[In the meanwhile, Shramik Special Trains are doing unannounced Bharat
Bhraman without food and water!
(Watch: <https://youtu.be/QqwbNFSgr1w.)
Further underlining how the poor are being treated like dirt.

<<The Modi government announced a Rs 20 lakh crore stimulus package over
five days in May this year to ameliorate the economic devastation caused by
India’s punitive and unplanned coronavirus lockdown. At 10% of India’s GDP,
the Aatma Nirbhar economic package was billed as one of the largest in the
world. Yet, the opposition Congress Party says the stimulus in terms of
actual additional government spending could be as little as between 1.6% to
0.91% of the GDP.

Global Securities research firm Sanford Bernstein, which put the fiscal
spending at 0.9% of the GDP, described the economic stimulus as “aimless,”
“with several generic announcements which should ideally have been a part
of a normal economic agenda.”

R. Ramakumar, an economics professor at the Tata Institute of Social
Sciences in Mumbai, told Huffpost India that his calculations suggested
actual additional government spending would be 1.5 to 2 lakh crores, or
0.87% of the GDP.

“Given that the whole world is announcing government packages, the
government of India wants to make it look like it has announced a huge
package,” Ramakumar said. “The reality is that this package is
extraordinarily insignificant in magnitude, and does not take into account
the acuteness of the crisis that we are in the moment. Its impact on the
economy is going to be insignificant."
...
Here are seven key reasons why the Modi government’s economic relief
measures since March have left many unimpressed.>>]

https://www.huffingtonpost.in/entry/modi-government-coronavirus-economic-relief-packag_in_5ecdd65fc5b6d40c1d55659b?ncid=other_facebook_eucluwzme5k&utm_campaign=share_facebook&fbclid=IwAR3rEU5F9akmt7kikZeKaUiim5borFLqsp6DEimcIJaQIPMIpwFoF2RWjCM

7 Big Little Lies Of The Modi Government’s Coronavirus Economic Relief
HuffPost India spoke to experts and read the fine print to find the Modi
government has failed to put its money where its mouth is.

By Betwa Sharma

A youth watches Prime Minister Narendra Modi's address to the nation on his
mobile phone in Siliguri,...
DIPTENDU DUTTA VIA GETTY IMAGES

A youth watches Prime Minister Narendra Modi's address to the nation on his
mobile phone in Siliguri, West Bengal on 12 May, 2020.

NEW DELHI — The Narendra Modi government’s much-touted Aatma Nirbhar, or
self-reliance, economic stimulus appears to be a rehashing of previously
announced schemes, with very little additional spending, that is unlikely
to prop up the faltering national economy, a close read of the package and
interviews with economists reveal.

The Modi government announced a Rs 20 lakh crore stimulus package over five
days in May this year to ameliorate the economic devastation caused by
India’s punitive and unplanned coronavirus lockdown. At 10% of India’s GDP,
the Aatma Nirbhar economic package was billed as one of the largest in the
world. Yet, the opposition Congress Party says the stimulus in terms of
actual additional government spending could be as little as between 1.6% to
0.91% of the GDP.

Global Securities research firm Sanford Bernstein, which put the fiscal
spending at 0.9% of the GDP, described the economic stimulus as “aimless,”
“with several generic announcements which should ideally have been a part
of a normal economic agenda.”

R. Ramakumar, an economics professor at the Tata Institute of Social
Sciences in Mumbai, told Huffpost India that his calculations suggested
actual additional government spending would be 1.5 to 2 lakh crores, or
0.87% of the GDP.

“Given that the whole world is announcing government packages, the
government of India wants to make it look like it has announced a huge
package,” Ramakumar said. “The reality is that this package is
extraordinarily insignificant in magnitude, and does not take into account
the acuteness of the crisis that we are in the moment. Its impact on the
economy is going to be insignificant.”

Ramakumar said this was a time when the government should be transferring
money to vulnerable workers, farmers, and the urban and landless poor; but
“the government is holding on to its purse and it is not opening it up.”

Ramakumar said this could be because the government was reluctant to run a
higher fiscal deficit.

“There is an ideological opposition in the economic thinking  within the
government that higher fiscal deficit is bad for the economy primarily
because it will scare away foreign investors who come to India,” he said.
Other countries however, “have temporarily kept aside such concerns and
gone into increasingly fiscal deficits.”

Here are seven key reasons why the Modi government’s economic relief
measures since March have left many unimpressed.

