SlideShare a Scribd company logo
1 of 48
Download to read offline
ECONOMY MATTERS 2
1
FOREWORD
SEPTEMBER 2016
T
he month of September 2016 saw two major central banks, the Bank of Japan (BoJ) and the US
Federal Reserve announce their policy decisions. Both of them acted on the expected lines and
delivered little surprise. The Fed decided to leave interest rates unchanged, but it strongly sig-
nalled it could still tighten monetary policy by the end of this year as the labor market improved further.
BoJ meanwhile revealed a new monetary policy framework in order to stimulate Japanese economy
and help it reach the 2 per cent inflation target. Under the new policy framework, the central bank
will target interest rates on government bonds to achieve its elusive inflation target, after years of
massive money printing that had failed to jolt the economy out of decades-long stagnation. The Bank
believes that its monetary policy and the Government’s fiscal policy as well as initiatives for strengthen-
ing Japan’s growth potential will produce synergy effects, and thereby will navigate Japan’s economy
toward overcoming deflation and achieving sustainable growth.
On the domestic front, although GDP growth moderated to 7.1 per cent during the first quarter of
2016-17 as against 7.5 per cent during the corresponding period last year, there are firm indications
that economic conditions would improve in the coming quarters and new growth opportunities would
emerge when the anticipated boost in demand takes root propelled by good monsoons, the Pay Com-
mission Award and the recent reform initiatives announced by the government. The good performance
of the manufacturing sector, which grew at 9.1 per cent is indeed heartening and points towards better
co-ordinated policies in this area. Inflationary pressure as measured by CPI has moderated sharply on
the back of fall in food prices. The latter has been precipitated by a near normal monsoon so far. Going
forward, we expect CPI inflation to settle within the RBI’s target of 5 per cent for March 2017.
In its effort to breathe new life into the Indian corporate bond market, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI)
announced a slew of measures. RBI’s measures include, allowing corporate bonds to be accepted un-
der the liquidity adjustment facility, higher ceiling on credit enhancements, providing Foreign Portfolio
investors (FPIs) direct access to bond trading platforms and increasing the risk weightages for non-
rated corporate borrowers. These measures are intended to further market development, enhance
participation, facilitate greater market liquidity and improve communication. An active, well-oiled cor-
porate bond market can help in channelising savings, both from India and abroad, through the bond
route and can complement the traditional banking sector lending.
Chandrajit Banerjee
Director General, CII
3 SEPTEMBER 2016
5
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
SEPTEMBER 2016
Focus of the Month: Towards a Vibrant
Bond Market & Developments in State
Finances
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) recently announced a
series of measures for the development of fixed income
markets. The announcements were quite comprehen-
sive and aimed to promote both market efficiency and
liquidity. This came in the backdrop of the recently an-
nounced report of the Working Group on development
of corporate bond market in India under the Financial
Stability and Development Council (FSDC) sub-com-
mittee. The recommendations in the FSDC report aim
to promote greater market liquidity, increased market
participation and greater transparency. RBI’s measures
included, allowing corporate bonds to be accepted un-
der the liquidity adjustment facility, higher ceiling on
credit enhancements, providing Foreign Portfolio inves-
tors (FPIs) direct access to bond trading platforms and
increasing the risk weightages for non-rated corporate
borrowers. These measures will go a long way in en-
hancing investor confidence in the Indian fixed income
markets. To achieve the desired results, it is equally im-
portant to ensure active participation from non-bank
participants. Interlinked with the theme of a vibrant
bond market is the importance of healthy condition of
State Finances in India especially with the introduction
of GST. In this month’s Focus of the Month, experts pro-
vide their viewpoints on these two important topics.
Domestic Trends
GDP growth in the first quarter of the current fiscal
came in at 7.1 per cent as compared to 7.5 per cent in
the same quarter last year, while gross value added
(GVA) at basic prices posted a growth of 7.3 per cent
in 1QFY17 as compared to 7.2 per cent in 1QFY16. The
sectoral data print reveals interesting insights into the
data. Even as investment growth contracted in 1QFY17,
government consumption expenditure growth posted
double-digit growth. Private consumption growth con-
tinued to post respectable growth rate. Going forward,
Pay Commission payouts, contained inflation and easy
monetary conditions are expected to support demand.
Meanwhile, data on Index of industrial production (IIP)
fell back into the negative territory, declining by 2.4 per
cent in July 2016 as compared to 2.0 per cent growth in
the previous month. Contraction in manufacturing and
capital goods output led to the disappointing numbers
during the month. On the inflation front, WPI inflation
edged up in August 2016 on the back of higher prices
recorded in fuel and manufacturing sectors. In contrast,
CPI inflation moderated sharply, providing relief to the
policymakers.
Corporate Performance
The corporate results at the end of the first quarter of
fiscal year 2017 brought a reason for cheer in the form
of rising profitability as the financial performance of In-
dian companies, especially manufacturing sector firms,
improved during the quarter. Manufacturing sector,
buoyed by a significant fall in inputs costs following the
collapse of global commodity prices, registered a sharp
pickup in profitability growth in 1QFY17 as compared to
the same quarter a year ago. Worryingly, both bottom-
line and top-line of services sector firms has continued
to remain weak so far. The analysis factors in the finan-
cial performance of a balanced panel of 1749 manufac-
turing companies (excluding oil and gas companies)
and 815 service firms extracted from the CMIE’s Prow-
ess database.
Global Trends
In line with expectations, US Federal Reserve main-
tained status-quo and kept the Federal funds target
range unchanged at 0.25-0.50 per cent in its meeting
held over two days on 20-21 September 2016 as it await-
ed more evidence of progress toward its goals, while
projecting that an increase is still likely by year-end. As
regards to its evaluation about the economic activity,
the Fed upgraded its assessment of the economic activ-
ity on upbeat economic data prints emanating from the
economy. Back in Asia, Bank of Japan (BoJ) Governor
Haruhiko Kuroda announced a new monetary policy
paradigm in order to stimulate Japanese economy and
help it reach the 2 per cent inflation target. The intro-
duction of “yield curve control,” in which the Bank will
press for the decline in real interest rates by control-
ling short-term and long-term interest rates, would be
placed at the core of the new policy framework.
ECONOMY MATTERS 6
FOCUS OF THE MONTH
Towards a Vibrant Corporate Bond Market
side issues. However fails to fully address the demand
side pressure points. The development of bond markets
needs sustained participation of long-term institutional
investors across the credit curve, which is a challenge
the Indian bond market continues to grapple with.
RBI’s measures include, allowing corporate bonds to be
accepted under the liquidity adjustment facility, higher
ceiling on credit enhancements, providing Foreign Port-
folio investors (FPIs) direct access to bond trading plat-
forms and increasing the risk weightages for non-rated
corporate borrowers.
RBI’s measures for the development of the fixed in-
come and currency markets are a step in the right di-
rection and can help broaden the market over the
medium- to long-term. These initiatives along with the
successful implementation of the bankruptcy laws can
help broaden the markets, assuming some of the other
issues relating to reissuances, stamp duty and asymme-
try of information are addressed in the interim.
T
he Indian corporate bond market, despite nu-
merous efforts by the regulator, continues to be
stuck in pursuit of the ‘holy grail’. A truly vibrant
and efficient corporate bond market would be char-
acterised by a high degree of depth across the credit
curve, greater liquidity, protection of creditor rights
and low information asymmetry, among other things.
The recent measures by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI)
is a welcome step for the development of the bond
market and rightly addresses some of the major supply
The Indian Corporate Bond Market in Pursuit
of the ‘Holy Grail’
7
FOCUS OF THE MONTH
SEPTEMBER 2016
Higher rated corporates will directly benefit in the
short-term due to the last mile efforts of Raghuram
Rajan; however the investment guidelines for most in-
vestor classes will require changes, to move down the
credit curve. Banks and Financial institutions will largely
remain the primary source of funding for corporates,
particularly stressed corporates. India Ratings esti-
mates that the number of borrowers above the thresh-
old of Rs 100 billion debt obligation aggregates 50 - out
of which potentially 24 are either stressed or fairly vul-
nerable.
The measures are likely to give a fillip to the lower rated
category bonds in the long run as the banks reduce their
reliance on loans as an instrument of providing credit to
large corporate issuers. This will incentivise a more dis-
ciplined corporate behavior and not necessarily a more
diversified investor base for them. In the developed
bond markets, the appetite for speculative/non-invest-
ment grade bonds remains high and they are issued and
traded widely. In the Indian bond market however it is
not as easy to place a bond below ‘AA category’ and
hence a successful and speedy implementation of the
bankruptcy law is keenly anticipated by potential inves-
tors with higher risk appetite.
Measure to increase the aggregate partial credit en-
hancement ceiling to 50 per cent from the earlier 20 per
cent, subject to a single banks exposure of 20 per cent,
will help corporates to raise money through bonds. As-
suming these partial guarantees help improve the rat-
ing of the underlying borrower, this potentially has the
scope of widening the market for potential issuers. The
development of dedicated institutions to provide credit
enhancement and the introduction of the covered bond
regulations, among others can be some of the other
steps which can spur the bond market.
The RBI has made an attempt to provide liquidity in the
bond market by allowing brokers to be part of corpo-
rate bond repo facility. In most developed bond mar-
kets, corporate bonds are permitted to be used as
collateral for liquidity operations. Allowing corporate
bonds as collateral for liquidity operations will improve
the demand for corporate bonds, from the perspective
of banks subscribing to these bonds. This will help de-
velop a robust secondary market for ‘AAA rated’ bonds
(assuming the final guidelines restrict it to AAA paper).
However, this is unlikely to result in investors moving
down the credit curve due to uncertainties relating to
recoveries and asymmetry in information sharing. In a
scenario, where AAA papers remain in short supply due
to bank investments, it could help in the gradual pro-
cess of migrating down the rating curve.
Current measures have not addressed issues with re-
spect to information asymmetry. A bond holder typi-
cally gets information with a lag (especially where the
underlying performance is deteriorating) limiting the
ability of the investors to go down the credit curve and
price the product attractively. Disclosure of covenants
and compliance could be made mandatory to improve
information asymmetry. The recent SEBI circular relat-
ing to information disclosure (including ratios like DSCR
among others) is a positive step and it could be further
strengthened with disclosures on covenants and com-
pliance. This is an international practice that both equity
and debt investors can benefit from.
Long term investors namely pension, provident, gratui-
ty funds’ among others are major investors in the Indian
bond markets and look for long term investment oppor-
tunities. The investment policies of these funds need to
be aligned with the regulatory changes. The last time
changes were made to the investment policies of these
funds it resulted in some debt market issuers migrating
to the bank loan market. Unless investment policies of
these funds are aligned with other regulatory changes,
it will be difficult to develop a deep and vibrant corpo-
rate bond market in India.
Giving direct access to FPI in the trading platform will
add more vigor, especially in the shorter end of the
curve. However, it will also mean faster transmission
of shocks. Moreover, wide divergences in the normal
ticket sizes for FPIs and retail investors compared to the
normal market lot of Rs 50 million and the price impact
may together deter large scale participation in the near
term.
Listed corporates can now park short term surplus cash
under the repo facility with banks and primary dealers.
Corporates holding on to high short term cash balances
or parking funds with banks may turn to this window;
however with better returns from liquid funds this
ECONOMY MATTERS 8
FOCUS OF THE MONTH
mode is unlikely to witness a shift in volumes from MFs
to banks.
India as a country provides a superior rating distribution,
as compared to other emerging markets because of the
RBI’s steps to encourage ratings on bank facilities. Fur-
ther, realignment of the risk weightages between low
rated and unrated corporate borrowers, would improve
the quality of information.
RBI’s measures address a lot of the supply side issues
facing the corporate bond market. Demand side meas-
ures, however are in the domain of multiple regulators
and each regulator comes with their own set of regu-
lation/investment guidelines. The speed and scale of
developments and innovation in the financial markets
poses a challenge for constantly improving the regula-
tors capacity. Each regulator namely Securities and Ex-
change Board of India (SEBI) Pension Fund Regulatory
and Development Authority (PFRDA), Insurance Regu-
latory and Development Authority of India (IRDA), RBI
though right in their own way but often do not have a
consensus on the larger goal of development of the cor-
porate bond market. Long term measures to develop
investor interest with varying risk appetite would also
hinge on increasing the role of alternate investors to
banks, who apportion a large dominant part of financial
savings in the economy.
Over specifying of regulations creates artificial barriers,
thereby leads to distortion and inefficient markets. For
example, the credit enhancement scheme which speci-
fies the amount per bond issue per bank or the rating
grade restrictions for investments by insurance com-
panies. Regulations targeted at tackling the risk arising
out of such provisions without limiting the ability of
markets to innovate would be required. Support from
various stakeholders can lead to a vibrant corporate
bond market in India, which otherwise continues to be
dominated by the public sector and financial institu-
tions.
Globally, the amount of sovereign debt with negative
yields has touched US$13 trillion. This provides a good
opportunity for all the stakeholders to kick start the
corporate bond market in India. Steps to develop masa-
la bonds could also help corporate issuers to develop an
overseas rupee bond market.
(Views expressed are personal)
9
FOCUS OF THE MONTH
SEPTEMBER 2016
Developing the Corporate Bond Market
T
he regulatory initiatives for development of cor-
porate bonds so far have been primarily focused
on product innovation (credit default swaps, cor-
porate bond repo) and infrastructure aspect (manda-
tory trade reporting, exchange based settlement, elec-
tronic bidding platform for private placements). While
product development and robust market infrastructure
are critical enablers, it is equally necessary to have a di-
versified pool of issuers, intermediaries and investors
in order to provide adequate depth and breadth to the
market. A well-functioning corporate bond market can
not only provide the much needed alternative to tradi-
tional bank financing, but can also help reduce borrow-
ing costs for corporates through market based pricing
of credit risk.
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has recently announced
a series of measures for the development of fixed in-
come markets. The announcements are quite compre-
hensive and aim to promote both market efficiency and
liquidity. This comes in the backdrop of the recently an-
nounced report of the Working Group on development
of corporate bond market in India under the Financial
Stability and Development Council (FSDC) sub-commit-
tee. The recommendations in the FSDC report aims to
promote greater market liquidity, increased market par-
ticipation and greater transparency.
Firstly, the RBI has issued a discussion paper with a view
to mitigate credit concentration risks in the banking sys-
tem. According to the proposed framework, large cor-
porates would need to rely on debt capital markets for
their incremental funding requirements. This measure
will give a major boost to the bond market and will lead
to greater diversity of issuers in the corporate bond
market. However, the investor appetite for issuers
across the credit curve would be a key determinant in
achieving the desired objective. Investment guidelines
of insurance companies and domestic retirement funds
may need to be amended for facilitating investment in
these bonds.
In order to make bond markets accessible to lower
rated issuers, the aggregate limits for partial credit en-
hancement provided by banks to corporate bonds have
