes are being released without any additional security features.

The “terror money” argument is absolutely untenable. If terrorists have a way of sourcing cash, they will always have ways to deal with new currencies too. Then, there is the additional cost of printing new notes, estimated to be in the range of ₹15,000–₹18,000 crore, as well as the aggregate losses due to disruption to the economy, which are to be borne until the situation stabilises.

‘Swachh Bharat’
Modi rhetorically associated the demonetisation decision with his Swachh Bharat campaign, knowing full well that little has come out of that very campaign. If he had given half the amount of money spent on just advertising the campaign to the Dalits who actually do the sanitation work needed to keep the country clean, much could have been accomplished. He claims to be freeing India of corruption and dirty money. One of the reasons for his being voted to power was the spate of corruption scandals that took place when the United Progressive Alliance (UPA) II was in power, which he had effectively exploited promising the country transparent and “minimal government with maximum governance.” Halfway through his tenure, the sources of big-ticket corruption appear to be thriving more than ever. The political parties, the fountainheads of corruption, still stay opaque and out of the purview of the right to information (RTI) net. The names of 648 traitors given in the “Panama list” are yet to be divulged. His government has written off ₹1.14 lakh crore in corporate loans owed to banks in the name of non-performing assets (NPAs). The NPAs of the public sector banks have crossed ₹11 lakh crore, but there is no action whatsoever against the corporate thugs. The direct tax arrears of corporate billionaires hover over ₹5 lakh crore, but Modi never spoke against this. The tax exemptions to them during the last decade exceed ₹40 lakh crore, the annual rate of which during Modi’s regime has crossed ₹6 lakh crore, as against ₹5 lakh crore during the UPA rule. Modi as such has been hugely supportive of corporate corruption, the real generator of black money.

Even the implementation of the demonetisation is suspected to be engulfed in corruption. The dramatised secrecy of the decision is for public consumption; it was known to the inner circle of the BJP, comprising politicians, bureaucrats and businessmen. It could be clearly seen from the spurt in bank deposits during the quarter ending 30 September 2016. The West Bengal unit of the BJP is reported to have deposited a total of ₹3 crore in its bank accounts in the hours before the announcement. A BJP leader posted pictures of wads of ₹2,000 notes much in advance of the demonetisation, and a digital payments company printed a full-page advertisement lauding the demonetisation move in a newspaper on the morning following the announcement at 8 pm on 8 November 2016. Actually, the demonetisation gave impetus to an entirely new business of converting demonetised currency notes for a commission. No wonder that there has not been a change in India’s rank by Transparency International, at 76 out of 168 countries, during Modi’s regime.

Professional Incompetence

The demonetisation move has showed up India’s institutional character, which is ready to buckle before the powers that be. Leave aside Modi, it speaks badly of the calibre of the finance ministry mandarins, particularly RBI Governor Urjit Patel, who has not only failed to preserve the prestige of his office, but also earned the ignominy of having his professional incompetence exposed. It is unlikely that the monetary experts in the RBI could not have seen the flawed economics of the decision, but they obviously fell before the emperor’s will. Demonetisation is no cure for corruption. However, it was tried out by rulers at various times in history, but never with the currency of the common people. The last time that it had taken place was when Morarji Desai had demonetised the ₹1,000 note in 1978, which was hardly seen or used by the common people. It constituted just 0.6% of the money in circulation then, as against the 86.4% of that today.

Modi, during his foreign visits, always brags about his achievement of the Jan-Dhan Yojana (JDY), which is just an extension of what the UPA called financial inclusion. He forced the banks to open accounts, just to score a Guinness world record. According to a survey conducted in July 2015, 33% of the customers indicated that their JDY account was not their first account, and, according to the World Bank report, 72% of them have zero balance in their accounts. Another survey by the World Bank–Gallup Global Findex Survey showed that about 43% of the total bank accounts in India are dormant. Even the RBI says that only 53% of Indians have bank accounts, and many do not operate these. Most bank branches are moreover bunched in tier 1 and tier 2 cities and vast rural areas are scantily served. It is a delusion to dream of a cashless economy in India in such a situation. It would be utterly ignorant to think that such a decision could endear the BJP to the people.

Needless to say, that the lower strata, like the Dalits and Adivasis, are the worst hit and they will never forgive the BJP for it. The BJP has variously tried to project through its hanumans (Dalit leaders in their fold) that the demonetisation decision was as per the advice of B R Ambedkar. It is a white lie. But, even if Ambedkar had said such a thing in some context, can it override the actual sufferings of the masses or alter the nature of reality? It would have been better if the BJP had heeded Ambedkar’s more pertinent advice that the bigger-than-life leaders in politics are the biggest danger to democracy.
(Anand Teltumbde is a writer and civil rights activist with the Committee for the Protection of Democratic Rights, Mumbai.)

22 November 2016

The Political Economy of Demonetising High Value Notes

Jaideep Unudurti
Modi government is extremely adept at optics, at policy measures presented in a blaze of publicity that dazzles the public, rather than with the required attention to detail that might ensure their success. The latest announcement of the demonetisation of high value bank notes is of the “shock and awe” variety of measures. While presented as evidence of the government’s supposedly firm resolve to root out black money, in reality it will barely touch the problem of generation of black money, even as it is being implemented in a way that causes immense economic harm to ordinary people and especially to poorer sections of society.

