Every nation’s economic output moves up or down along a long-term trend, fluctuating in accordance with seasonal patterns, business and financial cycles and random shocks.
In addition to those variables, the growth of India’s GDP now depends crucially on which party was in power when the activity occurred – and under which party it was measured.
Disagreeing about the future is for people on opposite sides of the Brexit debate. New Delhi’s favourite pastime is quarreling about the past. That’s why, when statistics on historical GDP under a new base year were released after almost four years without an official back series, the first thing analysts noticed was that Niti Aayog – a think tank set up by Prime Minister Narendra Modi – joined the statistics office in presenting the data and in defending the numbers later. Since the medium is the message, the figures became immediately political.
With months to go before the next general election, the opposition Congress Party was predictably incensed that the new series downgraded its stewardship of the economy between fiscal 2006 and 2014.
The average 7.35 percent GDP growth rate delivered by Modi in the last four years now trumps the 6.7 percent pace of the preceding nine. And this is despite his overnight ban on 86 percent of the currency in circulation and a tax change that was badly botched.
The annual earnings growth of 500 of India’s biggest companies averaged 11 percent between 2006 and 2014, plunging to half that rate in the four years under Modi. That, in itself, is no reason to doubt the new national accounts. Using a different database, State Bank of India Chief Economist Soumya Kanti Ghosh concluded that GDP expansion in India is now coming less from earnings and more from rising employee costs. In other words, India is becoming what Marxist economists call a wage-led economy as opposed to a profit-dominated one.
That interpretation isn’t wholly satisfactory. For one thing, India’s agrarian distress is not fake news. Private investment wouldn’t be so stubbornly lackluster if growth in recent years had been averaging higher than in the past. Balance sheets, which are weak for both corporate borrowers and lenders, would be getting repaired faster.
In fact, if you taper down the previous government’s economic performance, then Niti Aayog’s own condemnation of the pre-2011 period for its “untenable fiscal deficit and reckless expansion of commercial bank credit which was surely unsustainable†loses its sting.
Some of the databases the government is using for its improved GDP calculations didn’t exist back then. If these technical difficulties weren’t challenging enough, investors and analysts now must reckon with the politicisation of data at the very time that they contend with a deteriorating relationship between the finance
ministry and the central bank.
If the government was hoping to silence critics of the new GDP methodology, having Niti cheerlead the back series risks having the opposite effect. The biggest casualty of all this obfuscation is the important question of where exactly India’s potential growth rate lies.
— Bloomberg
Andy Mukherjee is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering industrial companies and financial services. He previously was a columnist for Reuters Breakingviews. He has also worked for the Straits Times, ET NOW and Bloomberg News.