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Hopes of an agricultural growth-led economic recovery may
not fructify
P
Vinod Kumar
WITH the rain gods smiling yet again, hopes
of an economic recovery led by agriculture growth is fast
gaining currency among the country’s think-tank. A 6.3 per
cent growth in gross domestic product (GDP), led by an impressive
9 per cent growth in agricultural output is just one of the
forecasts made recently by the Centre for Monitoring Indian
Economy (CMIE).
The reasoning behind such optimism is that
a good monsoon always leads to a bumper crop which translates
into higher rural income, demand and employment. This would
help industry shrug off its sluggishness in two ways: one,
the derived or indirect demand emanating from the agriculture
sector would see the manufacturing sector’s prospects looking
up. Two, a higher rural income would perk up demand for consumer
durables. The net effect: the economy will wake up from its
slumber and scale new heights.
Indeed, higher rural demand is a necessary
condition to perk up economic growth in a predominantly agrarian
economy like India. This is evident from the fact that though
the sectoral contribution of agriculture is only 28 per cent
of GDP, about 70 per cent of the population still depends
on it for livelihood.
But the optimistic projections of the economy
riding high on a robust growth in agriculture is likely to
go haywire if figures trickling in are anything to go by.
For one, prices of farm produce may go further southward,
which would see the causality behind the assumptions turning
the other way around. To use jargon, the economy may well
enter the textbook ‘vicious cycle of poverty’—lower income,
lower demand, lower output and lower employment with a lag
effect, if prices of farm produce soften further.
Whether the economy is in the twilight
of recession or slowdown is one thing that the empiricists
among economists have to sort out. Initial data suggests a
6 per cent plus GDP growth, leave alone the more optimistic
8.5 per cent forecast led by an upswing in farm growth. This
may turn out to be a damp squib if one does a little number
crunching.
The latest CMIE figures show that the wholesale
price index (WPI) of primary articles has been showing signs
of fatigue with the index moving up a modest 3.1 per cent
on a year-on-year basis to 169.6 in June. However, on an average,
WPI growth was down to 2.9 per cent in April-June 2001 compared
to 4.3 per cent last year.
A closer look shows that prices of agricultural
commodities are either declining or are stagnant across the
board. For instance, the average wholesale price of rice in
the Delhi market dropped by nearly 2 per cent to Rs 935 per
quintal in July compared with the same period in the previous
year.
Against this backdrop, the predicted bumper
crop may fail to rekindle rural demand as the Food Corporation
of India (FCI) and the State Trading Corporation (STC), with
their granaries full are expected to lift less stock during
the kharif season. Though FCI and STCs of Punjab, Haryana
and Uttar Pradesh had mopped up over 90 per cent of the wheat
that arrived in June, they are likely to go slow as their
stock position has hit a record high. Foodgrain stocks have
reportedly touched 65 million tonnes, much higher than the
required minimum stock of 24.3 million tonnes. There are indications
that the procurement agencies may lift lesser quantities of
kharif output.
These factors can hit rural demand in two
ways. First, the assumption of a bumper crop matched with
an uptrend in output prices leading to a higher rural income
may not yield the desired results, as farmers, used to the
cyclical swings in fortunes, may not alter their demand pattern
till they reach comfort level. This may fructify only after
at least two-to-three successive good harvests at reasonably
good price levels. This suggests that a revival in rural demand
may have to wait for another year or so, even if the kharif
crop is good.
In the worst-case scenario, low offtake
by procurement agencies may lead to a crash in the prices
of farm produce across the board, leading to a drastic crunch
in rural demand. This, in turn, would reverse the process
of an agriculture-led economic recovery. In other words, a
bumper output not matched by good offtake and prices would
lead to contraction in rural income, demand, employment and
finally, the next output.
News on the industrial front is also worrisome
with growth in output and prices slackening further. From
6 per cent growth in May last, industrial output has shown
a secular trend decline with the Index of Industrial Production
(IIP) crashing to 2.8 per cent, 2.1 per cent, 2.7 per cent
and 1.9 per cent during February, March, April and May this
year, a far cry from the 4-7 per cent growth registered during
the corresponding months last year. It is the first time since
industrial growth has slipped below the 3.5 per cent mark
since November 1998. The forecast this fiscal is, therefore,
rather grim with the growth rate pegged at 4.5 per cent over
5.1 per cent during the previous fiscal.
The other two factors that can lead to
a recovery, namely, investment demand and urban consumer demand,
are also bleak. With listed corporates reporting the lowest-ever
sales growth of 5.92 per cent since 1998 and a 9.39 per cent
growth in net profit figures during the first quarter of the
current fiscal, the investment climate in the country is virtually
under cloud. For instance, total investment planned in the
manufacturing sector nose-dived to Rs 2,90,079 crore in April
2001, way below Rs 4,29,385 crore in October 1997. The sluggishness
in investment demand also had a telling impact on sanctions
and disbursements by three leading domestic financial institutions.
With overall economic growth slowing down,
leading to a contraction in disposable income of individuals
and consumers postponing their purchases, the demand for consumer
durables has also taken a knock. The consumer durable production
index grew by 6.4 per cent in April-May compared to 22 per
cent during the corresponding period last year.
These figures suggest that an economic
recovery riding on the back of any of the three plausible
sources of demand—rural, investment, and consumer—looks bleak.
Against such a scenario, a possible way of putting the economy
back on track would be for the government to make certain
efforts to create demand without bloating its balance sheet.
One way is to introduce ‘food-for-work programmes’ in the
infrastructure sector using the massive foodstock piled up
with state-run procurement agencies. This could kill two birds
with one stone: First, it will help the agencies dispose of
their mounting stock and go for fresh procurement when the
kharif output arrives. Second, it will help the government
to stop worrying about raising money from the market to fund
long-gestation and slow-return infrastructure projects, especially
in view of the mounting fiscal deficit.
This might turn out to be a win-win situation
for all as it would serve the purpose of kick-starting the
economy without hurting any interests.
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