The demonetisation of bank notes per se is not the problem. Indeed, it has occurred periodically in India and many other countries, both to reduce concerns about counterfeiting and to spread the use of cash-based illegal transactions. To the extent that it reduces these, it should certainly be welcomed. However, when this has been done in India in the past or in other countries, it has typically been done gradually, allowing adequate time for people to replace the old notes with new ones to prevent too much disruption of economic activity. This overnight shock, by contrast, is hugely destabilising, with likely medium-term material damage to a very large part of the population. It affects very little of the stock of ill-gotten wealth and does nothing about its generation, but it has severe impact upon ordinary people, whose lives have already been hugely disrupted.

Government spokespersons argue that secrecy and speed were of the essence to achieve its goals. Otherwise, they state, those hoarding black money would simply be able to convert their cash into “white” through buying other assets in the intervening period. But this argument is completely specious. Suppose the government had announced that (say) from December 1, 2016, the old notes would no longer be valid. It could then start tracking all large sales of likely assets (such as land, houses, gold) and foreign exchange transactions, to follow up with those who had made them. This would have involved no cost to the ordinary law-abiding citizen but still provided the government with all the information it needs to ensure legal and tax compliance from such individuals.

Instead, the shock announcement seems to have emerged from the current government’s penchant for drama and propensity for so-called “big bang” reforms. Other explanations have been put forward about the timing of this move: the need to distract the media – and indeed the entire society – from the government’s increasing repression of the media and of all forms of democratic dissent, which had recently become a major issue of concern; and the upcoming elections in the two important States of Punjab and Uttar Pradesh, in which rival parties would definitely be wrong-footed by this announcement while the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) might just have got some sort of heads-up before the action. (Indeed there have already been accusations that several accounts held by BJP members in different parts of the country were suddenly filled with large deposits in the month before this dramatic announcement, and that members of the ruling party were informed about this demonetisation well in time to take precautionary measures.)

In any case, both design and implementation of this scheme have been far from ideal. In terms of design, the secrecy and suddenness have already been noted as creating completely unnecessary problems, which have hugely affected ordinary people across the country. In addition, the government clearly failed to recognise that, given the rise in prices over the years, it is absurd to treat Rs. 500 as a “high-denomination” note that poor and middle class people are not likely to use. Given the prices prevailing for many essentials like food items and medicines (with some dals costing nearly Rs. 200 per kg for example), it is absurd to consider that Rs. 500 would be an amount that only rich people or black marketeers would use. These Rs. 500 notes accounted for more than two-thirds of the notes in circulation, and removing those at one stroke inevitably has had huge repercussions on liquidity, markets, production and consumption across the country.

In fact, when the Morarji Desai government had demonetised high value bank notes in 1978, it cancelled only those notes with values of Rs. 1000 and above – and Rs. 1000 at that time would be the equivalent of Rs. 25,000 today! As it happens, precisely because the notes involved were of such high value at the time and accounted for only 0.6 per cent of the money in circulation, the demonetisation of 1978 was not so badly felt by ordinary people. However, even then the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) Governor of that time, I.G. Patel, pointed out that “such an exercise seldom produces striking results” since people who have black money on a substantial scale rarely keep it in cash. “The idea that black money or wealth is held in the form of notes tucked away in suit cases or pillow cases is naïve.” And in any case, big players holding large amounts of undisclosed cash can usually find agents to convert the notes through a number of small transactions “for which explanations cannot be reasonably sought.” Yet the government was insistent, and so “the gesture had to be made, and produced much work and little gain 1 .” The economists Brahmananda and Vakil noted that a measure like this “has primarily a political and not economic objective. In such a case it becomes a business in and among politicians 2 .”

If this is what has driven the current exercise as well, then perhaps the government’s willingness to tolerate and justify the massive administrative glitches and associated harm to common people are easier to understand. In terms of implementation, what has been even more surprising than the design is the apparent lack of preparation on the part of the administration for such a major move. Once again, the need for secrecy is being advanced for this, but that argument is untenable. The chaos evident in the week after the announcement is partly because not enough notes have been made available to banks and ATMs, and arrangements to deal with what should surely have been an expected rush to exchange notes were completely insufficient. Removing most (86 per cent) of the currency in circulation at one stroke is a huge move that necessarily constrains the payments system and can even bring it to a halt in parts of the country where the new cash notes do not become readily available. It is surely foolhardy to imagine that economic activity in such a heavily cash-based economy as that of India would be unaffected if these volumes of currency are not very rapidly replaced.
Then again, the choice to introduce first the Rs. 2000 note rather than the Rs. 500 note is mystifying: obviously, this would hardly create an effective liquidity substitute for the Rs. 500 note, yet government representatives appear to be surprised when people complain that they cannot find anyone to give them change for the higher value note. The shortage of other lower value notes, that is inevitable when only newer notes of even higher value are being introduced, should also have been anticipated, yet that too was not factored in. In any case, surely if the idea is to eliminate black money, then it is hardly desirable to introduce even higher value notes that would presumably be even easier to store for those holding large quantities of undeclared cash.

If the Prime Minister is correct in claiming that this was not a sudden move but something that has been planned for nine months, then it is incredible that so little effective preparation was made. It appears that there was little official recognition of likely implementation problems: the government began by claiming that things would be sorted out in a matter of days, then weeks, and most recently 50 days, during which time the Prime Minister has asked the people of the country to bear with him. But it beggars belief that simple matters like ensuring that the RBI has sufficient notes to replace the ones that have been demonetised, or that ATMs are appropriately configured, were not taken care of before going through with this, especially as there is no pressing need for choosing this particular moment to do so.
Still, all this this would have been worth it, if indeed such a move would eliminate all black money in the country. But in fact, it will do little more than scrape the surface of the problem, even if it does so in a blaze of hyperbole.