now been enhanced to 50 per cent of the issue size in-
stead of 20 per cent earlier. This should enable greater
infrastructure financing through bond markets, as the
credit enhanced bonds can appeal to a wider category
of bond market investors.
In a very significant development, the Parliament has
recently passed the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code,
2016. The key benefits include time-bound resolution of
corporate defaults (much on the lines of Chapter 11 fil-
ing in the US) and providing a forum to capital market
participants for resolution of disputes relating to corpo-
rate bankruptcies. This is a very positive development,
and once implemented, investors are expected to view
lower rated companies more favorably. However, the
success of the Bankruptcy Code would depend upon
the implementation of the associated legal infrastruc-
ture to support the new framework. The progress on
this front will be crucial to the bond market and will be
ECONOMY MATTERS 10
FOCUS OF THE MONTH
watched closely.
RBI has permitted Indian corporates to issue Rupee de-
nominated bonds overseas. This is a win-win product
for both issuers and investors. While issuers can access
new pools of investor capital without assuming curren-
cy risk, investors can access Rupee exposure in an op-
erationally convenient manner. Recently, RBI permitted
Indian banks to issue Rupee bonds overseas, both for
raising capital and infrastructure lending purpose. Since
Indian banks are familiar names in the USD bond space,
there would be investor demand for these bonds. This
would also help develop the offshore quasi-sovereign
Rupee yield curve and will facilitate better price discov-
ery for Rupee denominated bond issuances for corpo-
rates going forward.
In order to promote the repo market for corporate
bonds, RBI has taken positive and concrete measures
toward its development. Corporate bonds would be
considered as eligible securities for liquidity operations,
subject to amendments to the RBI Act. The decision to
include corporate bonds as collateral for LAF transac-
tions may result in spread compression vis-à-vis govern-
ment securities, leading to lower borrowing costs. An
electronic dealing platform is also being proposed for
repo in corporate bonds. This would introduce central
counterparty facility for corporate bond repo transac-
tions, which would help reduce counterparty risk, mini-
mise documentation and bring more transparency.
For enabling access to markets, RBI has permitted
Foreign Portfolio Investors (FPIs) to trade on NDS-OM
through primary members. FPIs can also trade directly
in corporate bonds without involving brokers. In anoth-
er key initiative, RBI has also permitted individual inves-
tors to invest in government securities through their de-
mat account (even if they don’t have a CSGL account).
This would offer operational convenience and liquidity
to individual investors and would help increase retail
participation in government securities markets.
A robust corporate bond market demands timely dis-
semination of credit sensitive information and high
standards of transparency. The FSDC sub-committee
recommends mandating credit rating agencies to strict-
ly adhere to the regulatory norms with regard to timely
disclosure of defaults on the stock exchanges and on
their own websites. It also suggests rating agencies
to publish their credit rating transition matrix more
frequently. This would help strengthen investor confi-
dence and increase demand for lower rated issuers.
The measures, as announced by RBI, will go a long way
in enhancing investor confidence in Indian fixed income
markets. To achieve the desired results, it is equally im-
portant to ensure active participation from non-bank
participants. This may be achieved through relaxation
in investment norms of regulated entities like insurance
companies and retirement funds by the respective reg-
ulators. Increased participation of non-bank investors
in corporate bond markets across the credit curve shall
help increase the breadth of the market and will sup-
port in enhancing liquidity in the secondary markets. A
time-bound plan for implementation of the recommen-
dations made in the FSDC sub-committee report is im-
portant in this regard.
The above developments, along with other measures,
would help broaden the issuer and investor base and
would be instrumental in creating a paradigm shift for
the corporate bond markets in India. These reforms will
set the stage not only for widening and deepening the
market itself, but also help to play a supportive role in fi-
nancing the country’s growth. An active, well-function-
ing corporate bond market can channelize savings, both
from India and abroad, through the bond route and can
complement the traditional banking sector lending.
(Views expressed are personal)
11
FOCUS OF THE MONTH
SEPTEMBER 2016
Developments in State Finances
State Finances: Assessing Near Term Prospects
I
ndia’s federal polity is passing through a historic
phase, in which the states have come to occupy a
prominent position in shaping India’s growth pros-
pects. With central government strongly promoting
the idea of co-operative and competitive federalism,
India’s future growth is likely to be determined by the
dynamism of its federal structure. Promoting both co-
operative and competitive federalism has been an over-
arching theme of the present government. While co-op-
erative federalism encompasses Centre’s co-operation
with states, competitive federalism involves competi-
tion between the states. The Niti Aayog talks of com-
petitive federalism as a catalyst to achieve the objective
of cooperative federalism.
Reinforcing its Cooperative Federalism agenda, the Gov-
ernment last year took on board the recommendations
of the 14th Finance Commission (FFC). With States now
receiving a higher share of tax devolution from the Cen-
tre i.e. 42 per cent as against 32 per cent earlier, along
with greater flexibility in expenditure, their role in driv-
ing regional growth momentum has been enhanced. In
this backdrop, it becomes critical to analyze key issues
that are likely to impact the finances of the states in the
near to medium term. In particular, we assess factors
such as Pay Commission, State Elections and UDAY that
are likely to impact prospects of state finances in India.
Performance of All India state level finances
The data for consolidated All India State-level finances
as released by RBI till FY16(BE) shows that states have
done well to adhere to the mandated fiscal deficit tar-
get of 3 per cent under the FRBM Act while steadily im-
proving the quality of fiscal health since FY05. While the
adverse impact of GFC amid implementation of the 6th
ECONOMY MATTERS 12
FOCUS OF THE MONTH
Pay Commission did put some strain on the finances in
FY09 & FY10, states managed to revert to revenue sur-
plus in subsequent years of FY12 & FY13.
However, finances of states deteriorated in FY14 &
FY15 led by lower revenue receipts and higher revenue
spending. In both these years, states at a consolidated
level saw re-emergence of revenue deficit for the first
time since FY10. Moreover, data on 15 state budgets
(mentioned in the table below) shows that trend of
Granular Analysis of FY17 State finances
Granular analysis of 15 state budgets shows that these
states have budgeted for an improvement in their defi-
cit indicators in FY17. Average fiscal deficit ratio as a
percentage of respective state GSDP is expected to im-
prove to 2.7 per cent in FY17 (BE) compared to 3.0 per
cent in FY16 (which worsened by 30 bps as compared to
the Budgeted levels).
Moreover, we find that on average, states diverted
greater quantum of incremental revenue receipts for
weakening finances likely continued even in FY16. Our
analysis shows that finances of state governments de-
teriorated in FY16 with average revenue surplus (for 15
states under review) declining to 0.1 per cent of GSDP
from 0.5 per cent budgeted and fiscal deficit rising to
an average 3.0 per cent from 2.7 per cent budgeted for
FY16. The deterioration in finances in FY16 has been
caused mainly by slowdown in state’s revenue receipts-
both tax as well as non-tax.
capital spending in FY16 compared to budgeted levels
for FY17. On an average, in FY17 ratio of incremental
capital outlay to incremental revenue receipts for 15
states under review is budgeted at 0.25 compared to
0.39 in FY16. State-wise data shows that only UP, Pun-
jab and Odisha failed to divert greater incremental rev-
enue resources to capital spending in post devolution
phase of FY16 & FY17 compared to pre-devolution year
of FY15. As such, transfer of higher resources towards
capex by a majority of larger states following greater
tax devolution from Centre is encouraging.
13
FOCUS OF THE MONTH
SEPTEMBER 2016
Near term factors that could influence state
finances
States endeavor to improve their deficit indicators is
likely to be affected by two factors in the near term:
Pay scale revision on the lines of Seventh Pay Commis-
sion and UDAY. While elections in key states of Uttar
Pradesh and Punjab could add to some pressure on
their finances through possible increase in spending,
astute management of spending priorities could help to
limit the impact.
a)	 The impact of UDAY
With an objective of financial turnaround of state elec-
tricity distribution companies, the government in Nov-
15 announced UDAY (Ujwal DISCOM Assurance Yojana).
UDAY aims at financial revival of DISCOMS through (i)
improvement in operational efficiencies of DISCOMs;
(ii) reduction of cost of power; (iii) reduction in interest
cost of DISCOMs; (iv) enforcing financial discipline on
DISCOMs through alignment with State finances. More-
over, since UDAY seeks to bring to the fore and duly rec-
ognize the contingent liabilities of the states, it adds to
transparency. Additionally, timely intervention to mend
the finances of DISCOMs before the debt on their books
became unsustainable is expected to be long term posi-
tive for the sector.
ECONOMY MATTERS 14
FOCUS OF THE MONTH
However, in the short term, UDAY could lead to some
increase in the liabilities of the state governments. For
instance, our analysis shows that while total interest li-
ability is expected to be a lower by Rs 170 billion (due
to lower funding cost) leading to net interest saving for
states and DISCOMS, states may have under budgeted
interest liabilities on SDLs to be issued under UDAY.
Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Punjab, Bihar,
b)	 Pay Commission
With states having budgeted fiscal consolidationin FY17,
it becomes important to assess the ability of states to
absorb the impact of higher revenue spending that is
likely to come on board for states post implementation
at the Centre. During 6th Pay Commissions, the fiscal
deficit of all States combined deteriorated by 1.6 per
cent between FY08 and FY10. In order to analyze ability
of states to fund Pay Commission relation expenditure,
Jharkhand and Haryana are estimated to have under
budgeted their interest liabilities for FY17 by a cumula-
tive of Rs 56.50 billion. Moreover we find that the issu-
ance of bonds under UDAY along with cash compensa-
tion for financial institutions other than banks (leading
probably to issuance of additional SDLs) is likely to in-
crease the outstanding liabilities of all states but Chhat-
tisgarh to a level greater than the mandated 25 per cent
of GSDP in FY17.
we rely on two proxy indicators – one, salaries, wages
and pension expenses as per cent of respective reve-
nue expenditure (for 2015-16 BE) and two, proportion of
state government employees in total organized sector.
Basis the above two parameters we arrive at a vulner-
ability matrix for states and find that Kerala and Punjab
stand out in terms of high pension and wages liabilities
while having relatively higher share of state govern-
ment employees in the organized sector and as such
look most susceptible in terms of pay scale revisions.
15
FOCUS OF THE MONTH
SEPTEMBER 2016
Recommendations and Way Forward
• 	 States need to complement Centre in its endeavor
towards fiscal consolidation
While the Centre has consolidated its finances each year
between FY13-FY16, by showing restrain in spending,
states have expanded their budget deficits during the
same period. Given the criticality of fiscal consolidation
amid quality spending for inflation management, states
need to prioritize expenditure rationalization to contain
deficits.
•	 Need to divert greater resources towards capex
In light of the continued slack in the private capex de-
mand anticipated for most of FY17, it is vital for states
to complement Centre’s efforts at reviving capex by al-
locating greater resources towards capital expenditure.
Data shows that ratio of incremental capital outlay to
incremental revenue receipts for 15 states under re-
view has been budgeted to decline to 0.25 from 0.39
while being modestly higher than 0.20 in FY15. Given the
transfer of higher tax resources by the Centre, there is
room for states to allocate greater spending towards
capex.
•	 Success of UDAY rests on states
The DISCOM restructuring plan that was launched in
2012 failed to improve the performance of DISCOMS
mainly because of low tariff hikes, lack of progress in
reducing losses, higher electricity purchase costs and
continuous increase in debt. With UDAY making it com-
pulsory for states to absorb losses FY18 onwards, a
failure on part of states to improve the performance of
DISCOMs through timely revision of tariffs would dilute
the purpose for which UDAY was launched.
(Views expressed are personal)
ECONOMY MATTERS 16
FOCUS OF THE MONTH
State Finances: Overcoming Fiscal Imbalances
S
tate finances are slated to be subjected to trans-
formational changes with the implementation of
the Goods and Services Tax (GST) and the aboli-
tion of the distinction between plan and non-plan ex-
penditure. Fortunately, they are in a good fiscal position
to handle these changes having overcome the problem
of large fiscal imbalances over the last decade and a
half.
Deficit and Debt
Recentexperienceindicatesthatthestategovernments
have shown significant improvement in the profile of
their fiscal imbalances after enacting Fiscal Responsibil-
ity Legislations (FRLs). In Chart 1, we depict fiscal defi-
cit and revenue surplus relative to GDP from 1990-91 to
2015-16. Individually, states have committed to achieve
a balance on revenue account and limit their fiscal defi-
cit to 3 per cent of their respective GSDPs or equivalent
in terms of interest payments to revenue receipts. The
Twelfth Finance Commission (TFC) had suggested that
state fiscal deficits considered as an aggregate should
be limited to 3 per cent of GDP.
States’ fiscal deficit was at its peak at 4.7 per cent of
GDP in 1999-2000. In this year, the revenue deficit was
also at its highest at 2.8 per cent. Given these high levels
of fiscal imbalances, the Eleventh Finance Commission
had introduced a States’ Fiscal Reform Facility (FRF)
scheme for the period 2000-01 to 2004-05 to incentivise
states to collectively eliminate revenue deficits. Twelfth
Finance Commission linked substantial debt and inter-
est rate relief to the enactment of State Fiscal Responsi-
bility Legislation. To avail of the incentives recommend-
ed by the TFC, this legislation was required to provide,
at a minimum, for
(a) 	Eliminating revenue deficit by 2008-09;
(b) 	Reducing fiscal deficit to 3 per cent of GSDP or its
equivalent defined as ratio of interest payment to
revenue receipts.
The Thirteenth Finance Commission recommended that
the Debt Consolidation and Relief Facility may be ex-
tended to West Bengal and Sikkim, provided they enact
their FRBM Acts.
With these successive incentives given by the Finance
Commissions, states progressively enacted their re-
spective Fiscal Responsibility Legislations (FRLs). Three
states had passed their FRLs even before the central
government. Five states had passed FRBM Acts before
the Twelfth Finance Commission award. Twenty one
states enacted FRBM legislations, incentivised by the
Twelfth Finance Commission award in terms of debt
and interest rate relief. Two states, namely, West Ben-
gal and Sikkim enacted their FRBM legislations in 2010
after the recommendations of the Thirteenth Finance
Commission.
17
FOCUS OF THE MONTH
SEPTEMBER 2016
Clearly, the FRLs have had a beneficial impact in improv-
ing the profile of fiscal imbalances of the state govern-
ments. From 2005-06 onwards, the state governments
considered together, have always been below the
benchmark of 3 per cent of GDP except for 2009-10,
when it marginally crossed this limit at 3.01 per cent. In
the case of revenue balance, states achieved a revenue
surplus in 2006-07 and maintained it up to 2012-13 with
the exception of 2009-10, when revenue deficit was at
0.42 per cent of GDP. However, since 2013-14, there has
been some deterioration in state finances.
The improvement in fiscal deficit also led to a reduction
in the states’ outstanding liabilities to GDP ratio. At its
peak, this ratio was close to 32 per cent in 2003-04. It
progressively fell to about 22 per cent in 2013-14, that
is an improvement of 10 per cent points. This implied
a fall in the interest payments-GDP ratio for the state
governments facilitating improvement in their revenue
account.
While states successfully improved their fiscal balance
position, there have been considerable inter-state vari-
ations. In Charts 2 and 3, we have shown a comparison
between two points reflecting averages over the peri-
ods 2003-04 to 2005-06 and 2013-14 to 2014-15/ 2015-16.
Comparing these ratios with a benchmark line drawn at
3 per cent of GSDP, it is seen that earlier most of the
states were above this benchmark. In the latter refer-
ence period, most of these are below it. The states that
have still not achieved the desired level of fiscal consoli-
dation are Bihar, Karnataka, Jammu and Kashmir, West
Bengal, Himachal Pradesh, Andhra Pradesh and Mizo-
ram.
In the case of revenue deficit also, there is noticeable im-
provement. In the earlier reference period, it is mostly
only the special category states that show revenue sur-