The reality is that this package is extraordinarily insignificant in
magnitude...

*Pradhan Mantri Matsya Sampada Yojna*
One part of Rs 20 lakh crore Aatma Nirbhar package, Finance Minister
Nirmala Sitharaman announced Rs 20,000 crores for the Pradhan Mantri Matsya
Sampada Yojna to“integrate, sustainable, inclusive development of marine
and inland fisheries to plug critical gaps in fisheries value chain,” and
to provide employment to over 55 lakh persons and double exports to Rs. 1
lakh crore.

However, this scheme was first announced in July 2019 and approved in
January 2020, well before the coronavirus pandemic struck India.

Sitharaman announced the scheme in 2019 Budget in July, and the Expenditure
Finance Committee in January 2020 approved the PMMSY at a total cost of  Rs
20,050.00 crores comprising a central government share of Rs 9,407 crores,
a state share of Rs 4,880.00 crores and beneficiary share of Rs 5,763
crores for its implementation for a period of five years with effect from
2020-21 to 2024-25. This was exactly the same scheme approved by Cabinet on
20 May following Sitharaman’s announcement.

Anil Tharayath Varghese from the secretariat of the National Fishermen
Forum said the beneficiary share suggested this was an “investment-based
scheme,” and in no way constituted coronavirus relief.

“All they are saying is that this is a scheme for five years, and once you
start fishing, you can take a loan. But people have not done fishing for
the last two months. What about their relief?” he said. “There is no
component for Covid-19. There is nothing here that says that we will give
you financial assistance.”

*National Animal Disease Control Program*
As part of the Aatma Nirbhar package, Sitharaman announced Rs 13,343 crores
for the National Animal Disease Control Program aimed at vaccinating
India’s cattle, buffaloes, sheep, goats and pigs.  The same scheme was
approved by the Cabinet in May, 2019 and launched by Prime Minister
Narendra Modi in September that year.

*Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises*
As part of the Aatma Nirbhar package, Sitharaman announced funding of Rs 3
lakh crores to Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSMES) to guarantee
loans from the National Credit Guarantee Trustee Company Limited, a
Delhi-based private limited company, and the Pradhan Mantri Mudra Yojana
that provides loans up to Rs 10 lakh, through a guaranteed emergency credit
line facility. The government also announced 20% extra working capital for
businesses with an outstanding debt of up to Rs 25 crore and sales of up to
Rs 100 crores.

There was, however, no fiscal spending to tide over the MSMES that were
shuttered in the lockdown.

A week before the Modi government announced the economic stimulus package,
former Finance Secretary Subhash Chandra Garg wrote that 10 of the 15 crore
workers employed in eight crore MSMES are without a job, and paying  50% of
their normal wage for the period of the shutdown (capping it at Rs 10,000)
would only cost the government Rs 1 lakh crores. A second package of 1 lakh
crore, Garg wrote, should be extended to eight crore MSMES to cover for
part of their fixed costs.

Extending additional credit support through banks, Garg tells HuffPost
India does not help MSMES because only about 45 to 50 lakh have some credit
with the bank, which leaves out the bulk of the eight crore enterprises.

“They suffered income loss, turn over loss and massive unemployment loss.
Their backs are literally broken,” said Garg. “I refuse to call it a
stimulus package because they don’t need stimuli to grow further, they need
support to survive and revive. The package that has come is unfortunately
not a support package.”

On the 20% additional loans guaranteed by the government, Garg said the
MSMES loan growth has only been 4% to 5% in the past few years, which makes
increasing to 20% a challenge. Garg also said that 10% to 15% of MSMES have
large non performing loans that considerably reduces their chances of
getting additional credits from banks.

The Reserve Bank of India has since March cut the repo rate at which banks
borrow twice (now at an all time low of 4%), to make it easier to give out
more loans, but this has not led to higher lending — a trend that was
persisting even before the coronavirus pandemic due to slower economic
growth and mounting bad loans.

“The package does not seem to be addressing the core need of the MSMEs to
get some support for the losses they have suffered so that they restart
their business now that the lockdown has been largely lifted,” said Garg.

I refuse to call it a stimulus package...

*Agriculture Infrastructure Fund*
As part of the Aatma Nirbhar package, Sitharaman had announced that a 1
lakh crore Agriculture Infrastructure Fund would be created for small and
marginal farmers, and financed by the National Bank for Agriculture and
Rural Development (NABARD). Ramakumar, who teaches economics at TISS, said
there was no additional spending on part of the government, and NABARD
would have to borrow the money from the market.