The nature of “black money”
What exactly is “black money”? The first mistake is to see it as a stock of cash or pile of accumulated assets, because it is not about stocks at all so much as flows or transactions that are concealed from authorities or under-reported, so as to avoid taxes and various other regulations. Bribery and other instances of corruption are one form of such transactions, but there are many other forms, such as under-invoicing and over-invoicing by companies of all sizes, under-reporting of the values of sales of goods and services by individual providers, overstating of costs, reporting false or non-existent transactions and of course criminal activities of various kinds. Many of these do not necessarily require cash transfers at all but can be just as easily (and more speedily) done through electronic means, and relate to different sorts of account-keeping. Also, money does not acquire a particular colour and keep it; as it flows through different transactions, it can move through white, black and grey hues.

For all these reasons, estimates of the exact amount of “black money” in the system at any given time are necessarily problematic, since they rely on assumptions about both the number and the value of unrecorded and tax-evading transactions. A recent estimate by a private agency has claimed that black money amounts to 20 per cent of total Gross Domestic Product (GDP) or 25 per cent of recorded GDP, which would make this one of the lowest in the world already 3. However, a report by the National Institute for Public Finance and Policy (NIPFP) on the incidence of black money in India (which was submitted in December 2013 but has still not been made public or even submitted in Parliament) is reported to have suggested that the black economy amounts to as much as 75 per cent of the recorded GDP 4 .

Most of this is not – and indeed cannot be – held in the form of local currency. It is more than obvious that those who are significant recipients of such funds would speedily seek to transfer them into other assets. In India today, these are mostly land and other real estate property, gold and jewellery, benami accounts in banks, holdings of dollars and other global reserve currencies, holdings of stocks and shares through the anonymous vehicle of Participatory Notes and, most of all, sending the money abroad through various means.

Let us try to estimate what proportion of the money in circulation is black money that could be flushed out by this new measure. As noted above, estimates of the incidence of black money vary between 25 and 75 per cent of GDP. Meanwhile, we know that currency in circulation currently amounts to 12 per cent of GDP, and 86 per cent of this currency is in the form of Rs. 500 and Rs. 1000 notes.

But we also know that a significant proportion of our GDP – around half, according to current CSO estimates – is produced in the informal sector, and around 85 per cent of the population relies on it. This is unrecorded income, even though it is estimated in the GDP, but it is dominantly not “black” because incomes here are generally too small to fall into the direct tax net and are anyway subject to indirect taxes of various kinds. Indeed, the incomes of farmers (which are not taxed), the returns of small traders and micro entrepreneurs, the incomes of daily wage workers, the incomes of small service providers: all these and many more such incomes are clearly the result of what would be considered as “white” transactions even though they are not registered and reported to any fiscal authorities.

This informal economy in India is hugely, if not completely, dependent upon cash. The preponderance of the informal sector is indeed why more than 90 per cent of all transactions in India are still estimated to be in cash. It is not unreasonable to assume that anywhere between half to all of the estimated GDP of the informal sector would be in the form of cash transactions. Since estimated cash balances amount to 12 per cent of GDP, the cash equivalent of anything between 3 to 6 per cent of GDP is involved in such informal activity, which is completely legal.

This in turn suggests that a move to demonetise larger denomination notes of Rs. 500 and Rs. 1000 would be successful only to the extent that it flushes out the part of black money that is held in cash, which would then be equivalent to 2.3-5.2 per cent of GDP. In terms of the available estimates of black money, this comes to only 3.4-6.8 per cent of the NIPFP estimate of black money or 10-20 per cent of the smaller recent estimate provided by a private agency. In all these cases, the numbers suggest that only a tiny or at most a small proportion of black money (or rather, of the assets acquired through illegal or unrecorded transactions) would be captured through this move.

The impact of sudden demonetisation
Whatever little effect this measure may have to bring such black money out into the open would still be an unmitigated benefit, if the move did not simultaneously cause so much grief to innocent citizens. The fact is that the both the insensitive design and the shoddy implementation have already cause a huge amount of distress to different people in various ways, and the pain is likely to linger for some time. The rapid and sudden strike without warning meant that ordinary people had no opportunity to prepare for it. The immediate impact – in the form of drastic cash shortages leading to immense hardship especially among less privileged groups; long and tedious waiting times in queues that often prove to be fruitless because banks and ATM machines are unable to provide the required cash – all these have been widely portrayed in the media.

It is true that these are essentially temporary disruptions, which should be eased over the coming weeks. Even if that does not provide much comfort to those whose livelihoods have been adversely affected, there is the argument that this temporary pain is worth it to ensure the greater common gain of eliminating black money. As noted earlier, the latter goal is unlikely to be reached with this measure. However, some sectors like real estate are known for the fact that cash typically accounts for a substantial share of the transactions. Those engaged in this business (whether as buyers, sellers or intermediaries) who have been caught at the point when they happen to be holding large cash balances will be affected, and face substantial losses. To the extent that it curbs the tendency to demand a certain proportion of the price for a property transaction in “black”, and makes property more affordable, this is definitely a good thing.

However, there have been and will be other effects that are very damaging for the economy and especially for the groups that are already in a weaker position. It will definitely put a brake on economic activity. Indeed, the immediate dislocation, uncomfortable as it is, may even be less damaging than the medium term impact.