plus. This was not on account of fiscal discipline. Rather
it was the effect of fiscal transfers that they received
from the central government in the form of very large
plan and non-plan grants. In the latter reference peri-
od, a number of general category states show surplus
on revenue account. These are Odisha, Uttar Pradesh,
Bihar, Madhya Pradesh, Gujarat, Jharkhand and Karna-
taka. Further, there are some general category states
which are only marginally in revenue deficit. These are
Rajasthan, Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu and Chhattisgarh.
Thus, there is a widespread improvement in many of
the large states that include some of the low-income
states.
ECONOMY MATTERS 18
FOCUS OF THE MONTH
19
FOCUS OF THE MONTH
SEPTEMBER 2016
ECONOMY MATTERS 20
FOCUS OF THE MONTH
Improvement in Tax Performance
Table 1 shows that the improvement in states’ fiscal
imbalance profile was largely due to the improvement
in states’ tax-GDP ratio which increased in two notice-
able phases, first from 1998-1999 to 2006-07 when it
increased from 4.95 per cent to 6.13 per cent. It briefly
fell in 2007-08 and 2008-09 on account of the global
economic crisis also leading to a fall in India’s growth
rate. In the next phase from 2008-09 to 2012-13, it in-
creased from 5.51 per cent to 6.83 per cent. Thus, com-
paring 1998-99 to 2012-13, there was an overall increase
Goods and Services Tax
With the introduction of the GST, there would be major
changes affecting state finances. First, tax autonomy so
far vested exclusively with individual states, will now
be the joint responsibility of the GST Council. Second,
states will share the value added beyond manufactur-
ing with the central government. At the same time,
they will have the additional power to tax value added
in services. In the initial stages, the revenue of the net
consuming and net producing states will be affected dif-
ferently. The net consuming states would gain while the
net producing states would lose but would be brought
on par after compensation. Thus, the net gainers would
be some of the larger but low income states like Ut-
tar Pradesh, Bihar, Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan. In
the present structure of GST, no explicit allowance has
been made for mineral-rich states such as Odisha, Mad-
hya Pradesh, Jharkhand and Chhattisgarh who are net
exporters of minerals. These minerals are inputs and
not items of final consumption. Therefore, any GST paid
in states’ own tax revenue to GDP ratio of 1.9 per cent
points. This large increase came about first by states
agreeing to floor rates in their sales tax regimes and
preparing ground for the implementation of VAT. Sub-
sequently, they gained from VAT as well as high global
crude prices which resulted in relatively high sales tax
revenues on petroleum products since these were
largely ad-valorem in nature. The fall in the states’ own
tax-GDP ratio in more recent period starting 2013-14
could also partially be due to the fall in global crude
prices and the corresponding adjustment in the prices
of petroleum products in India.
on these minerals will have to be rebated at later stag-
es. These states will lose revenue in the long run while
suffering from the adverse consequences of the local-
ized pollution related to mineral activities which their
residents will be forced to suffer. As long as alcohol,
petroleum products, electricity and real estate remain
outside the purview of the GST, the tax reforms would
still not be complete.
The impact of GST on states’ fiscal imbalances would
depend on two factors: first, whether the GST rate
structure proves to be revenue-neutral and second, dis-
tribution of states in the categories of net-consuming
vis-à-vis net-producing states. If GST involves revenue
losses, at least in the initial stages, the central govern-
ment would be a net loser since through the compensa-
tion mechanism, if it works efficiently, states would be
either net gainers or at least will remain revenue-neu-
tral. However, a net revenue loss to the central govern-
ment will imply a reduction in grants or transfers that it
gives to the state governments.
(Views expressed are personal)
ECONOMY MATTERS 22
DOMESTIC TRENDS
GDP Growth Moderates in 1QFY17
G
DP growth in the first quarter of the current
fiscal came in at 7.1 per cent as compared to
7.5 per cent in the same quarter last year,
while gross value added (GVA) at basic prices posted a
growth of 7.3 per cent in 1QFY17 as compared to 7.2 per
cent in 1QFY16. The sectoral data print reveals interest-
ing insights into the data. Even as investment growth
contracted in 1QFY17, government consumption ex-
penditure growth posted double-digits growth. Private
consumption growth continued to post respectable
growth rate. Going forward, Pay Commission payouts,
contained inflation and easy monetary conditions are
expected to support demand.
From supply-side, GDP growth driven entire-
ly by services sector
From the supply side, agriculture growth moderated
to 1.8 per cent in 1QFY17 as compared to 2.6 per cent
growth in 1QFY16. However, farm growth is expected
to pick up in line with the improvement in monsoons
and the increase in Kharif crop sowing. Manufacturing
posted robust growth of 9.1 per cent, while construc-
tion sector growth moderated sharply in 1QFY17. Go-
ing forward, lower interest rates and smart recovery
in private consumption expenditure will help drive in-
dustrial growth in remaining quarters of FY17. Services
sector was the star performer as it grew by 9.6 per cent
in the reporting quarter cushioned by strong growth in
government spending. However, components such as
trade, hotels showed moderation as compared to the
same quarter last year.
23
DOMESTIC TRENDS
SEPTEMBER 2016
Consumption growth continues to outpace
investment growth
At market prices, private consumption expenditure has
not shown signs of any significant distress and posted a
growth of 6.7 per cent in 1QFY17 from 6.9 per cent in the
same quarter last year. Government spending growth
was very strong for Q1FY17 as it posted 18.8 growth
which was the highest since December 2014. Since the
Going forward, in the short-run, growth will receive a
boost from the cumulative impact of economic reforms
and improved inflationary expectations. Therefore in
government has a strong commitment to stick to fiscal
deficit targets, support on this scale is unlikely to con-
tinue in the second half of the year. Gross fixed capital
formation continued to remain a drag on growth and
given the current balance sheet constraints for corpo-
rates, private capex recovery still seems far away. The
external sector showed some recovery as exports grew
by 3.2 per cent in 1QFY17 as compared to a contraction
of 5.7 per cent in 1QFY16.
FY17, CII is projecting a base case of 7.75-8.25 per cent
growth, higher than the 7.6 per cent posted in FY16.
ECONOMY MATTERS 24
DOMESTIC TRENDS
Manufacturing output remains lackadaisical
The manufacturing sector contracted by 3.4 per cent in
July 2016 as compared to 0.7 per cent in the previous
month and 4.8 per cent in the same month last year. The
dismal growth in manufacturing sector since November
2015 is a matter of concern and calls for a results orient-
ed action from the government. For the April-July 2016
quarter, the sector’s output contracted by 1.4 per cent,
as against a growth of 4.0 per cent a year ago. Growth
also decelerated in the mining and electricity sectors.
Outlook
Although GDP growth moderated to 7.1 per cent during the first quarter of 2016-17 as against 7.5 per cent dur-
ing the corresponding period last year, there are firm indications that economic conditions would improve in the
coming quarters and new growth opportunities would emerge when the anticipated boost in demand takes root
propelled by good monsoons, the Pay Commission Award and the recent reform initiatives announced by the gov-
ernment. The good performance of the manufacturing sector, which grew at 9.1 per cent is indeed heartening and
points towards better co-ordinated policies in this area.
The numbers show that consumption demand has been the main driver of growth in the first quarter of 2016-17
with investment continuing to reflect a subdued performance as compared to last year. CII expects a rebound in
investment, going forward, as the government continues to rev up public expenditure and in the process crowd in
private investment leading to a new demand cycle in the economy.
Industrial Output Contracts in July 2016
The growth in Index of industrial production (IIP) fell
back into the negative territory, declining by 2.4 per
cent in July 2016 as compared to 2.0 per cent growth in
the previous month. Contraction in manufacturing and
capital goods output led to the disappointing numbers
during the month. On a cumulative basis, factory output
in the April-July 2016 quarter contracted by 0.2 per cent
compared to 3.5 per cent growth in the same period a
year-ago. However, going forward, we can expect the
industrial output to recover cushioned by the govern-
ment’s pro-reform agenda. Overall in FY17, we expect
industrial production to grow at a higher rate as com-
pared to the previous fiscal on the back of policy aided
domestic upturn and low global commodity prices.
25
DOMESTIC TRENDS
SEPTEMBER 2016
Capital goods output contracts for the ninth
consecutive month
According to use-based classification, the capital goods
output witnessed a ninth straight month of contraction
in July 2016, thus raising doubts about the recovery of
investment cycle in the country. The sector’s output
contracted by a hefty 29.6 per cent in July 2016 as com-
pared to a decline of 16.7 per cent in the last month
partly due to high base of last year. To be sure, indus-
trial production excluding the output of the capital
goods sector stood at 2.1 per cent during the month as
compared to 4.8 per cent in the previous month. Going
forward, capital expenditure by the Government will be
crucial to support recovery in this segment.
Mirroring IIP output, core sector output too
moderates in July 2016
In tandem with the deceleration witnessed in indus-
trial output growth, core sector output also slowed to
3.2 per cent in July 2016 as compared to 5.2 per cent
growth posted in the previous month, partly due to the
impact of monsoon that hit output in sectors such as ce-
ment. Among the individual segments, cement sectors’
growth slowed to 1.4 per cent in July 2016 from of the
impressive 10.3 per cent posted in June 2016. Similarly,
fertiliser production declined to 2.5 per cent in July 2016
from 9.8 per cent in June 2016. Further, electricity gen-
Consumer goods output also decelerates
during the month
Consumer goods growth declined to 1.3 per cent in July
2016 as compared to 2.7 per cent in June 2016. Amongst
its sub-sectors, consumer non-durables growth moved
into the negative territory once again in July 2016, after
posting positive growth in June 2016. In contrast, out-
put of consumer durables sector quickened to 5.9 per
cent in July 2016 as compared to 5.6 per cent posted in
the last month. The boost in consumption due to the
implementation of 7th
Pay Commission report is expect-
ed to improve the growth of this sector further, going
forward.
eration registered a mere 1.6 per cent in July 2016, which
was the lowest since the zero per cent growth in No-
vember 2015. Steel production also contracted by -0.5
per cent, the lowest since it shrunk by the same margin
in February 2016. Crude oil production also shrunk by
-1.8 per cent in the reporting month. On a cumulative
basis, core sector output stood at 5.4 per cent during
April-July 2016 as compared to 2.5 per cent in the same
period last year. In contrast, output of refinery prod-
ucts accelerated to 13.7 per cent – the highest growth
achieved since 17.9 per cent in April 2016. Natural gas
also recorded 3.3 per cent growth in July 2016 after four
months of contraction
ECONOMY MATTERS 26
DOMESTIC TRENDS
Outlook
The contraction in industrial output during July 2016 is worrisome as it indicates that industry is performing much
below its underlying potential. What is causing concern is that both manufacturing and capital goods sectors are
witnessing an anemic trend in output implying that growth impulses are still weak. But we hope that going for-
ward, aggregate demand would pick up based on pay rise of government employees and the reform initiatives
recently taken by the government to induce demand in the economy.
CPI Inflation Moderates, While WPI Inflation Inches Up
Wholesale Price Index (WPI) based inflation quickened
to a two-year high of 3.7 per cent in August 2016 from
3.55 per cent in July 2016 on high fuel and manufactur-
ing inflation. This was the fifth straight month of WPI
inflation after continued deflation for over a year. In
contrast to a jump in WPI inflation, CPI inflation cooled
sharply to 5.1 per cent in August 2016 as compared to
6.1 per cent in the previous month. The main driver be-
hind the deceleration in CPI inflation was food inflation
which edged down to 5.8 per cent in August 2016 from
7.96 per cent in the previous month. The most signifi-
cant development was the sharp plunge in vegetables
inflation to 1 per cent in August 2016 from 14 per cent
seen in the previous month.
27
DOMESTIC TRENDS
SEPTEMBER 2016
Outlook
WPI inflation edged up in August 2016 on the back of higher prices recorded in fuel and manufacturing sectors. In
contrast, CPI inflation moderated sharply, providing relief to the policymakers. Going forward, CII expects CPI infla-
tion to settle within the RBI’s target of 5 per cent for March 2017 as food prices are expected to ease going forward
on account of a spate of reforms undertaken by the present government to address the supply bottlenecks and
the expectation that monsoon would be normal after two consecutive years of drought. This should spur RBI to
resume its rate easing cycle as investments continue to be sluggish.
WPI primary articles inflation moderates in
August 2016
Coming to WPI sub-categories, inflation in primary ar-
ticles slowed down to 7.5 per cent in August 2016 as
compared to 9.4 per cent posted in July 2016. Within
primary articles, inflation in both food and non-food sub
categories decelerated during the reporting month. Pri-
mary food inflation moderated to 8.2 per cent (as com-
pared to 11.8 per cent in July 2016) while non-food infla-
tion stood at 8.4 per cent (as compared to 9.5 per cent
in July 2016). A normal monsoon so far has boded well
for reining in high food prices.
Inflation in fuel category moves to positive
territory after a gap of 21 months
Inflation in the fuel group of WPI moved to the positive
territory after a gap of 21 months in August 2016 as it
stood at 1.6 per cent. The upward movement in global
crude oil prices owing to the ongoing political tensions
in Venezuela, Libya and Nigeria has pushed fuel inflation
into the positive territory. Inflation in high speed diesel
quickened to 12.2 per cent during the reporting month
as compared to 6.6 per cent in July 2016. Petrol infla-
tion too moved to -8.6 per cent as compared to -10.3 per
cent in the previous month.
Manufacturing inflation quickens in August
2016
Inflation in manufactured group quickened to 2.4 per
cent in August 2016 – its highest reading since October
2014, as compared to 1.8 per cent posted in the previous
month. Manufacturing food inflation which had moved
to double-digits in July 2016 continued its upward tra-
jectory, rising further to 11.4 per cent in August 2016
from 10.2 per cent in the previous month. Meanwhile
manufacturing non-food inflation (popularly called as
core inflation and a proxy for demand-side pressures in
the economy) too accelerated mildly to 0.6 per cent in
the reporting month from 0.1 per cent in the previous
month. With core inflation recording an increase after a
prolonged period of deflation, there are indications that
demand is returning to the economy.
ECONOMY MATTERS 28
DOMESTIC TRENDS
SW monsoon expected to be normal despite
3 per cent monsoon deficit so far
India is heading towards a normal South-west mon-
soon this year, notwithstanding the monsoon deficit
of 3 per cent below long period average (LPA) till 28th
September 2016. The India Meteorological Department
(IMD) categorizes rainfall in the 96-104 per cent long-
period average range as normal and rainfall between
104-110 per cent of LPA as above normal. Much of the
rainfall deficit has been seen in East & Northeast parts
and South peninsula of the country, which are either
predominantly non-agriculture dependent or are well
irrigated.
Record production of kharif foodgrains as
per 1st
advance estimate
The importance of a normal monsoon this year is par-
ticularly crucial given the high food inflation rates seen
currently. In this context, the news of 1st
advance esti-
mates of total kharif foodgrains estimated at a record
high of 135.03 million tonnes is heartening. This year the
estimated production is higher by 11.02 million tonnes
Kharif crops sowing progressing well, ex-
cept for cotton
Kharif sowing starts with the onset of June and the crop
is harvested during September-October. Area sown un-
der kharif crops increased to 1067.53 lakh hectares by
23rd September 2016. This is 3.6 per cent higher than
the area sown at this time last year. Much of the food
inflation last year was driven by high inflation in pulses,
but encouragingly pulses have recorded the largest in-
crease in area sown to the tune of 29.1 per cent this year
so far. As of 23rd September 2016, area under pulses
measured 145.84 lakh hectare as compared to 112.93
lakh hectare a year-ago. Among pulses, arhar recorded
the maximum increase in acreage. Area sown under
as compared to last year’s kharif foodgrains production
of 124.01 million tonnes. Further, kharif foodgrains pro-
duction is also higher by 7.65 million tonnes than the
last five years’ (2010-11 to 2014-15) average production
of 127.38 million tonnes. Notably, production in pulses
(which has seen double-digit inflation in the last couple
of months) has been estimated at a record level of 8.70
million tonnes which is higher by 3.16 million tonnes
than the last year’s production of 5.54 million tonnes.
