[I have told this story before. I will say it again as its aptness to
describe our leadership style has never been so exact. The Russians
have a great joke on every misfortune they have to endure. One of the
best I have heard is about Lenin, Stalin, Khrushchev and Brezhnev
traveling together on a train when it unexpectedly stops. Then come
suggestions to fix the problem. Lenin suggests a subbotnik or day of
voluntary labour so that workers and peasants can fix the problem.
Nothing happens. Stalin puts his head out of the window and shouts
that if the train does not move immediately, the engine driver will be
shot. Nothing happens. Khrushchev then suggests having the rails from
behind put in front so that the train can start moving. Nothing
happens. When his turn comes, Brezhnev says, “Comrades, let’s draw the
curtains, turn on the gramophone and pretend we are moving!” There is
a similar air of eyes shut make believe in this government’s
persistent euphoria on the economic front.]

https://scroll.in/article/839496/this-old-russian-joke-helps-explain-the-government-spin-on-demonetisation-and-falling-gdp-numbers

OPINION

This Russian joke helps explain the persistent government euphoria on
the economic front
The demonetisation effect is visible in the falling GDP numbers. But
the government says all is well.

4 hours ago

Mohan Guruswamy

In January, no sooner was the demonetisation period officially over,
Chief Statistician TCA Anant told us, “The growth in GDP [gross
domestic product] during 2016-’17 is estimated at 7.1% as compared to
the growth rate of 7.6% in 2015-’16.” He also said the economy had
weathered the volatility caused by the withdrawal of high-value bank
notes in November and that it was now back on the growth trajectory.
Immediately, the full official caboodle, from the prime minister
downwards to the patently ignorant party spokespersons, went to town
and said the ill-effects, if any, of demonetisation were a passing
blip and all was well.

What they did not say was that the data on hand was till November
2016, before that singular act of great stupidity was inflicted on the
nation. This is typical of how this government uses and misuses data
to create the illusion of wellbeing. It is now known that
demonetisation cost us much more. India’s GDP growth for the last
quarter of 2016-’17 financial year is officially pegged at 6.1%. It’s
a huge fall from the 7.8% claimed for the previous year. Mind you, the
2015-’16 growth factors in a deflation of 1.4%, which means the
nominal GDP growth was only 6.4%. In the real world, it is nominal GDP
that is more important as value addition, profits and taxes are
computed as they are without adjusting for inflation or deflation.

Demonetisation was supposed to be the great big magic wand to clean up
the economy, elevate revenues and put us on a higher growth
trajectory. None of this happened or is happening. Cash transactions
are once again the norm. According to Reserve Bank of India data, the
number of digital transactions increased by 100 million to 200 million
in 2014-’16. This went up to 300 million till November. During the
months of November and December, when 86% of the cash in the system
was withdrawn, the number of digital transactions shot up to well over
500 million. In the first three months since currency curbs were
withdrawn, the number of digital transactions fell to 350 million.
This downward trajectory suggests that such transactions will hit
pre-demonetisation levels soon. Tax revenue mostly went up because of
additional tax collections on Seventh Pay Commission back dues.

GDP data
Gross domestic product growth is like a number on the speedometer in a
car. It tells us what pace the nation’s economic train is moving at.
By knowing this, we can estimate the distance to the next destination.
But suppose somebody tinkered with the speedometer to get a higher
reading even when at zero? Even when the vehicle is not moving, the
meter will tell you it is moving, and when it is moving it will tell
you it is moving faster than it actually is.

This is what the Narendra Modi regime did in February 2015. The GDP
growth rate was tweaked to put India on a higher trajectory, giving
itself an added 2.2% growth as a bonus. Since it was not real, it was
like adding water to milk. Adding this gave us a growth of 7.4% in
2015-’16. Without the tweaking, it would have been 5.2%, in line with
the International Monetary Fund’s forecast. If the Manmohan Singh-led
United Progressive Alliance government had done it a year earlier, the
growth in its last year in office would have been a healthy looking
6.9% instead of the dismal 4.7% computed.

Tweaked speed on the speedometer gets caught out when speed and time
cannot be reconciled with the distance travelled, and things like fuel
consumption. The lack of new jobs, just 210,000 in the organised
sector last year, and the falling investment to GDP ratio are some
giveaways pointing to a lower speed. But the cacophony of lies
orchestrated every day in the media, particularly television, tries to
drown out the reality. But like the mismatched readings on the
speedometer and odometer (which measures the distance traveled by a
wheeled vehicle), the truth cannot be hidden for long. The 2016-’17
GDP for the fourth quarter is now officially fixed at 6.1%. Take out
the 2.2% and it is actually moving at 3.9%, or around 1% below that in
the last year of the Congress-led United Progressive Alliance, which
had left us so despondent that 31% of the country had taken the
economic prognostications of Narendra Modi and Baba Ramdev seriously
to give the National Democratic Alliance a mandate to take us out of
the morass.

Make-believe euphoria?
Several well-regarded economists have questioned the data the Finance
Ministry and the Central Statistics Office are churning out. Derek
Scissors of the American Enterprise Institute, who tracks the Chinese
and Indian economies, equates the two when it comes to fudging data.
In March, Scissors wrote, “Most people from pluralist open societies
want to see pluralist, open India do well. For now, however, India has
the same level of economic credibility as a country like Vietnam,
which publishes GDP results even before the year ends! World-beating
growth? Maybe. Or maybe poorly founded quasi-propaganda.” Even
Raghuram Rajan, as the Reserve Bank of India governor, had expressed
concern about GDP data collection and analysis.

True or false, the figures put out by the government reveal an even
more worrisome trend. While GDP growth has slowed to 6.1%, public
administration and defence have grown by 17%. These two heads are
classified as part of the services sector. They account for about 15%
of services, which, in turn, accounts for almost 60% of the GDP.
Announcing acceptance of the Seventh Pay Commission’s recommendation
of an across-the-board salary hike of 23%, Finance Minister Arun
Jaitely said that it will boost demand. Didar Singh, secretary general
of the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry, said,
“The pay hike of nearly Rs 1 lakh crore for government employees will
give a strong boost to the consumer demand and help uplift the growth
of the economy.” Clearly, spending ever more on its employees is seen
by this dispensation as a Keynesian pump priming of the economy (using
government tax and spending to boost the economy). So what is
happening here?

I have told this story before. I will say it again as its aptness to
describe our leadership style has never been so exact. The Russians
have a great joke on every misfortune they have to endure. One of the
best I have heard is about Lenin, Stalin, Khrushchev and Brezhnev
traveling together on a train when it unexpectedly stops. Then come
suggestions to fix the problem. Lenin suggests a subbotnik or day of
voluntary labour so that workers and peasants can fix the problem.
Nothing happens. Stalin puts his head out of the window and shouts
that if the train does not move immediately, the engine driver will be
shot. Nothing happens. Khrushchev then suggests having the rails from
behind put in front so that the train can start moving. Nothing
happens. When his turn comes, Brezhnev says, “Comrades, let’s draw the
curtains, turn on the gramophone and pretend we are moving!” There is
a similar air of eyes shut make believe in this government’s
persistent euphoria on the economic front.



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Peace Is Doable

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