The biggest negative effect is the loss of liquidity for the informal economy, which has already been of massive proportions. This has led to breakdowns in payments systems and has drastically affected trading. As the chaos continues, the knock-on effects on economic activity have grown. People hoard their slender cash holdings and do not shop; this affects large and small retailers who rely on cash sales; this affects their own demand for purchase of goods in the wholesale markets; and so on. Even in megacities like Delhi, there are reports of shopkeepers simply shutting their shops because of the lack of buyers as a result of the cash squeeze, while traders in mandis have been caught with huge amounts of unsellable stock of perishable items like fruits and vegetables because of lack of cash purchasers. This has permeated down the distribution chain to the small vendors and street hawkers. This has also affected production systems, as moneylenders providing working capital to small producers are unable to provide the new notes.

The decline in trade – even if temporary – has a knock-on effect on production, and thereby generates further negative multiplier effects in the local economy. There are already reports of daily wage labourers unable to find work because employers cannot pay them with the new money and are only able to offer old notes, which are now without value.
All this is worsened by the impact that the cash shortage has on consumption, as people cut down on purchases of non-essentials and even of food and other essentials, because of the lack of liquidity with which to purchase these items. Consumption squeezes have been especially dreadful for those facing medical emergencies. Many private hospitals and clinics are not accepting old notes. Even when public hospitals do accept them, they expect the patient’s family to purchase the required medicines and materials required for operations, which in turn can only be with the new notes. Stories of individual tragedies resulting from this mess are abounding.

Of course, as always happens in capitalism, the market quickly responds to these needs, in the form of intermediaries who offer to collect the old notes and exchange them for a discount. The prevailing rates in Delhi in the days after the banks purportedly opened were at 20 per cent discount: Rs. 400 for a Rs. 500 note and Rs. 800 for a Rs. 1000 note. Similar rates were also being offered by market vendors for their goods. Those who are desperate to get hold of some cash quickly for whatever reason, or who cannot afford to lose a day’s wages for standing in the queue at the bank, are then forced to take these rates. Since the people forced to take these rates also include the poor, this amounts to an attack on their already low incomes.

In rural areas, matters may be even worse. The cash distribution systems for the new currency notes that have failed so miserably in the major metros and other towns are unlikely to be much more efficient in villages. In any case, the number of rural bank branches has declined in past years, and these branches are now few and far between. Banking activities are supposed to be conducted through ATMs and though the Banking Correspondents (BCs), most of whom have been largely dormant for a while now, and thus far these systems have proved completely inadequate to the task of ensuring the supply of new notes.
This has led to some truly difficult circumstances, which will be hard to imagine for those in the administration or ruling party who fondly believe that demonetisation will simply lead all Indians to shift to cashless transactions. Migrant workers in Delhi report that in their home village in Uttar Pradesh, which is still not electrified, kerosene remains the essential fuel for lighting and cooking. But the current cash crunch has affected villagers’ ability to buy kerosene as the local private dealer (the only one in the village) refuses to accept the old notes – so households must sit in darkness until they are somehow able to exchange their old notes for the new ones. Since the nearest bank is also some distance away and the villagers have received word that it has also not received the new currency, things are not going to improve anytime soon for them.

Farmers are in a particularly difficult condition. Across north and central India, and in many parts of the west and east as well, farmers have recently harvested the kharif crop and are now about to begin sowing the rabi crop. Many of them had saved up the cash proceeds of their kharif sales to buy inputs for the next sowing season. They need money to buy seeds and fertilisers, and to hire tractors and other equipment – and they need it now, because the agricultural season does not wait upon humans. Even a day’s delay can be critical in some cases depending upon weather conditions, but these farmers have already been waiting nearly a week. In most rural areas, the compensating delivery of coupons promised to farmers has simply not materialised, and not all of them can access public supply systems for inputs, as these too have run out of supplies. If delays caused by this policy-created cash shortage affect sowing, it would surely be farce turned to tragedy for these farmers and for agricultural output.

This particular policy move has also been shockingly gender-blind, and therefore has already had highly gendered consequences. Policy makers persist in seeing India in terms of households, not recognising that men and women can have very different requirements and relationship to banking. Around 80 per cent of women do not have access to the banking system, and even when they do, it is often in the form of joint accounts with their husbands. So saving up some money in cash hoards to guard it from husbands who would use it for drink or other such purposes, or to ensure some savings for children’s future needs, or to provide for medicines in case of illness, or even to protect themselves from abusive husbands, is a very common practice.

There are numerous stories of women who now do not know what to do with these hard-won and carefully stored notes, and who have neither the time nor the capacity and autonomy to go and stand in those endless queues to exchange the money. When the amounts add up to what may seem like a tidy sum in the context, say Rs. 50,000, the problem for the woman becomes more acute. She not only stands to lose control over the money, but even the knowledge of such a private hoard can infuriate the adult men in the house, with potentially violent consequences. Surely this is not the kind of black money that is being sought to be forced out into the open? It is extraordinary that those who introduce such a policy could have such little awareness of Indian society that they do not stop to think of such consequences.

The cashless society?
It is not as if at least some of these aspects are not known to those in the ruling party who are currently signing paeans to what they describe as this “historic move”, supposedly a game changer” in the reform process. Not so long ago, in fact in January 2014 when the United Progressive Alliance (UPA) government had tried to, the then BJP spokesperson Meenakshi Lekhi had described the move as “an attempt to obfuscate the issue of black money stashed outside the country… This measure is strongly anti-poor. The ‘aam aurats’ and the ‘aadmis’ – those who are illiterate and have no access to banking facilities will be the ones to be hit by such diversionary measures 5 .”