Kerala records the highest rainfall deficiency
so far
Among the major states, rainfall deficiency has so far
been the highest for Kerala, with the rainfall gap (from
1st June to 23rd
September, 2016) standing at 32 per cent
followed by Punjab and Haryana (each at 25 per cent
below LPA). North Eastern states have also received
large deficit in rainfall so far. In contrast, the states
which have received bountiful rainfall so far include- Ra-
jasthan (30 per cent above LPA), Madhya Pradesh (18
per cent above LPA), Maharashtra (11 per cent above
LPA), Andhra Pradesh (7 per cent above LPA) and Telan-
gana (3 per cent above LPA).
rice increased by 2.6 per cent to 387.04 lakh hectare
while under coarse cereals expanded by 3.3 per cent to
189.58 lakh hectares in the period 1st June-23rd Septem-
ber 2016. Coarse cereals include jowar, bajra, maize and
ragi.
The acreage under oilseeds, as a group, stood at 189.16
lakh hectares, up 3.0 per cent compared with last year,
with groundnut recording a staggering 29.0 per cent
increase, chiefly due to the higher plantings in Andhra
Pradesh, Rajasthan, Karnataka and Gujarat. A key pres-
sure point with regard to the sowing of major kharif
crops has been that of cotton, whose acreage has fallen
by 11.6 per cent over the last year, mainly due to poor
rainfall in Gujarat, which happens to be the key cotton
growing state in the country.
Monsoon Deficit: Nothing to Worry About
29
DOMESTIC TRENDS
SEPTEMBER 2016
Going forward, improved reservoir levels and high re-
sidual soil moisture will be supportive of forthcoming
Rabi crop. Rabi crop accounts for nearly 50 per cent
of country’s total food output. In addition, Northeast
monsoon over October to December are important
for 5 metrological subdivisions of southern India (Tamil
Nadu, Coastal Andhra Pradesh, Rayalaseema, Kerala
and south interior Karnataka) as they receive 30 per
cent of their annual rainfall in these months.
Merchandise exports continued to remain in the nega-
tive territory for the second consecutive month, albeit
the magnitude of contraction reduced sharply in August
2016, aided by a favorable base. Exports fell by 0.3 per
cent on year-on-year basis to US$21.5 billion in August
2016 as compared to contraction to the tune of 6.8 per
cent in July 2016.
Export performance improved sharply with 14 out of
30 major commodities posting positive growth as com-
pared to 8 commodities seen last month. The key sec-
tors posting positive growth during the month were
iron ore, fruits & vegetables, marine products, gems
& jewellery and electronics. Cereals, oil seeds and pe-
troleum products exports contracted sharply. On a
cumulative basis, for the period April-August 2016, mer-
chandise exports stood at US$108.5 billion, registering
a contraction of 2.98 per cent on a year-on-year basis.
Imports continue to post contraction
Merchandise imports contracted by 14.1 per cent to
US$29.1 billion in August 2016 as compared to a decline
of 19 per cent in the last month. During April-August
FY17, India’s cumulative merchandise imports stood at
US$143.2 billion, registering a negative growth of 15.89
per cent on a year-on-year basis. Coming to the sector
bifurcation, oil imports during August 2016 contracted
by 8.5 per cent to US$6.74 billion during the month.
Meanwhile, non-oil imports during August 2016 were
estimated at US$22.4 billion which was 15.7 per cent
lower than non-oil imports of US$26.1 billion in August
2015.
Magnitude of Contraction in Exports Narrows
ECONOMY MATTERS 30
DOMESTIC TRENDS
Current Account Deficit Contained in 1QFY17
Merchandise trade deficit narrowed marginally to
US$7.7 billion in August 2016 from US$7.8 billion in the
previous month. A much steeper fall in imports vis-a-vis
exports, led to this contraction in trade deficit. Cumu-
latively, during April-August 2016, India’s trade deficit
stood at US$34.7 billion, 40.6 per cent lower than the
Current account deficit (CAD) for the first quarter of the
current fiscal (1QFY17) stood at US$0.3 billion or 0.1 per
cent of GDP, the same as the preceding quarter. In the
same quarter last year, CAD stood at US$6.1 billion or
1.2 per cent of GDP. The contraction in CAD in the June
quarter was primarily on account of narrowing of the
trade deficit to US$23.8 billion from US$34.2 billion a
year ago. On a balance of payments (BoP) basis, mer-
chandise imports declined sharply (by 11.5 per cent) as
compared to merchandise exports (which declined by
2.1 per cent), leading to a lower trade deficit in Q1FY17.
year-ago period. Going forward, while improving do-
mestic competitiveness through structural reforms is
crucial to improve exports performance; we believe
that this can only materialize in the medium-term. In the
near-term, a weaker rupee can act as a catalyst to revive
competitiveness.
Lower remittances offset by sharp narrow-
ing of merchandise trade deficit
Invisibles related flows were lower at US$23.5 billion in
1QFY17 as compared to US$28.0billion in the same quar-
ter last year. Component wise, net services receipts de-
clined on a y-o-y basis, largely due to a fall in net earn-
ings on account of travel, financial services and other
business services. Private transfer receipts, which rep-
resent remittances by overseas Indians, amounted to
US$15.2 billion, declining from their level in the preced-
ing quarter as well as from a year ago. Going forward
there is a risk of further lower inflows from Middle East
region amid decline in crude oil prices and economic
slowdown in that part of the world.
31
DOMESTIC TRENDS
SEPTEMBER 2016
Concerns persist on lower foreign invest-
ment front
Net capital account moderated sharply to US$7.1 billion
in 1QFY17 as compared to US$18.6 billion in the same
quarter last year mainly on account of lower net foreign
investment. The global financial market uncertainty, led
by the slowdown in China, steep decline in commodity
prices and the likely trajectory of US Fed rate hikes, has
weighed on the capital flows across EM economies and
India was not immune to the trend.
To be sure, net foreign direct investment moderated to
US$4.1 billion in Q1FY17 from US$10.0 billion in Q1FY16
and US$8.8 billion in the Q4FY16. On the other hand,
We expect CAD to come below 1 per cent of GDP in FY17.
The key risk to the outlook is volatility in portfolio relat-
ed flows and deceleration in remittance related inflows.
From a longer term perspective, although the external
portfolio investment, recorded a net inflow of US$2.1
billion in Q1FY17 as against a marginal outflow in the cor-
responding period of last year and an outflow of US$1.5
billion in the preceding quarter, primarily reflecting net
inflow in the equity component. Higher repayments un-
der external commercial borrowings led to a net out-
flow under loans to India in Q1FY17 as against net bor-
rowings in the same period last year.
Foreign exchange reserves (on a BoP basis) increased
by US$6.9 billion in Q1FY17 as compared with an accre-
tion of US$11.4 billion in Q1FY16 and US$3.3 billion in the
preceding quarter.
sector performance remains favorable, the sustainabil-
ity of the same is still doubtful. Continued weakness in
exports performance due to global headwinds is a po-
tential risk for the sector.
ECONOMY MATTERS 32
CORPORATE PERFORMANCE
Corporate Profitability on the Upswing in 1QFY17
Manufacturing firms register rising profit-
ability in 1QFY17 as compared to 1QFY16
The corporate results at the end of the first quarter of
fiscal year 2017 brought a reason for cheer in the form
of rising profitability as the financial performance of In-
dian companies, especially manufacturing sector firms,
improved during the quarter. The manufacturing sec-
tor, buoyed by a significant fall in inputs costs following
the collapse of global commodity prices, registered a
sharp pickup in profitability growth in 1QFY17 as com-
pared to the same quarter a year ago. Worryingly, both
bottom-line and top-line of services sector firms has
continued to remain weak so far. The analysis factors
in the financial performance of a balanced panel of 1749
manufacturing companies (excluding oil and gas com-
panies) and 815 service firms extracted from the CMIE’s
Prowess database.
Bottom-line of firms on an aggregate basis
registers a stellar performance in 1QFY17
In the 1QFY17, the bottom-line of the firms improved
to 9.4 per cent on an aggregate basis, as compared to
contraction of 10.1 per cent a year ago. Manufacturing
companies registered growth in PAT as high as 14.7 per
cent as compared to a contraction of 23.2 per cent in
the same quarter previous year. Though, profitability in
service firms moderated to 2.9 per cent in 1QFY17 from
double-digits growth of 13.8 per cent in 1QFY16.
33
CORPORATE PERFORMANCE
SEPTEMBER 2016
In contrast, net sales growth is recovering
slowly
Growth in net sales remained a bit of a sore point, even
though falling input costs provided a respite. In 1QFY17,
net sales growth on an aggregate basis remained low
albeit stable as it stood at 0.7 per cent as compared to
0.5 per cent in the same quarter a year ago. Net sales
growth of manufacturing sector moved to the positive
Struck with weak domestic and external demand, the
Indian companies are trying hard to clutch a straw of
hope. Efforts are in force by firms to improve their own
production efficiencies and employ cost effective meas-
ures. Simultaneously, there are also expectations of
territory in 1QFY17 as compared to contraction a year
ago. In contrast, net sales growth of services sector
firms moderated to 1.3 per cent in the reporting quarter
as compared to 2.0 per cent a fiscal ago. Though, net
sales growth has been recovering, it still remains lacka-
daisical, reflecting in part the lack of ample demand in
the economy. The slowing demand in the external mar-
kets has been doing no good either.
some serious economic reforms, some of which have
already come in form of necessary rate cuts by the RBI,
that would elevate the economy, help pick up sales and
raise the profitability for the Indian corporates further
in the months to come.
ECONOMY MATTERS 34
POLICY FOCUS
POLICY FOCUS
1.	 Cabinet approves Agreement and the
Protocol between India and Cyprus for
the Avoidance of Double Taxation and
the Prevention of Fiscal Evasion
The Union cabinet on 24th
August, 2016 approved a re-
vised India-Cyprus tax treaty that seeks to plug loop-
holes used by investors to avoid paying taxes in India.
The new agreement, which will replace the 1994 treaty,
will enable Indian authorities to tax capital gains on in-
vestments routed through Cyprus; it will also lead to
the removal of the Mediterranean island nation from
an Indian government blacklist on which it was placed
for not providing financial information sought by India.
The revisions in the treaty are on the lines of the recent
changes notified in the India-Mauritius tax treaty and
those still being negotiated in the India-Singapore trea-
ty. India will get the right to tax capital gains from sale
of shares on investments made by Cyprus-based com-
panies after 1 April 2017.
2.	 Cabinet Approves Initiatives to Revive
the Construction Sector
The Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs, chaired by
the Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi on 31st
August,
2016 has approved various measures to revive the con-
struction sector which has been undergoing stress.
Under the proposal put forward by NITI Aayog and ap-
proved by the CCEA, government agencies would pay
75 per cent of the arbitral award amount to an escrow
account against margin free bank guarantee, in those
cases where the award is challenged.
The escrow account can be used to repay bank loans
or to meet commitments in ongoing projects. This is a
major step which will allow recovery of loans by banks
and allow construction companies to speed up execu-
tion of ongoing projects. It will also increase the ability
of construction companies to bid for new contracts and
the resulting competition will be beneficial in contain-
ing the costs of public works. This measure will provide
a stimulus to the construction industry and to employ-
ment.
Government Departments and PSUs have also been
instructed to transfer cases under arbitration to the
amended Arbitration Act which has an expedited pro-
cedure, with the consent of the contractors. In the long
run, other measures are also under consideration, in-
cluding changes to bid documents and model contracts,
The important policy announcements by the Government in the months of August-September 2016 are covered in this
month’s Policy Focus. Our endeavor through this section is to keep our readers abreast of the latest happenings on
the policy front so that they can take an informed decision accordingly.
35
POLICY FOCUS
SEPTEMBER 2016
and increased use of conciliation. NITI will also examine
the idea of creating “claim take out funds” financed by
private sector investors, while the Department of Finan-
cial Services will examine a suitable scheme for address-
ing stressed bank loans in the construction sector.
CII’s Reaction
The Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs (CCEA)’s
announcement of a revival package for the ailing con-
struction sector has come at an opportune time as it
seeks to destress the liquidity woes of construction
companies and the infrastructure sector, said the Con-
federation of Indian Industry (CII). “Indian industry wel-
comes this positive and timely initiative taken by the
government as this would unclog stressed assets and
revive projects that have been stuck over years in litiga-
tion and courts,” said Mr Chandrajit Banerjee, Director
General, CII.
Mr Banerjee added, “The revival package for the con-
struction sector by the government will translate into
a huge liquidity boost for the system and would save
many construction companies from being declared
NPAs.” The package will also allow recovery of loans by
banks and facilitate construction companies to speed
up execution of ongoing projects. Further, it will in-
crease the ability of construction companies to bid for
new contracts and the resulting competition will be
beneficial in containing the costs of public works, he
said.
One of the major decisions by the CCEA includes a di-
rection to PSUs to pay 75 per cent of award amount to
contractors against a margin fee in cases where the PSU
has lost the Arbitration case and goes in for appeal in
Courts. This amount will infuse liquidity and will be used
by the contractors to repay bank loans or to meet com-
mitments in ongoing projects.
Government Departments and PSUs have also been
instructed to transfer cases under arbitration to the
amended Arbitration Act which has an expedited pro-
cedure, with the consent of contractors. This will help
disputes to be settled expeditiously, with minimum
cost and time overruns and unlock stuck money to go
back into circulation in the economy. It would be worth
mentioning here that an estimated amount of around
Rs 70,000 crores is expected to be unlocked due to this
measure.
Given the fact that the construction sector generates
the highest level of direct and indirect jobs employing
about 40 million people with a 2.7x multiplier effect on
the economy and being the second largest contributing
nearly 8 per cent economic activities to the GDP, these
initiatives are all set to trigger massive expansion of the
infrastructure sector, industrialization, urbanization,
rise in disposable incomes and success of various Gov-
ernment initiatives to improve India’s residential and
transport infrastructure.
A few suggestions for possible additional amendments
that will further streamline ease of doing business
could include adoption of ICC’s Uniform Rules for De-
mand Guarantees (URDG) which are being followed in
most major countries. Also, revision of clauses in Public
Contracts so that the interest of both the Client and the
Contractor are taken care of, is essential for the full re-
covery of this crucial sector.
While the effect of the amendment may be visible after
a few months, in the long run these initiatives would en-
able Construction Sector to attract foreign investments
and help in reviving sectors crucial for rebooting India’s
growth story.
3.	 Cabinet approves creation of GST Council
and its Secretariat
The Constitution (122nd
Amendment) Bill, 2016, for intro-
duction of Goods and Services tax in the country was ac-
corded assent by the President on 8th
September, 2016,
and the same has been notified as the Constitution (101st
Amendment) Act, 2016. As per Article 279A (1) of the
amended Constitution, the GST Council has to be consti-
tuted by the President within 60 days of the commence-
ment of Article 279A. The notification for bringing into
force Article 279A with effect from 12th
September, 2016
was issued on 10th September, 2016.
As per Article 279A of the amended Constitution, the
GST Council which will be a joint forum of the Centre
and the States, shall consist of the following members:
Union Finance Minister will be the Chairperson, the Un-
ion Minister of State-in-charge of Revenue will be its
Member and the Minister-in-charge of Finance or Taxa-
tion or any other Minister nominated by the State Gov-
ernments will be its Members as well.
ECONOMY MATTERS 36
POLICY FOCUS
Additionally, the Union Cabinet under the Chairmanship
of Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi has also approved
setting up of GST Council and setting up its Secretariat
on 12th September, 2016 as per the following details:
(a)	 Creation of the GST Council as per Article 279A of
the amended Constitution;
(b)	 Creation of the GST Council Secretariat, with its of-
fice at New Delhi;
(c)	 Appointment of the Secretary (Revenue) as the Ex-
officio Secretary to the GST Council;
(d)	 Inclusion of the Chairperson, Central Board of Ex-
cise and Customs (CBEC), as a permanent invitee
(non-voting) to all proceedings of the GST Council;
(e)	 Creation of one post of Additional Secretary to the
GST Council in the GST Council Secretariat (at the
level of Additional Secretary to the Government of
India), and four posts of Commissioner in the GST
Council Secretariat (at the level of Joint Secretary
to the Government of India).
