https://scroll.in/article/825566/a-year-of-outrageous-lies-from-economic-growth-to-job-creation-to-demonetisation

NOTE DEMONETISATION

A year of outrageous lies: From economic growth to job creation to
demonetisation
Prime Minister Narendra Modi has embarked on creating his own facts.

Dec 31, 2016 · 08:00 am
Updated Dec 31, 2016 · 05:50 pm

Mohan Guruswamy

On Thursday, I heard the spokesman for the Bharatiya Janata Party,
Sambit Patra, blithely claim that when the National Democratic
Alliance government of Atal Behari Vajpayee demitted office in 2004,
gross domestic product was growing at 8.4%, and when the United
Progressive Alliance regime under Manmohan Singh lost the elections in
2014, this growth was down to 4.8%. He made an attempt to wring some
humour out of the reversal of growth figures, which would have been
quite neat but for the fact that it is an outright lie.

The fact is that the Vajpayee government had an average GDP growth
rate of 6.1% while Singh’s first tenure saw an average growth of 9.4%
and his second tenure 7.4%. It was in the final year of Singh’s second
term that growth did drop to 4.7%. But let us not forget that the
Narendra Modi government tweaked the calculation of gross domestic
product growth in 2015 to add 2.2% to it. Applying this methodology to
the previous years, we get a growth rate of 6.9% for Singh’s last year
in power, a figure higher than Modi’s first two years.

In March, speaking at the Bloomberg India Economic Forum at New
Delhi’s Maurya hotel, Prime Minister Narendra Modi said: “India’s
economic success is the hard-won result of prudence, sound policy and
effective management.” It seems there is a little more than that.

Take GDP growth for instance. Few argue that the real growth is 7.4%,
as his government claims, though there have been serious misgivings
about how the calculations were tweaked to add a jump of a further
2.2% to the growth. The problem here is the use of the term real. In
the real world, the number that matters is the nominal GDP growth
rate, which is a measure of current market prices.

For much of the past decade, India’s nominal GDP growth was in the
10%-15% range and corporate profitability growth was also in that
range. Since inflation used to be in the 4%-8% range, real GDP was in
the 6%-9% range. The present nominal GDP growth is 5.2%, and instead
of inflation we have a deflation of 2.2%, giving us a real GDP growth
of 7.4%.

But India’s crisis is not that of inadequate GDP growth. We have been
doing well, irrespective of regime, for the past decade and a half
because we are on a demographic pathway that automatically confers
growth. This is the much talked about demographic dividend that has
created a huge working age cohort with a relatively low-dependency
ratio – which means, the number of people who work and the number of
people, such as children and the elderly, who are dependent.

But prime ministers and political parties like to appropriate this
because, otherwise, they have done little to make the economy more
efficient and expand it enough to generate jobs and create a labour
demand that will push up wages. The Modi government has failed
abysmally to create new jobs. While growth has been smart, investment
has lagged behind and jobs are just not being created.

Where are the jobs?
Instead of accepting this as a fact, the prime minister has typically
embarked on creating his own facts. He often refers to his flagship
job creation programme, the Pradhan Mantri Mudra Yojana. The Mudra, or
Micro Units Development and Refinance Agency, claims it has disbursed
3.2 crore loans amounting to Rs 1.4 lakh crores. The prime minister
then makes the rather far-fetched assumption that every such loan
would have created at least one job each. Thus, he gets an astounding
figure of 32 million jobs created by just Mudra alone. These loans
range from a few thousand rupees to as much as Rs 10 lakhs. But at
least 60% of these are in the sub-Rs 50,000 category – small loans
that are used for trade and micro manufacturing.

But where does most of this money go? According to bank officials,
loans have mostly been given for purchasing vehicles for goods and
personal transport, starting or expanding saloons, beauty parlours,
gymnasiums, boutiques and tailoring shops, among others. All
investments incapable of creating many new jobs. But the prime
minister thinks or wants us to believe that all is hunky dory. Maybe
because Gujarat gets the highest average in small loans – over Rs
55,000 each? The next average loan size is in Maharashtra at Rs
37,000. Can anybody other than the nation’s prime minister believe
that this would have created 32 million jobs?

Then came the big self-goal – demonetisation, an act that sucked out
86.4% of the cash in the market. He gave three reasons for doing this.
He said he was ridding the nation of black money, counterfeit currency
and terror financing. He is going to speak to the nation on Saturday,
and I am pretty sure he will, ala George W Bush, announce “mission
accomplished”. I, however, believe that like the Americans are still
in a highly fractured and fractious Iraq more than a decade after that
announcement of a victorious conclusion to an inglorious invasion, the
government will still be fighting these scourges for a very long time.
The reason is that the deed was not as much meant to do a job but to
score brownie points with a disenchanted nation and to regain lost
support.

Carpet-bombing the economy
But like in the Panchatantra tale of the pet monkey who cut of his
royal master’s nose to rid him of a pesky fly, the prime minister’s
“surgical strike” on black money has devastated the economy. Now look
at the scale of damage caused. India has a workforce of close to 450
million. Of this, only 7% are in the organised sector. Out of these 31
million, about 24 million are employed by the state or state-owned
enterprises. And of the vast reservoir of over 415 million employed in
the unorganised sector, about half are engaged in the farm sector,
another 10% each in construction, and small-scale manufacture and
retail. These are mostly daily-wage workers earning less than the
officially decreed minimum wages. At least 220 million daily workers
have lost their jobs. The sectors hit hardest are farm and
construction labour, who have each lost between 30 million and 40
million jobs. When you render such gigantic numbers jobless, you
devastate the economy.

Tens of lakhs of small farmers, particularly vegetable and fruit
growers, have lost standing crops due to fall in demand. These farmers
are predicted to suffer a slowdown of growth from 20.6% to 8.8%. This
covers almost 70% of the farm sector. About 20 million small retailers
are also expected to suffer consequential losses because of a sudden
fall in demand.

Some facts are already in hand. Two-wheelers are the bellwether of the
rural economy. The market grew 16% in April-October to 11.3 million
units. That growth fell 6% in November to 1.3 million units and the
industry expects it to fall by a huge 35% in December to its lowest
level in six years.

More than 80% of our electronic point of sale terminals are in urban
areas. The decline in two-wheeler sales in November came even as the
amount spent at these digital payment devices grew consistently from
Rs 33,230 crores in January to Rs 51,116 crores in October. The
average spend declined from Rs 2,229 to Rs 1,714 in November. In
December (until December 13, 2016), card spend on point of sale
machines remained muted and amounted to Rs 18,130 crores. Clearly, the
surgical strike was in fact a carpet-bombing of the economy.


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Peace Is Doable

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