So what could have changed over the past three years to make BJP leaders change their tune to such an extent? They would probably suggest that this time is different because of the much greater coverage of banking services through the Jan Dhan Yojana. Indeed, the official website of the scheme notes that on July 1, 2016, 25.45 crore accounts had been opened, with only around a quarter of them with zero balance and an average of Rs. 1,780 per account. This has led to the claim that almost all households in the country are now covered by banking. But despite these claims, it is estimated that around one- third of the adult population does not have any bank account, even of the no-frills variety 6 . Others may have an account, which has been dormant ever since they were made to take it on, but the distance from and sheer difficulty of getting to the nearest bank has meant that institutional banking plays no role in their lives. They rely on intermediaries – the BCs created by the banks themselves, or local middlemen who spring up to meet these gaps. So the logistical issues involved in exchanging the old money for the new would be huge in any circumstances, not to mention the strained and overstretched conditions of today.

The RBI – which surely should know better than any of us the true state of the penetration of e-banking and digital transactions in the economy – had its own Marie Antionette moment in a press release of November 12, 2016:

“public are encouraged to switch over to alternative modes of payment, such as pre-paid cards, RuPay/Credit/Debit cards, mobile banking, internet banking. All those for whom banking accounts under Jan Dhan Yojana are opened and cards are issued are urged to put them to use. Such usage will alleviate the pressure on the physical currency and also enhance the experience of living in the digital world 7."

Statements like this make one wonder whether the RBI is living only in the digital world. Surely the worthies in that institution have some idea of the conditions under which banking and money exchange occur for most Indians? As well as some knowledge of the importance of electronic transactions in the wider world? It is worth noting that even in the U.S. currency is said to account for around 63 per cent of transactions

In fact, e-banking has been increasing in India, but the shares are still very small: cash is still estimated to account for more than 90 per cent of all transactions, and the remainder is approximately equally split between cheques and e-payments. The facile assumption that moving to e-banking is just a matter of personal choice, which appears to underlie some of these arguments, is completely mistaken.

Of course, it is desirable to move to less reliance on currency, but that cannot be done in this abrupt and coercive manner, especially when most bank accounts are still not e-enabled, when basic infrastructure for this (such as secure internet connections or even electricity) is not accessible everywhere, and where levels of education for a very large section of the population do not allow for easy e-banking. This must occur as a smooth and gradual process because of the greater ease and facility of such transactions. Disrupting currency transactions is a painful and ultimately much less effective way to push the population towards greater e-banking. It also disregards the point that this is not something people can just do at one stroke, and certainly not at this moment, when the pressures on banks are anyway so intense that they are in no condition to handle these new requests.

So what can be done to control black money?
It has been argued, with some justification, that this is a diversionary tactic, designed to draw attention away from the fact that – despite its fervent campaign promises – this government has so far done very little to deal with the problem of black money. As it happens, there is a lot it can do, relatively easily, if only it truly does have the necessary political will – and none of these measures would cause any hardship to the common people.

In terms of preventing the generation of black money, what is required is a more effective, clean and accountable tax administration that uses all the information at its disposal to go after those who are evading the law in various ways. For companies, it is possible to identify practices such as over- or under-invoicing, false transactions and attempts to use loopholes in the laws. For individuals, it is now easily possible to uncover undisclosed incomes by tracking payments and following suspiciously large purchases, and put them under scrutiny. Obviously, movement of funds abroad is a major avenue, which needs to be monitored much more closely. Indeed, this is what most countries that are known to have relatively “clean” economic systems do as regular practice, without making a great song and dance about it.

In terms of dealing with the assets held from such undisclosed incomes, this too can be easily done if the government has a mind to do so. It is not just land deals and gold and jewellery purchases that can be monitored, precisely as the government is trying to do now in the middle of this cash crunch. The completely uncalled for possibility of making buying securities through “Participatory Notes” in the stock market, which do not require the buyer to reveal his/her identity, is an obvious means of parking illicit funds. These should obviously be done away with – yet both the previous UPA government and this supposedly anti-corruption BJP government have proved to be curiously reluctant to do so.

The most obvious thing to do – and the issue that Modi continuously railed about in his electoral campaign speeches – is to go after those who have stashed away their undisclosed funds in bank accounts and other assets abroad. He had promised to “bring back” all this money, to the point that many holders of Jan Dhan accounts today still fondly believe that they will each receive around Rs. 15 lakh as their share of the returned money! Yet the Modi government has steadfastly refused even to divulge the names of such individuals, much less take any action against them. Other wilful defaulters are similarly being dealt with kid gloves. The facility with which the king of defaulters, Vijay Mallya, was allowed to leave the country makes a mockery of the subsequent official noises made against him, which are made with the full knowledge that he will not be deported back to India by the U.K.

Overall, this ill-conceived and even more poorly executed move appears to be an attempt by the government to display a lot of sound and fury, but signifying very little. It is unfortunate that in the process it has inflicted such damage on ordinary people and on the economy.