The Cabinet also decided to provide for adequate funds
for meeting the recurring and non-recurring expenses
of the GST Council Secretariat, the entire cost for which
shall be borne by the Central Government. The GST
Council Secretariat shall be manned by officers taken
on deputation from both the Central and State Govern-
ments.
The steps required in the direction of implementation
of GST are being taken ahead of the schedule so far.
4.	 Finance Minister announces the exemp-
tion threshold and administrative control
mechanism for GST
The two day meeting of the newly constituted GST
Council comprising of Union Finance Minister, Union
Minister of State for Finance and the State Finance Min-
isters concluded on 23rd
September, 2016. Based on the
proceedings of the meeting, the announcements made
by the Union Finance Minister are as follows:
•	 Exemption threshold for GST has been fixed at Rs
20 lakhs for all the States except the North-Eastern
States and other small states. For these states the
exemption threshold has been fixed at Rs 10 lakhs.
•	 State Authorities shall assess the taxpayers with
annual turnover not exceeding Rs 1.5 crore.
•	 For annual turnover above Rs 1.5 crore, the taxpay-
ers will be cross examined either by the Central or
State Authorities on the basis of risk assessment.
•	 Centre shall continue to assess the existing Service
tax assessees irrespective of their annual turnover
till the state officers are trained for said purposes.
However, new assessees which would be added to
the list shall be divided between Centre and States.
•	 The Council has also agreed that all cesses shall be
subsumed in the GST.
•	 Union Finance Minister further announced that
the GST Council shall try and finalise the tax rate
and slabs in the meeting to be held from17 October
2016 to 19 October 2016.
5.	 Centre Issues Model Guidelines on Direct
Selling
The Government on 12th
September, 2016 issued model
guidelines for State governments to regulate the busi-
ness of direct selling and multi-level marketing with an
aim to protect consumers from Ponzi schemes. The
‘Direct Selling Guidelines 2016’ framework, released
by Food and Consumer Affairs Minister Ram Vilas Pas-
wan, prohibits pyramid as well as money circulation
schemes. In the guidelines, direct selling has been
defined as “marketing, distribution and sale of goods
or providing of services as a part of network of direct
selling other than under a pyramid scheme”. Pyramid
Scheme has been defined in the guidelines as “a multi
layered network of subscribers to a scheme formed by
subscribers enrolling one or more subscribers in order
to receive any benefit, directly or indirectly, as a result
of enrolment or action or performance of additional
subscribers to the scheme”.
Amongst the major measures, the guidelines make
it mandatory for e-retailers and online marketplaces
to get prior written consent of the direct selling enti-
ties like Amway before soliciting sales. The norms also
provided for direct selling companies for setting up a
Grievance Redressal Committee to attend to consumer
complaints that will necessarily have to carry a unique
number through which they can be tracked for redres-
37
POLICY FOCUS
SEPTEMBER 2016
sal. The guidelines have also made provision for ap-
pointment of monitoring authority at both the Centre
and State levels to deal with the issues related to direct
selling. Further, the guidelines also place conditions on
the contract between direct sellers and the direct sell-
ing entity, saying that all such agreements should be in
writing describing the material impact of the participa-
tion.
6.	 Report Released on “Incentivising Pulses
Production through Minimum Support
Price (MSP) and Related Policies”
Chief Economic Adviser, Dr. Arvind Subramanian sub-
mitted a Report titled “Incentivising Pulses Production
through Minimum Support Price (MSP) and Related
Policies” to Finance Ministry on 16th
September, 2016.
The panel was set up in the wake of a recent surge in
retail prices of pulses. The major suggestions of the re-
port are as follows:
-	 Government should procure pulses on a “war foot-
ing”,
-	 Government should create buffer stock of 2 million
tonnes,
-	 States should be pushed to delist pulses from Ag-
ricultural Produce Market Committee (APMC) and
promote development of GM technologies. It also
prescribed subsidies to farmers for growing pulses,
-	 Government should immediately announce higher
MSP of gram (chana) to Rs 4,000 a quintal for rabi
2016 and Rs 6,000 a quintal for both urad and tur
for kharif season 2017,
-	 It suggested that new agencies should handle pro-
curement under PPP model,
-	 The report suggested that there should be no bans
on exports of pulses or ad hoc controls.
7.	 Cabinet approves merger of rail budget
with general budget; advancement of
budget presentation and merger of plan
and non-plan classification in budget and
accounts
The Union Cabinet on 21st
September, 2016 approved
the proposals of Ministry of Finance on certain landmark
budgetary reforms relating to (i) the merger of Railway
budget with the General budget, (ii) the advancement
of the date of Budget presentation from the last day of
February and (iii) the merger of the Plan and the Non-
Plan classification in the Budget and Accounts. All these
changes will be put into effect simultaneously from the
Budget 2017-18.
Merger of Railway Budget with the General
Budget:
The arrangements for merger of Railway budget with
the General budget have been approved by the Cabinet
with the following administrative and financial arrange-
ments-
(i)	 The Railways will continue to maintain its distinct
entity -as a departmentally run commercial under-
taking as at present;
(ii)	 Railways will retain their functional autonomy and
delegation of financial powers etc. as per the exist-
ing guidelines;
(iii)	 The existing financial arrangements will continue
wherein Railways will meet all their revenue ex-
penditure, including ordinary working expenses,
pay and allowances and pensions etc. from their
revenue receipts;
(iv)	The Capital at charge of the Railways estimated at
Rs.2.27 lakh crore on which annual dividend is paid
by the Railways will be wiped off. Consequently,
there will be no dividend liability for Railways from
2017-18 and Ministry of Railways will get Gross
Budgetary support.
The presentation of separate Railway budget started in
the year 1924, and has continued after independence
as a convention rather than under Constitutional provi-
sions.
The merger would help in the following ways:
•	 The presentation of a unified budget will bring the
affairs of the Railways to centre stage and present
a holistic picture of the financial position of the Gov-
ernment.
•	 The merger is also expected to reduce the proce-
dural requirements and instead bring into focus,
ECONOMY MATTERS 38
POLICY FOCUS
the aspects of delivery and good governance.
•	 Consequent to the merger, the appropriations for
Railways will form part of the main Appropriation
Bill.
Advancement of the Budget presentation:
The Cabinet also approved, in principle, another reform
relating to budgetary process, for advancement of the
date of Budget presentation from the last day of Febru-
ary to a suitable date. The exact date of presentation
of Budget for 2017-18 would be decided keeping in view
the date of assembly elections to be held in States.
Merger of Plan and Non Plan classification in
Budget and Accounts:
The third proposal approved by the Cabinet relates to
the merger of Plan and Non Plan classification in Budget
and Accounts from 2017-18, with continuance of ear-
marking of funds for Scheduled Castes Sub-Plan/Tribal
Sub-Plan. Similarly, the allocations for North Eastern
States will also continue.
This would help in resolving the following issues:
•	 The Plan/Non-Plan bifurcation of expenditure has
led to a fragmented view of resource allocation to
various schemes, making it difficult not only to as-
certain cost of delivering a service but also to link
outlays to outcomes.
•	 The bias in favour of Plan expenditure by Centre as
well as the State Governments has led to a neglect
of essential expenditures on maintenance of assets
and other establishment related expenditures for
providing essential social services.
CII’s Reaction
The decision to merge the rail budget with the Union
Budget and removal of the distinction between Plan
and non-Plan expenditure are commendable initiatives
to simplify and streamline decision-making within the
government and move towards efficiency of resource
use. Purely from a policy point of view, the recent Cabi-
net decisions send a clear message that the govern-
ment is orchestrating big bang reforms in a major way.
Expediting the passage of the Budget is a move in the
right direction as it would facilitate early implementa-
tion of Budget decisions. This is a historic move in the
direction of less government and more governance, the
credo of the present government. Global and domes-
tic business sentiment would get a further fillip and so
would the environment for doing business in the coun-
try.
39
GLOBAL TRENDS
Federal Rate Hike on Cards in
December 2016
SEPTEMBER 2016
I
n line with expectations, US Federal Reserve main-
tained status-quo and kept the Federal funds target
range unchanged at 0.25-0.50 per cent in its meeting
held over two days on 20-21 September 2016 as it await-
ed more evidence of progress toward its goals, while
projecting that an increase is still likely by year-end. In-
terestingly, three members from the hawkish Fed bloc
— Esther George, Loretta Mester and Eric Rosengren
— dissented from the statement as compared to only
one member dissenting in the previous meeting. In the
policy statement, the Federal Open Market Commit-
tee (FOMC) indicated that the labor market had con-
tinued to strengthen and growth of economic activity
had picked up from the modest pace seen in the first
half of this year. It however added that the household
spending had been growing strongly but business fixed
investment had remained soft. Further, the Fed state-
ment highlighted that it had been concerned about
global developments; particularly the Brexit vote and a
slowdown in China, however the near-term risks to the
economic outlook were put as being roughly balanced.
Fed upgrades its assessment of econom-
ic activity
As regards to its evaluation about the economic activ-
ity, the Fed upgraded its assessment of the economic
activity, citing that “growth of economic activity has
picked up from the modest pace seen in the first half of
this year” as compared to the moderate rate of growth
cited in the last meeting. However, in the Summary
of Economic Projections (SEP) that accompanied the
statement, the FOMC revised slightly lower its projec-
tion for GDP growth for 2016. The median growth pro-
jection for 2016 was cut to 1.8 per cent from 2 per cent,
mirroring the drop in the longer-run forecast, based on
median estimates.
On the inflation front, Fed noted that inflation had con-
tinued to run below the Committee’s longer-run objec-
tive, partly reflecting earlier declines in energy prices
and decreasing prices of non-energy imports. Hence, it
revised its projection of CPI to 1.3 per cent in the fourth
quarter, down from a forecast of 1.4 percent made in
June 2016. However, it retained its view that inflation
was expected to rise towards the 2 per cent target in
the medium-term.
ECONOMY MATTERS 40
GLOBAL TRENDS
Notwithstanding the moderation in NFP
seen in August, labour market conditions
remain upbeat
On the labour market conditions, Fed acknowledged
that a range of indicators pointed to “continued
strengthening of the labour market”. However, the Au-
gust 2016 non-farm payrolls (NFP) came in lower than
expectations, increasing by 151,000 in August 2016 as
compared with the market consensus of 180,000. While
the June 2016 print was revised downwards to 271,000
from 292,000, the July 2016 print was revised up from
255,000 to 275,000. The less volatile three-month aver-
age NFP came in above its psychological 200,000 mark
at 232,000.
Bank of Japan (BoJ) Governor Haruhiko Kuroda an-
nounced a new monetary policy paradigm in order to
stimulate Japanese economy and help it reach the 2 per
cent inflation target. The introduction of “yield curve
control,” in which the Bank will seek for the decline in
real interest rates by controlling short-term and long-
term interest rates, would be placed at the core of the
new policy framework.
Large scale monetary easing has released
surfeit of easy money in the economy
More than three years ago, BoJ had introduced Quan-
titative and Qualitative Monetary Easing (QQE) in April
In December 2015, the Fed had signaled that four rate
increases were likely in 2016, but had scaled back these
projections in March 2016 due to a global growth slow-
down, financial market volatility and concerns about
tepid inflation. In the years ahead, the FOMC sees two
hikes in 2017 and three each in 2018 and 2019 that would
bring the funds rate to about 2.6 per cent, assuming
that each increase would come in quarter-point incre-
ments.
Fed rate hike expected in December 2016
Going ahead, incoming data and developments in the
global and financial markets will remain critical for de-
termining the next policy action. However, a rate hike in
December 2016 remains on the cards.
2013. In this period, Japan’s economic activity and prices
had improved significantly and Japan’s economy was
pulled out of deflation. However, despite the Bank’s
large-scale monetary easing, the price stability target
of 2 per cent had not been achieved. In order to com-
plement this policy, in January 2016, the Bank had intro-
duced “QQE with a Negative Interest Rate”. Since the
introduction of this measure, Japanese government
bond (JGB) yields, lending rates and interest rates on
corporate bonds and commercial paper had declined
considerably, implying that the measure has had sub-
stantial effects.
Bank of Japan Introduces New Monetary Policy Paradigm
41
GLOBAL TRENDS
SEPTEMBER 2016
In line with market expectation, the Bank of England
(BoE) in its monetary policy meeting held on 15th
Sep-
tember, 2016 kept key policy rate unchanged at 0.25 per
cent and Asset Purchase Facility (APF) at GBP 435 billion.
All nine members of the Bank’s Monetary Policy Com-
mittee (MPC) voted to leave interest rates at a record
low, following signs that businesses and households
have largely shrugged off the initial shock of Brexit.
BoE adopts dovish stance; rate cut ex-
pected most likely by end of 2016
However, the accompanying statement was broadly
dovish on the stance front but BoE’s assessment of in-
coming data was mildly positive, with the Committee
highlighting the need to act further if data disappoints.
The Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) admitted that
a number of indicators of near-term economic activity
had been somewhat stronger than expected. It now
expects less of a slowing in UK GDP growth in the sec-
ond half of 2016. For now, an internal judgment by Bank
staff suggests GDP growth will come in at about 0.2-0.3
per cent in the third quarter, the minutes said. That was
stronger than their view at the time of the August rate
cut, when they forecast that growth would be close to
zero.
The meeting record showed a majority of policymak-
ers were still open to another rate cut, probably to 0.1
per cent, before the end of the current year. However,
much will depend on the Bank’s next inflation report
due on 3rd
November, 2016, when it produces new fore-
casts for the economy based on the latest indicators.
Bank of England Adopts Dovish Policy Stance
BoJ introduces ‘’ QQE with Yield Curve
Control”
But still, price target of 2 per cent had remained elu-
sive. Hence, BOJ decided to introduce a new monetary
policy framework called as “QQE with Yield Curve Con-
trol”, which consists of two major components: the first
is “yield curve control” in which the Bank will control
short-term and long-term interest rates; and the second
is an “inflation-overshooting commitment” in which the
Bank has committed itself to expanding the monetary
base until the year-on-year rate of increase in the ob-
served consumer price index (CPI) exceeds the price
stability target of 2 per cent and stays above the target
in a stable manner.
In order to achieve the yield control, BoJ has speci-
fied guidelines for market operations which enunciate
a short-term policy interest rate and a target level of a
long-term interest rate. Specifically, short-term interest
rates will be decided by applying a negative interest rate
of minus 0.1 per cent to the policy-rate balances in cur-
rent accounts held by financial institutions at the Bank.
The long-term interest rates will be the rate at which the
Bank will purchase Japanese government bonds (JGBs)
and also ensure that the 10-year JGB yields will remain
more or less at the current level (around zero per cent).
The experience so far with the negative interest rate
policy shows that a combination of the negative inter-
est rate on current account balances at the Bank and
JGB purchases is effective for yield curve control.
Further, the Bank also decided to introduce the follow-
ing new tools of market operations so as to control the
yield curve smoothly:
(i)	 Outright purchases of JGBs with yields designated
by the Bank (fixed-rate purchase operations) and
(ii)	 Fixed-rate funds-supplying operations for a period
of up to 10 years (extending the longest maturity of
the operation from 1 year at present).
Achieving inflation target of 2 per cent
remains critical for BoJ
To sum it, BoJ has showed resolute determination in
pursuing “QQE with Yield Curve Control” and achieve
the price stability target of 2 per cent at the earliest pos-
sible time. The Bank believes that its monetary policy
and the Government’s fiscal policy as well as initiatives
for strengthening Japan’s growth potential will pro-
duce synergy effects, and thereby will navigate Japan’s
economy toward overcoming deflation and achieving
sustainable growth.
ECONOMY MONITOR
ECONOMY MATTERS 42
43
ECONOMY MONITOR
SEPTEMBER 2016
Economy Matters, August-September 2016
Economy Matters, August-September 2016
Economy Matters, August-September 2016