“It is not actually money spent by the government,” he said. “If you wanted
to address the concerns in agriculture, you should have thought of
increasing the cash transfers to farmers through a scheme like PM Kisan. If
you wanted to address the concern of workers, you should have thought of a
new cash transfer scheme for them at least or universalizing the Public
Distribution System.”

*Pradhan Mantri Kisan Samman Nidhi Yojna*
As part of the Rs 1.7 lakh crore Garib Kalyan package unveiled in March,
the Modi government had announced a payout of Rs 2,000 each to more than
eight crore farmers under the PM Kisan Yojna. Reported by sections of the
media as a “big relief” for farmers, the government had only fast tracked
the first instalment of Rs 2,000 of a total of Rs 6,000 due to landholding
farmers covered under the scheme every year. The money under this scheme,
launched in February 2019, is meant to provide income support for
landholding farmer families to meet their agricultural as well as domestic
needs.

Jean Dreze, an economist and activist, and visiting professor at Ranchi
University, toldHuffPost India, “For years there has been a pattern of
creative accounting to reduce social expenditure, and this is visible again
in the critical relief package.”

*MGNREGA wages*
The Modi government in March had announced a hike of Rs 20 in wages given
under the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme
(MGNREGA), increasing the national average wage under the scheme from Rs
182 per person per day to Rs 202. This increase was a routine revision that
is done twice a year by the Chief Labour Commissioner and calculated as per
the Consumer Price Index for Agricultural Labourers.

2020-2021 marked an 11% rise in the average wage rate, significantly higher
than the 1.6% in 2019-2020, the highest since the 7% increase in 2015-16,
but still 40% to 50% less than the state-notified minimum wages paid to
unskilled agricultural workers. Labour rights activists also questioned how
a rise in MGNREGA wages in the middle of a coronavirus lockdown would help
rural families given that there was no work to be found and they too were
under the lockdown.

Reetika Khera, an economics professor at the Indian Institute of
Management, Ahmedabad, said the month of April had seen the least work
generated in the past five years under MGNREGA, a program that guarantees
100 days of work in a year for rural families.

Sitharaman announced funding of Rs 40,000 crores for MGNREGA  in May, in
addition to the Rs 61,500 announced in the Union Budget 2020-2021.

Khera has pointed out that Rs 11,000 of the Rs 61,500 announced in the
budget was payment of pending arrears.

*State Disaster Response Mitigation Fund (SDRMF)*
The Modi government while releasing Rs 11,092 crores to the State Disaster
Response Mitigation Fund of 28 states on 3 April called on them to use it
for combating the coronavirus. A letter from the Disaster Management
Division from the Ministry of Home Affairs to the Chief Secretaries all
states said the money should be used for quarantine measures, sample
collection, screening, and procurement of essential items and laboratories
for response to Covid-19.

Funds under the SDRMF are released every year in two instalments for state
governments for responding to natural disasters. The Union Government
contributes 75% of funds for general category states and 90% for special
category states (Northeast states, Sikkim, Uttarakhand and Himachal
Pradesh), and the rest of the money comes from the state government.

The funds for each state released in the first allotment were calculated by
the 15th Finance Commission in November, 2019, months before the
coronavirus cases were reported in India, and its report tabled in
Parliament in February. But no additional money specifically for tackling
the coronavirus was released in the first allotment.

The Commission says that it arrived at the final allotment for each state
by weighing area, population and risk profile, with Maharashtra getting the
most at Rs 4,296 crores and Rs 1,1611 crores in the first allotment
 followed at a distant second by Uttar Pradesh with Rs 2,578 and Rs 966.50.

Data scientist Nilakantan R.S. has pointed out that this allotment does not
correspond to how the coronavirus disaster is playing out in different
states in the country.

While Maharashtra has the highest number of coronavirus cases, the next
worst-hit states ― Tamil Nadu and Gujarat ― only got half as much relief
funds (Rs 510 crores and Rs 662 crores) in the first allotment.

The Fifteenth Finance Commission formula was not designed for the
coronavirus pandemic situation, and the vulnerability of states in the face
of a public health emergency does not correspond with the disaster risk
index, said Himanshu Upadhyay, who teaches development at the
Bengaluru-based Azim Premji University. “So, when you use a formula which
was not designed for the crisis situation, you will naturally be generating
a fiscal prudence disaster,” he said.
-- 
Peace Is Doable

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