References:
1.^ Doctor, V., 2016. The cycles of demonetisation: A looks back at two similar experiments in 1946 and 1978. [Sic.] The Economic Times, November 12. Last accessed: November 14, 2016.
2.^ Ibid.
3.^ PTI, 2016. India’s black economy shrinking, pegged at 20% of GDP: Report. The Indian Express, June 5. Last accessed: November 14, 2016.
4.^ Puja, M., 2014. Black economy now amounts to 75% of GDP. The Hindu, August 4. Last accessed: November 14, 2016.
5.^ The Wire, 2016. Watch: Bad in 2014, Great in 2016 – BJP’s Flip-Flop on Currency Exchange. [Online] November 11. Last accessed: November 14, 2016.
6.^ Datta, D., 2016. In one stroke, demonetisation has shaken the trust our monetary system is based on. [Online] November 9. Last accessed: November 14, 2016.
7.^ Reserve Bank of India, 2016. Withdrawal of Legal Tender Character of ₹500 and ₹1,000: RBI Statement. November 12. [Online] Last accessed: November 14, 2016.

14 July 2016

Atal Pension Yojana: Pensions to the poor

D RAJASEKHAR, SANTOSH KESAVAN, R MANJULA
In the last two years, the Government has introduced several new programmes, some of which are variations of earlier schemes. One such is the Atal Pension Yojana (APY), which was earlier called Swavalamban Yojana NPS (NatioAnal Pension Scheme) Lite. The APY was introduced in 2015 for unorganised sector workers who do not have sufficient and reliable old age security. 
 
The scheme encourages unorganised workers to make regular small savings during their working years towards pension benefits later. This is an important policy shift away from social assistance schemes to contributory schemes. 
 
Design features
APY clearly spells out end benefits of the pension scheme. Monthly pension ranging from ₹1,000 to ₹5000 is guaranteed upon retirement if subscribers contribute the prescribed amount for at least 20 years. This is an improvement over NPS-Lite where the pension amount was uncertain. 
The Government provides co-contribution as incentive for five years to poor, unorganised workers not covered by formal social security schemes. APY is a public scheme regulated by the Pension Fund Regulatory and Development Authority (PFRDA). The key functions of record keeping, administration and customer service are performed by National Securities Depository Limited. A Permanent Retirement Account Number (PRAN) is assigned to all subscribers. 
 
The scheme is tied to the broader mission of financial inclusion under the Pradhan Mantri Jan Dhan Yojana by using banks as intermediaries for promoting, administering and extending pension benefits to low income workers. With greater emphasis on e-governance, the scheme seeks to use mobile SMS reminders/alerts, electronic KYC-based registration and online exit, withdrawal, claims settlement processes to overcome last mile challenges and simplify the experience. 
 
Official statistics show that by March 2016 the scheme had registered 371 banks (public and private sector , RRBs, cooperatives,etc), enrolled 24.60 lakh subscribers, and was managing ₹506 crore of assets. The scheme registered the highest month-on-month subscriber growth (13.55 per cent) and asset growth (26.18 per cent) among all pension schemes in March 2016. However, unorganised workers covered by it are barely 1 per cent.
 
Slow to catch on
Stringent default penalties are a major impediment. If a subscriber misses six consecutive contributions, the account is frozen, after 12 months it is deactivated and beyond 24 months the account is permanently closed. Considering that APY is meant for unorganised workers with irregular income streams, this feature reduces the scheme’s effectiveness. 
 
Limited government co-contribution: Although co-contribution has been extended to 2019-2020, this could be availed of only by those joining before March 31, 2016. Given that the coverage of the scheme is less than 1 per cent, many unorganised workers joining the scheme in future cannot access it. 
 
Poor agent incentives: Banks are asked to administer APY so that new bank accounts opened under PMJDY could be used for promoting the scheme as well as expanding financial inclusion among the economically excluded. 
 
However, this will come in the way of the rural poor accessing the scheme due to low financial inclusion and low penetration of bank branches in rural areas. Moreover, incentives to banks are considerably lower than those provided in previous schemes since incentives have to be mutually negotiated, and shared between banks and business correspondents. 
 
Lower flexibility in exit and withdrawal: The exit process is rigid as the scheme permits premature withdrawals only in the event of death of the beneficiary or her/his being afflicted by a terminal disease. Subsequently, the exit option was given to the beneficiary if she/he gave up the government’s contribution and interest earned on his/her contributions. Considering that poor unorganised workers are highly vulnerable to workplace injuries, accidents and disability, this reduces the reach of the scheme.

Suggestions for improvement

Remove account closure for defaults: In the event of sustained non-payment, there can be a system by which subscribers are no longer entitled to a fixed monthly pension on retirement as per APY but can continue making suitable contributions to the APY account at his/her discretion to get different returns. At retirement, 40 per cent of the accumulated corpus can be converted into an annuity and the rest can be offered as a lumpsum.

Encourage mobile money payments: APY hopes to leverage PMJDY’s success to expand its coverage among low income workers. However, according to the RBI, while PMJDY has increased account density among underserved communities, account usage is low with nearly 35 per cent of such bank accounts having zero balance. This calls for the deployment of low cost and flexible mobile money channels, which is a newly emerging technology, to improve last mile access to banks for the rural poor. 
 
Ease of premature exits and withdrawals: APY should provide for partial withdrawal of the corpus in an emergency after a reasonable lock-in period of 5 or 10 years. Public Provident Fund schemes have a 15-year lock-in period prior to full withdrawal and allow 50 per cent withdrawal at the end of the sixth year. APY should introduce similar flexibility.

Enhance behavioural interventions: Behavioural interventions or ‘nudges’ have of late attracted significant attention as low cost policy tools to elicit desired savings behaviour. Studies around the world show that nudges such as peer comparison, commitment devices, goal-setting calendars and personalisation are effective in overcoming self-control issues and prompting regular savings. Although APY has incorporated SMS reminders and auto-debit facility, scope for embedding behavioural interventions into the APY design still exists.