More Related Content

What's hot

Stock of the week kotak mahindra bank
Stock of the week   kotak mahindra bankStock of the week   kotak mahindra bank
Stock of the week kotak mahindra bankstockquint
 
Recent Economic Development: August 2010
Recent Economic Development: August 2010Recent Economic Development: August 2010
Recent Economic Development: August 2010Badan Kebijakan Fiskal
 
Study on impact of RBI policy rates on inflation
Study on impact of RBI policy rates on inflationStudy on impact of RBI policy rates on inflation
Study on impact of RBI policy rates on inflationYashvardhanGehlot
 
Equity Update - February 2019
Equity Update - February 2019Equity Update - February 2019
Equity Update - February 2019iciciprumf
 
The World This Week - 07th to 11th March, 2016
The World This Week - 07th to 11th March, 2016The World This Week - 07th to 11th March, 2016
The World This Week - 07th to 11th March, 2016Karvy Private Wealth
 
Equity Update - March 2019
Equity Update - March 2019Equity Update - March 2019
Equity Update - March 2019iciciprumf
 
Equity Update - November 2019
Equity Update - November 2019Equity Update - November 2019
Equity Update - November 2019iciciprumf
 
Equity Update - March 2020
Equity Update - March 2020Equity Update - March 2020
Equity Update - March 2020iciciprumf
 
“A study on economic performance, after a new rbi governor ride” bali tij...
“A study on economic performance, after a new rbi governor ride”   bali   tij...“A study on economic performance, after a new rbi governor ride”   bali   tij...
“A study on economic performance, after a new rbi governor ride” bali tij...Mallikarjun Bali
 
Equity update - April 2020
Equity update - April 2020Equity update - April 2020
Equity update - April 2020iciciprumf
 
Fixed Income Update - May 2019
Fixed Income Update - May 2019Fixed Income Update - May 2019
Fixed Income Update - May 2019iciciprumf
 
Banking Sector Q4FY15 preview: Asset quality will remain under pressure
Banking Sector Q4FY15 preview: Asset quality will remain under pressureBanking Sector Q4FY15 preview: Asset quality will remain under pressure
Banking Sector Q4FY15 preview: Asset quality will remain under pressureIndiaNotes.com
 
Federal Bank Fundamental Report
Federal Bank Fundamental ReportFederal Bank Fundamental Report
Federal Bank Fundamental ReportSumeesh Thomas
 
FINANCIAL RESULTS (INDIAN GAAP) FOR THE QUARTER ENDED JUNE 30, 2016
FINANCIAL RESULTS (INDIAN GAAP) FOR THE QUARTER ENDED JUNE 30, 2016FINANCIAL RESULTS (INDIAN GAAP) FOR THE QUARTER ENDED JUNE 30, 2016
FINANCIAL RESULTS (INDIAN GAAP) FOR THE QUARTER ENDED JUNE 30, 2016Nilakshi Nene
 
Indian Banking Moving towards a new landscape - Indian Banking Sector Overv...
Indian Banking  Moving towards a new landscape - Indian Banking Sector Overv...Indian Banking  Moving towards a new landscape - Indian Banking Sector Overv...
Indian Banking Moving towards a new landscape - Indian Banking Sector Overv...Resurgent India
 
Second quater analysis 2071
Second quater analysis 2071Second quater analysis 2071
Second quater analysis 2071Nabin Timsina
 
The World This Week - 29th Feb - 04th March, 2016
The World This Week - 29th Feb - 04th March, 2016The World This Week - 29th Feb - 04th March, 2016
The World This Week - 29th Feb - 04th March, 2016Karvy Private Wealth
 

What's hot (20)

Stock of the week kotak mahindra bank
Stock of the week   kotak mahindra bankStock of the week   kotak mahindra bank
Stock of the week kotak mahindra bank
 
Recent Economic Development: August 2010
Recent Economic Development: August 2010Recent Economic Development: August 2010
Recent Economic Development: August 2010
 
Study on impact of RBI policy rates on inflation
Study on impact of RBI policy rates on inflationStudy on impact of RBI policy rates on inflation
Study on impact of RBI policy rates on inflation
 
Equity Update - February 2019
Equity Update - February 2019Equity Update - February 2019
Equity Update - February 2019
 
Weekly Market Review - February 7, 2014
Weekly Market Review - February 7, 2014Weekly Market Review - February 7, 2014
Weekly Market Review - February 7, 2014
 
analysis on rbi growth
analysis on rbi growthanalysis on rbi growth
analysis on rbi growth
 
The World This Week - 07th to 11th March, 2016
The World This Week - 07th to 11th March, 2016The World This Week - 07th to 11th March, 2016
The World This Week - 07th to 11th March, 2016
 
Equity Update - March 2019
Equity Update - March 2019Equity Update - March 2019
Equity Update - March 2019
 
Equity Update - November 2019
Equity Update - November 2019Equity Update - November 2019
Equity Update - November 2019
 
Equity Update - March 2020
Equity Update - March 2020Equity Update - March 2020
Equity Update - March 2020
 
Economy Matters October 2017
Economy Matters October 2017Economy Matters October 2017
Economy Matters October 2017
 
“A study on economic performance, after a new rbi governor ride” bali tij...
“A study on economic performance, after a new rbi governor ride”   bali   tij...“A study on economic performance, after a new rbi governor ride”   bali   tij...
“A study on economic performance, after a new rbi governor ride” bali tij...
 
Equity update - April 2020
Equity update - April 2020Equity update - April 2020
Equity update - April 2020
 
Fixed Income Update - May 2019
Fixed Income Update - May 2019Fixed Income Update - May 2019
Fixed Income Update - May 2019
 
Banking Sector Q4FY15 preview: Asset quality will remain under pressure
Banking Sector Q4FY15 preview: Asset quality will remain under pressureBanking Sector Q4FY15 preview: Asset quality will remain under pressure
Banking Sector Q4FY15 preview: Asset quality will remain under pressure
 
Federal Bank Fundamental Report
Federal Bank Fundamental ReportFederal Bank Fundamental Report
Federal Bank Fundamental Report
 
FINANCIAL RESULTS (INDIAN GAAP) FOR THE QUARTER ENDED JUNE 30, 2016
FINANCIAL RESULTS (INDIAN GAAP) FOR THE QUARTER ENDED JUNE 30, 2016FINANCIAL RESULTS (INDIAN GAAP) FOR THE QUARTER ENDED JUNE 30, 2016
FINANCIAL RESULTS (INDIAN GAAP) FOR THE QUARTER ENDED JUNE 30, 2016
 
Indian Banking Moving towards a new landscape - Indian Banking Sector Overv...
Indian Banking  Moving towards a new landscape - Indian Banking Sector Overv...Indian Banking  Moving towards a new landscape - Indian Banking Sector Overv...
Indian Banking Moving towards a new landscape - Indian Banking Sector Overv...
 
Second quater analysis 2071
Second quater analysis 2071Second quater analysis 2071
Second quater analysis 2071
 
The World This Week - 29th Feb - 04th March, 2016
The World This Week - 29th Feb - 04th March, 2016The World This Week - 29th Feb - 04th March, 2016
The World This Week - 29th Feb - 04th March, 2016
 

Viewers also liked

Web browsers & the realtime web
Web browsers & the realtime webWeb browsers & the realtime web
Web browsers & the realtime webPhil Leggetter
 
Bilingue si cresce - un incontro sul bilinguismo infantile
Bilingue si cresce - un incontro sul bilinguismo infantileBilingue si cresce - un incontro sul bilinguismo infantile
Bilingue si cresce - un incontro sul bilinguismo infantileEsedra Srl
 
Timmy Global Health Presentation
Timmy Global Health PresentationTimmy Global Health Presentation
Timmy Global Health PresentationMatt Cummings
 
Build Your Confidence Muscles: Three Tips and Three Challenges
Build Your Confidence Muscles: Three Tips and Three ChallengesBuild Your Confidence Muscles: Three Tips and Three Challenges
Build Your Confidence Muscles: Three Tips and Three ChallengesLisa Braithwaite
 
Equipo 3 planificador aamtic con ajustes de retroalimentación version 2.
Equipo 3   planificador aamtic  con ajustes de retroalimentación version 2.Equipo 3   planificador aamtic  con ajustes de retroalimentación version 2.
Equipo 3 planificador aamtic con ajustes de retroalimentación version 2.Polo Apolo
 
Securing the Pipeline
Securing the PipelineSecuring the Pipeline
Securing the PipelineThoughtworks
 
Curriculum Vitae Gary Smith
Curriculum Vitae Gary SmithCurriculum Vitae Gary Smith
Curriculum Vitae Gary SmithGary Smith
 
CaseTalk Transformations - 10 slide intro
CaseTalk Transformations - 10 slide introCaseTalk Transformations - 10 slide intro
CaseTalk Transformations - 10 slide introMarco Wobben
 
My inspirational person english
My inspirational person englishMy inspirational person english
My inspirational person englishPao Tati
 
Workshop The Family - Automate Your Startup
Workshop The Family - Automate Your StartupWorkshop The Family - Automate Your Startup
Workshop The Family - Automate Your StartupGentlenode Studio
 
Waarom schuift paleis andere schaakstukken naar voor?
Waarom schuift paleis andere schaakstukken naar voor?Waarom schuift paleis andere schaakstukken naar voor?
Waarom schuift paleis andere schaakstukken naar voor?Thierry Debels
 
Next Generation Leadership: Integrated Talent Management for Robust Talent Pi...
Next Generation Leadership: Integrated Talent Management for Robust Talent Pi...Next Generation Leadership: Integrated Talent Management for Robust Talent Pi...
Next Generation Leadership: Integrated Talent Management for Robust Talent Pi...National HRD Network
 
Revision SD 4 SEMESTER GENAP T.P. 2015-2016 UNIT 16
Revision SD 4 SEMESTER GENAP T.P. 2015-2016 UNIT 16Revision SD 4 SEMESTER GENAP T.P. 2015-2016 UNIT 16
Revision SD 4 SEMESTER GENAP T.P. 2015-2016 UNIT 16Agnes Yodo
 

Viewers also liked (20)

Northern Notes, July 2016
Northern Notes, July 2016Northern Notes, July 2016
Northern Notes, July 2016
 
Web browsers & the realtime web
Web browsers & the realtime webWeb browsers & the realtime web
Web browsers & the realtime web
 
Bilingue si cresce - un incontro sul bilinguismo infantile
Bilingue si cresce - un incontro sul bilinguismo infantileBilingue si cresce - un incontro sul bilinguismo infantile
Bilingue si cresce - un incontro sul bilinguismo infantile
 
Timmy Global Health Presentation
Timmy Global Health PresentationTimmy Global Health Presentation
Timmy Global Health Presentation
 
Build Your Confidence Muscles: Three Tips and Three Challenges
Build Your Confidence Muscles: Three Tips and Three ChallengesBuild Your Confidence Muscles: Three Tips and Three Challenges
Build Your Confidence Muscles: Three Tips and Three Challenges
 
Equipo 3 planificador aamtic con ajustes de retroalimentación version 2.
Equipo 3   planificador aamtic  con ajustes de retroalimentación version 2.Equipo 3   planificador aamtic  con ajustes de retroalimentación version 2.
Equipo 3 planificador aamtic con ajustes de retroalimentación version 2.
 
Audi summary
Audi summaryAudi summary
Audi summary
 
Github
GithubGithub
Github
 
Vplyv online kampaní na offline výsledky
Vplyv online kampaní na offline výsledkyVplyv online kampaní na offline výsledky
Vplyv online kampaní na offline výsledky
 
Securing the Pipeline
Securing the PipelineSecuring the Pipeline
Securing the Pipeline
 
Curriculum Vitae Gary Smith
Curriculum Vitae Gary SmithCurriculum Vitae Gary Smith
Curriculum Vitae Gary Smith
 
CaseTalk Transformations - 10 slide intro
CaseTalk Transformations - 10 slide introCaseTalk Transformations - 10 slide intro
CaseTalk Transformations - 10 slide intro
 
My inspirational person english
My inspirational person englishMy inspirational person english
My inspirational person english
 
Workshop The Family - Automate Your Startup
Workshop The Family - Automate Your StartupWorkshop The Family - Automate Your Startup
Workshop The Family - Automate Your Startup
 
Waarom schuift paleis andere schaakstukken naar voor?
Waarom schuift paleis andere schaakstukken naar voor?Waarom schuift paleis andere schaakstukken naar voor?
Waarom schuift paleis andere schaakstukken naar voor?
 
Next Generation Leadership: Integrated Talent Management for Robust Talent Pi...
Next Generation Leadership: Integrated Talent Management for Robust Talent Pi...Next Generation Leadership: Integrated Talent Management for Robust Talent Pi...
Next Generation Leadership: Integrated Talent Management for Robust Talent Pi...
 
kyle
kylekyle
kyle
 
Revision SD 4 SEMESTER GENAP T.P. 2015-2016 UNIT 16
Revision SD 4 SEMESTER GENAP T.P. 2015-2016 UNIT 16Revision SD 4 SEMESTER GENAP T.P. 2015-2016 UNIT 16
Revision SD 4 SEMESTER GENAP T.P. 2015-2016 UNIT 16
 
Web Tricks
Web TricksWeb Tricks
Web Tricks
 
El petroleo
El petroleoEl petroleo
El petroleo
 

Similar to Economy Matters, August-September 2016

The world this week april 16 - april 20 2012
The world this week   april 16 - april 20 2012The world this week   april 16 - april 20 2012
The world this week april 16 - april 20 2012Karvy Private Wealth
 
Fixed Income Update - March 2020
Fixed Income Update - March 2020Fixed Income Update - March 2020
Fixed Income Update - March 2020iciciprumf
 
Construction Industry Review Issue 51
Construction Industry Review Issue   51Construction Industry Review Issue   51
Construction Industry Review Issue 51Remona Divekar
 
Fixed Income Update - June 2019
Fixed Income Update - June 2019Fixed Income Update - June 2019
Fixed Income Update - June 2019iciciprumf
 
FIXED INCOME UPDATE - July 2020
FIXED INCOME UPDATE - July 2020FIXED INCOME UPDATE - July 2020
FIXED INCOME UPDATE - July 2020iciciprumf
 
Fixed Income Update - June 2020
Fixed Income Update - June 2020Fixed Income Update - June 2020
Fixed Income Update - June 2020iciciprumf
 
Fixed Income Update - August 2019
Fixed Income Update - August 2019Fixed Income Update - August 2019
Fixed Income Update - August 2019iciciprumf
 
Fixed Income Update - April 2020
Fixed Income Update - April 2020Fixed Income Update - April 2020
Fixed Income Update - April 2020iciciprumf
 
ICICI Prudential AMC - Debt Market Outlook - August 2017
ICICI Prudential AMC - Debt Market Outlook - August 2017ICICI Prudential AMC - Debt Market Outlook - August 2017
ICICI Prudential AMC - Debt Market Outlook - August 2017iciciprumf
 
Fixed Income Update - February 2019
Fixed Income Update - February 2019Fixed Income Update - February 2019
Fixed Income Update - February 2019iciciprumf
 
Monetisation by bhawna bhardwaj
Monetisation by bhawna bhardwajMonetisation by bhawna bhardwaj
Monetisation by bhawna bhardwajBhawnaBhardwaj24
 
Fixed Income Update - January 2019
Fixed Income Update - January 2019Fixed Income Update - January 2019
Fixed Income Update - January 2019iciciprumf
 

Similar to Economy Matters, August-September 2016 (20)

Advice For The Wise - April 2016
Advice For The Wise - April 2016Advice For The Wise - April 2016
Advice For The Wise - April 2016
 
Advice for the Wise - May 2016
Advice for the Wise - May 2016Advice for the Wise - May 2016
Advice for the Wise - May 2016
 
The world this week april 16 - april 20 2012
The world this week   april 16 - april 20 2012The world this week   april 16 - april 20 2012
The world this week april 16 - april 20 2012
 