These improvements are urgently needed to improve the coverage of unorganised workers and enhance old age security among them. 

Rajasekhar is a professor and Manjula a research officer at the Centre for Decentralization and Development, Institute for Social and Economic Change, Bengaluru. Kesavan is a founding trustee of Crosslinks Foundation, Bengaluru

31 May 2016

Does financial inclusion really include?

 PAWAN BAKHSHI, ANAND PARAMESWARAN
The Pradhan Mantri Jan Dhan Yojana (PMJDY) has seen more than 218 million new bank accounts opened and over 180 million debit cards activated as of May 2016, making it a massive exercise in financial inclusion.

However, the potential of these accounts to drive regular and consistent banking habits, key to achieving universal financial inclusion, is yet to be exploited. Dormancy, despite significant reductions from about 67 per cent in January 2015, remains at about 26 per cent in May 2016. While average balance in active accounts has doubled from ₹836 to ₹1,700 in this period, it has the potential to go higher as people start using their accounts more frequently. If the PMJDY is to realise its vision, it is important that we understand the reasons for the current situation.
Low and slow 
 We undertook a study to get insights into the reasons for generally low usage of bank accounts from a behavioural science perspective. The findings of the study conducted in Punjab, Assam, Uttar Pradesh, Gujarat, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra and Tamil Nadu, open up multiple, behavioural science-informed avenues that can have a large impact on savings behaviour.

 
The PMJDY bank account user is usually poor, mostly in debt and repaying a loan. Often this loan is taken from informal sources such as moneylenders, at a very high rate of interest.

The survey found that the primary motive for people to open a bank account (encouraged by the PMJDY) was to save. Surprisingly, most poor people have the ability to ‘manufacture’ a surplus from their meagre incomes by compromising on their daily needs to repay the high interest loans. However, this ability to create surplus and the intention to save is not translating into actual savings for three major reasons.
The minus factors

Present bias: During our interactions, we observed many instances of ‘present bias’. The focus on meeting short-term goals results in a behavioural inclination towards informal financial channels with high cost of funds, where the ease of getting a loan outweighs the long-term cost of servicing the loan. People are aware of this shortcoming and try to compensate by using commitment devices, especially during an important life event for which they need to save money. When presented with choices, the respondents selected savings products that put restrictions on withdrawals and provided no additional benefits, over the ones that allowed for withdrawals. One of the respondents explained this seemingly irrational behaviour as driven by the need to “protect the money from ourselves”.

Psychological barriers: Account-holders’ mental model is that banks are meant for saving large amounts, typically in excess of ₹10,000. This means infrequent interactions with the bank and low likelihood of small savings.

Relevance: Since low-income customers are likely to be in a cycle of debt, credit is always relevant to them. However, credit is usually required to meet an immediate short-term need, so convenience and ease of access are valued. Therefore, most people do not see banks as a reliable source of credit because they perceive a high degree of uncertainty in securing a loan (cumbersome processes, time-consuming approvals, etc). Hence their preference for more traditional sources. As one respondent put it, “I don’t risk going to the bank for loans when I am certain to get the money from my moneylender.”

Given these reasons, the challenge then arises in designing products, communication, literacy initiatives and last-mile engagements so that these are relevant to the PMJDY bank account-holder for immediate use, while keeping sight of the future.
A better way

The research points to four behavioural levers that can be useful.

First, design products that bridge the gap between current and future needs. Emotionally relevant products with an artificial barrier to withdraw and with a focus on people’s future such as children’s education and marriage gives them a goalpost to bank and save. Many people tend to leave the money from government subsidies untouched for future use. Automated transfers of such subsidies to a savings account or pension account can therefore translate into savings. Banks could design product concepts that are easily understood. The overdraft facility offered by PMJDY bank accounts, for instance, is not well understood by most low-income customers. Instead the bank could design communication to inform people that they can borrow small values against monthly inflows. Similarly, given the familiarity of customers with loan repayments it might help to bundle small savings into loan repayment plans.

Second, address the psychological distance. The Reserve Bank of India encourages banks to address physical distances to branches in villages through ‘Bank Mitras’ or banking correspondents who perform basic services for customers. However, banks also need to address the psychological distance in addition to the physical distance. Besides the core product curriculum, Bank Mitras need to be given soft-skills training to engage with low-income customers and help reduce their inhibitions and intimidation of accessing a bank.

Third, recalibrate financial literacy initiatives. The shift that needs to be made is to move to ‘process literacy’ from traditional financial literacy — how one needs to (for example, save or borrow) rather than why one needs to emerges as an important finding.

Fourth, address perceptions. PMJDY has been successful in getting bank accounts to millions. However, addressing people’s perceptions, that anything from the government is free, will be key. People apply reciprocal relations when they engage with commercial financial institutions. They have to pay back to borrow again in the future. Initiatives from PMJDY should be seen as coming from the financial institution so that it is not envisaged as free money.

Banking and saving can lead to healthier and productive lives for those coming into formal banking channels, provided these initiatives are aligned to the context of the customer. The good news is that we have some answers to the problems. It is all about matching the offerings with the goals, aspirations and anxieties of this audience.

(Bakhshi is Senior Program Officer, Financial Services for the Poor, Bill 
and Melinda Gates Foundation; Parameswaran is Co-Founder, Finalmile
Consulting)

29 May 2016

The mirage of inclusive growth

Deepanshu Mohan
In the age we live in, the process of securing a persistent rate of higher economic growth is considered to be the ultimate means of achieving prosperity for all. Economists and policymakers insouciantly use the word ‘inclusive growth’ in penning down the objectives and rationale for every policy and reform measure.

It becomes pertinent thus to explore the underlying neo-liberalist idea of inclusive growth that fails to apply in evidence to the developing world context (specifically to India in South Asia).

The idea of inclusive growth has shaped our understanding of growth since the mid-1960s. The process of achieving such growth encompasses an inclusion of all sections as beneficiaries and partners in growth, and envisages that an inclusion of the excluded should be embedded in the growth process.

Such growth, as expected, by itself will then lead to a high elasticity of poverty reduction (higher reduction of poverty in per unit of growth), also reducing income inequalities at individual and group levels. 

Curve of inequality
Simon Kuznets (1966) explained how inequalities do not last for long. According to Kuznets, ‘Economic inequality increases over time while a country starts developing; however, after a certain average income is attained, inequality becomes to decrease’.

The curve of inequality — the Kuznets curve — is inversely U-shaped, where inequalities tend to decline after a point because of two reasons: Firstly, with higher economic growth, the tax revenue of governments is likely to increase, enabling them to spend more on infrastructural development, education, healthcare and skill development; particularly in backward areas where the need of such social investment is felt more, in improving opportunities for people lacking the capital to grow.

And secondly, after the initial period of economic growth and boom, the stated expectation of neo-liberal advocates is that it will trickle down to people, by creating more jobs and incomes for many.

Jagdish Bhagwati cites the need of ‘Track II’ reforms in developing countries where he calls for the government to massively spend the economic benefits from liberalising markers on healthcare, education, etc. for the initial growth to trickle down and achieve the principles of equity and sustainability.

 It just widens
In a her 2012 paper, Indira Hirway provides some useful empirical evidence from South Asia to debunk myths attached to ‘inclusive’ theoretical application of neo-liberalist version of economic growth. Hirway explains how, in spite of the adoption of pro-market policies in most South Asian countries, the level of income inequalities continue to widen.

Out of the 14 Asian countries studied, inequality has increased in 11 — including Sri Lanka, China, Cambodia, India, Indonesia and Nepal. Malaysia and Thailand were the only two countries where inequalities decreased at the margin. In the case of India, the Gini coefficient (a measure of income inequality) rose from 0.44 to 0.47 during the last decade.

The issue with the Indian case has primarily been with the implementation of Track II reforms where, in spite of higher, sustained economic growth levels from early 2000s, public spending on education and healthcare has remained drastically low (less than 3 per cent and 2 per cent of the GDP, respectively, till now). This has resulted in the accumulation of economic wealth in limited geographical city centres where economic prosperity is enjoyed by the few who directly accrue the benefits, leaving ‘the others’ entirely dependent on the government. Upward income mobility within these lower income classes remains an issue due to the lack of adequate education, health standards and access to increasing productive job opportunities.

In the field of employment and labour, scholars indicate a poor performance in generating productive employment with ‘decent work’ conditions. In India, the unemployment rate increased from 1.96 per cent in 1993-94 to 2.2 per cent in 1999-2000, to 2.37 per cent in 2004-05 and to 2.06 per cent in 2009-10.

Though different reasons are cited for explaining this increase by economists, trends show the rate of growth of employment including the rate of growth of ‘decent work’ has been far from satisfactory.

This is not just true in the case of India but other developing economies as well. According to the ILO, during 1995-2006, open unemployment grew by 22 per cent, pegging the global unemployment rate at 6.3 per cent. While the output growth rate was much higher than job growth, it is appalling how the obsession with production as the ultimate factor of inclusive and consistent growth still wheels the imagination of our policymakers.

Need an alternative
A major limitation of the theory underlying the neoliberal policy framework is that it leaves two important macro-economic components outside its purview — natural resources or natural capital, and unpaid work or work that is outside the production boundary but within the general production boundary of the UN System of National Accounts. Both these exclusions are associated with the excluded sections of population, relevant for developing economies.

So, there is a strong need for policymakers in India and across the developing world to give a fresh look at the macroeconomic framework underlying the present policies. It is critical to end the tug of war between the growth and the redistribution phases as there is a clear lacuna between these two.

The mainstream growth process that creates exclusion as well as inequalities tends to overpower the redistribution process and intensifies exclusion in the process. As supported by Hirway, ‘both the growth phase and the redistribution phase should be complimentary to each other for the mainstream growth process to be inclusive’.

For this, first, the macroeconomic policy framework warrants a radical change, where we need a vision shift in moving from short term focus goals to a more long-term focus.

It is also important that growth in developing economies continues to remain more labour-intensive and broad-based, as a generation of production employment opportunities on a large scale is perhaps the best way for including the excluded and marginalized sections of the population. This can be achieved by investing more in the development of small and medium-scale enterprises and providing an easier line of credit to their development.

Secondly, it is critical to adopt a rights-based approach accepting the citizenship’s rights of people. Provision of education, healthcare, basic infrastructural needs are part of the basic rights of every citizen. A persistent increase in social investments such as education and healthcare are attached with long-term benefits and are part of a macro strategy for improving productivity of workers and for enhancing aggregate effective demand in the economy.

It would, therefore, be useful for developing economies to think afresh on the theoretical applications of existing neo-liberalist policies that somewhere have failed to include the excluded and in the process modify the theoretical basis of such policies to indigenize them more suitably with a longer term focus.
(The writer is executive director of Centre for International Economic Studies at OP Jindal Global University)