Raghunomics
RaghunomicsRaghunomics
Raghunomics
 
Fixed Income Update - March 2020
Fixed Income Update - March 2020Fixed Income Update - March 2020
Fixed Income Update - March 2020
 
Advice for the Wise October 2016
Advice for the Wise   October 2016Advice for the Wise   October 2016
Advice for the Wise October 2016
 
Construction Industry Review Issue 51
Construction Industry Review Issue   51Construction Industry Review Issue   51
Construction Industry Review Issue 51
 
Fixed Income Update - June 2019
Fixed Income Update - June 2019Fixed Income Update - June 2019
Fixed Income Update - June 2019
 
FIXED INCOME UPDATE - July 2020
FIXED INCOME UPDATE - July 2020FIXED INCOME UPDATE - July 2020
FIXED INCOME UPDATE - July 2020
 
Fixed Income Update - June 2020
Fixed Income Update - June 2020Fixed Income Update - June 2020
Fixed Income Update - June 2020
 
Vibrant India
Vibrant IndiaVibrant India
Vibrant India
 
Fixed Income Update - August 2019
Fixed Income Update - August 2019Fixed Income Update - August 2019
Fixed Income Update - August 2019
 
Portfolio study latest
Portfolio study latestPortfolio study latest
Portfolio study latest
 
Fixed Income Update - April 2020
Fixed Income Update - April 2020Fixed Income Update - April 2020
Fixed Income Update - April 2020
 
Advice for the Wise - June 2016
Advice for the Wise - June 2016Advice for the Wise - June 2016
Advice for the Wise - June 2016
 
ICICI Prudential AMC - Debt Market Outlook - August 2017
ICICI Prudential AMC - Debt Market Outlook - August 2017ICICI Prudential AMC - Debt Market Outlook - August 2017
ICICI Prudential AMC - Debt Market Outlook - August 2017
 
Fixed Income Update - February 2019
Fixed Income Update - February 2019Fixed Income Update - February 2019
Fixed Income Update - February 2019
 
FICCI's Voice - From the desk of Dr Didar Singh, SG, FICCI
FICCI's Voice - From the desk of Dr Didar Singh, SG, FICCIFICCI's Voice - From the desk of Dr Didar Singh, SG, FICCI
FICCI's Voice - From the desk of Dr Didar Singh, SG, FICCI
 
Monetisation by bhawna bhardwaj
Monetisation by bhawna bhardwajMonetisation by bhawna bhardwaj
Monetisation by bhawna bhardwaj
 
Fixed Income Update - January 2019
Fixed Income Update - January 2019Fixed Income Update - January 2019
Fixed Income Update - January 2019
 

More from Confederation of Indian Industry

Composite Water Management Index - A Tool for Water Management
Composite Water Management Index - A Tool for Water Management Composite Water Management Index - A Tool for Water Management
Composite Water Management Index - A Tool for Water Management Confederation of Indian Industry
 
Ease Of Doing Business - Reforms in Maharashtra - May 2018
Ease Of Doing Business - Reforms in Maharashtra - May 2018 Ease Of Doing Business - Reforms in Maharashtra - May 2018
Ease Of Doing Business - Reforms in Maharashtra - May 2018 Confederation of Indian Industry
 
Broadband 2022: Unlocking a Trillion Dollar Digital Economy
Broadband 2022: Unlocking a Trillion Dollar Digital EconomyBroadband 2022: Unlocking a Trillion Dollar Digital Economy
Broadband 2022: Unlocking a Trillion Dollar Digital EconomyConfederation of Indian Industry
 

More from Confederation of Indian Industry (20)

Multilateral Newsletter May 2018 Edition
Multilateral Newsletter May 2018 Edition Multilateral Newsletter May 2018 Edition
Multilateral Newsletter May 2018 Edition
 
Economy Matter - June 2018
Economy Matter - June 2018Economy Matter - June 2018
Economy Matter - June 2018
 
Composite Water Management Index - A Tool for Water Management
Composite Water Management Index - A Tool for Water Management Composite Water Management Index - A Tool for Water Management
Composite Water Management Index - A Tool for Water Management
 
Transition to GST: A year into the system
Transition to GST: A year into the systemTransition to GST: A year into the system
Transition to GST: A year into the system
 
CII Whitepaper India Cyber Risk & Resilience Review 2018
CII Whitepaper India Cyber Risk & Resilience Review 2018CII Whitepaper India Cyber Risk & Resilience Review 2018
CII Whitepaper India Cyber Risk & Resilience Review 2018
 
SME - The Game Changers
SME - The Game ChangersSME - The Game Changers
SME - The Game Changers
 
Ease Of Doing Business - Reforms in Maharashtra - May 2018
Ease Of Doing Business - Reforms in Maharashtra - May 2018 Ease Of Doing Business - Reforms in Maharashtra - May 2018
Ease Of Doing Business - Reforms in Maharashtra - May 2018
 
Multilateral Newsletter March-April 2018
Multilateral Newsletter March-April 2018Multilateral Newsletter March-April 2018
Multilateral Newsletter March-April 2018
 
Economy Matters - May 2018
Economy Matters - May 2018Economy Matters - May 2018
Economy Matters - May 2018
 
CII Commuique May 2018
CII Commuique May 2018CII Commuique May 2018
CII Commuique May 2018
 
Ease of Doing Business
Ease of Doing Business Ease of Doing Business
Ease of Doing Business
 
Broadband 2022: Unlocking a Trillion Dollar Digital Economy
Broadband 2022: Unlocking a Trillion Dollar Digital EconomyBroadband 2022: Unlocking a Trillion Dollar Digital Economy
Broadband 2022: Unlocking a Trillion Dollar Digital Economy
 
Indian Industry's Inclusive Footprint in South Africa
Indian Industry's Inclusive Footprint in South Africa Indian Industry's Inclusive Footprint in South Africa
Indian Industry's Inclusive Footprint in South Africa
 
Policy Watch March 2018
Policy Watch March 2018Policy Watch March 2018
Policy Watch March 2018
 
India meets Britain Tracker
India meets Britain Tracker India meets Britain Tracker
India meets Britain Tracker
 
Economy Matters April 2018
Economy Matters April 2018Economy Matters April 2018
Economy Matters April 2018
 
CII Communique April 2018
CII Communique April 2018CII Communique April 2018
CII Communique April 2018
 
CII-NITI Aayog's 'Cleaner Air Better Life Initiative'
CII-NITI Aayog's 'Cleaner Air Better Life Initiative'CII-NITI Aayog's 'Cleaner Air Better Life Initiative'
CII-NITI Aayog's 'Cleaner Air Better Life Initiative'
 
Annual CSR Tracker 2017
Annual CSR Tracker 2017Annual CSR Tracker 2017
Annual CSR Tracker 2017
 
CII IWN - EY Report - The Future is HERe
CII IWN - EY Report - The Future is HEReCII IWN - EY Report - The Future is HERe
CII IWN - EY Report - The Future is HERe
 

Recently uploaded

Horngren’s Financial & Managerial Accounting, 7th edition by Miller-Nobles so...
Horngren’s Financial & Managerial Accounting, 7th edition by Miller-Nobles so...Horngren’s Financial & Managerial Accounting, 7th edition by Miller-Nobles so...
Horngren’s Financial & Managerial Accounting, 7th edition by Miller-Nobles so...ssuserf63bd7
 
Psychic Reading | Spiritual Guidance – Astro Ganesh Ji
Psychic Reading | Spiritual Guidance – Astro Ganesh JiPsychic Reading | Spiritual Guidance – Astro Ganesh Ji
Psychic Reading | Spiritual Guidance – Astro Ganesh Jiastral oracle
 
20220816-EthicsGrade_Scorecard-JP_Morgan_Chase-Q2-63_57.pdf
20220816-EthicsGrade_Scorecard-JP_Morgan_Chase-Q2-63_57.pdf20220816-EthicsGrade_Scorecard-JP_Morgan_Chase-Q2-63_57.pdf
20220816-EthicsGrade_Scorecard-JP_Morgan_Chase-Q2-63_57.pdfChris Skinner
 
digital marketing , introduction of digital marketing
digital marketing , introduction of digital marketingdigital marketing , introduction of digital marketing
digital marketing , introduction of digital marketingrajputmeenakshi733
 
NAB Show Exhibitor List 2024 - Exhibitors Data
NAB Show Exhibitor List 2024 - Exhibitors DataNAB Show Exhibitor List 2024 - Exhibitors Data
NAB Show Exhibitor List 2024 - Exhibitors DataExhibitors Data
 
GUIDELINES ON USEFUL FORMS IN FREIGHT FORWARDING (F) Danny Diep Toh MBA.pdf
GUIDELINES ON USEFUL FORMS IN FREIGHT FORWARDING (F) Danny Diep Toh MBA.pdfGUIDELINES ON USEFUL FORMS IN FREIGHT FORWARDING (F) Danny Diep Toh MBA.pdf
GUIDELINES ON USEFUL FORMS IN FREIGHT FORWARDING (F) Danny Diep Toh MBA.pdfDanny Diep To
 
PSCC - Capability Statement Presentation
PSCC - Capability Statement PresentationPSCC - Capability Statement Presentation
PSCC - Capability Statement PresentationAnamaria Contreras
 
Unveiling the Soundscape Music for Psychedelic Experiences
Unveiling the Soundscape Music for Psychedelic ExperiencesUnveiling the Soundscape Music for Psychedelic Experiences
Unveiling the Soundscape Music for Psychedelic ExperiencesDoe Paoro
 
WSMM Technology February.March Newsletter_vF.pdf
WSMM Technology February.March Newsletter_vF.pdfWSMM Technology February.March Newsletter_vF.pdf
WSMM Technology February.March Newsletter_vF.pdfJamesConcepcion7
 
Environmental Impact Of Rotary Screw Compressors
Environmental Impact Of Rotary Screw CompressorsEnvironmental Impact Of Rotary Screw Compressors
Environmental Impact Of Rotary Screw Compressorselgieurope
 
Church Building Grants To Assist With New Construction, Additions, And Restor...
Church Building Grants To Assist With New Construction, Additions, And Restor...Church Building Grants To Assist With New Construction, Additions, And Restor...
Church Building Grants To Assist With New Construction, Additions, And Restor...Americas Got Grants
 
Driving Business Impact for PMs with Jon Harmer
Driving Business Impact for PMs with Jon HarmerDriving Business Impact for PMs with Jon Harmer
Driving Business Impact for PMs with Jon HarmerAggregage
 
Interoperability and ecosystems: Assembling the industrial metaverse
Interoperability and ecosystems:  Assembling the industrial metaverseInteroperability and ecosystems:  Assembling the industrial metaverse
Interoperability and ecosystems: Assembling the industrial metaverseSiemens
 
1911 Gold Corporate Presentation Apr 2024.pdf
1911 Gold Corporate Presentation Apr 2024.pdf1911 Gold Corporate Presentation Apr 2024.pdf
1911 Gold Corporate Presentation Apr 2024.pdfShaun Heinrichs
 
business environment micro environment macro environment.pptx
business environment micro environment macro environment.pptxbusiness environment micro environment macro environment.pptx
business environment micro environment macro environment.pptxShruti Mittal
 
Fordham -How effective decision-making is within the IT department - Analysis...
Fordham -How effective decision-making is within the IT department - Analysis...Fordham -How effective decision-making is within the IT department - Analysis...
Fordham -How effective decision-making is within the IT department - Analysis...Peter Ward
 
Welding Electrode Making Machine By Deccan Dynamics
Welding Electrode Making Machine By Deccan DynamicsWelding Electrode Making Machine By Deccan Dynamics
Welding Electrode Making Machine By Deccan DynamicsIndiaMART InterMESH Limited
 
trending-flavors-and-ingredients-in-salty-snacks-us-2024_Redacted-V2.pdf
trending-flavors-and-ingredients-in-salty-snacks-us-2024_Redacted-V2.pdftrending-flavors-and-ingredients-in-salty-snacks-us-2024_Redacted-V2.pdf
trending-flavors-and-ingredients-in-salty-snacks-us-2024_Redacted-V2.pdfMintel Group
 
How To Simplify Your Scheduling with AI Calendarfly The Hassle-Free Online Bo...
How To Simplify Your Scheduling with AI Calendarfly The Hassle-Free Online Bo...How To Simplify Your Scheduling with AI Calendarfly The Hassle-Free Online Bo...
How To Simplify Your Scheduling with AI Calendarfly The Hassle-Free Online Bo...SOFTTECHHUB
 

Recently uploaded (20)

Horngren’s Financial & Managerial Accounting, 7th edition by Miller-Nobles so...
Horngren’s Financial & Managerial Accounting, 7th edition by Miller-Nobles so...Horngren’s Financial & Managerial Accounting, 7th edition by Miller-Nobles so...
Horngren’s Financial & Managerial Accounting, 7th edition by Miller-Nobles so...
 
Psychic Reading | Spiritual Guidance – Astro Ganesh Ji
Psychic Reading | Spiritual Guidance – Astro Ganesh JiPsychic Reading | Spiritual Guidance – Astro Ganesh Ji
Psychic Reading | Spiritual Guidance – Astro Ganesh Ji
 
20220816-EthicsGrade_Scorecard-JP_Morgan_Chase-Q2-63_57.pdf
20220816-EthicsGrade_Scorecard-JP_Morgan_Chase-Q2-63_57.pdf20220816-EthicsGrade_Scorecard-JP_Morgan_Chase-Q2-63_57.pdf
20220816-EthicsGrade_Scorecard-JP_Morgan_Chase-Q2-63_57.pdf
 
digital marketing , introduction of digital marketing
digital marketing , introduction of digital marketingdigital marketing , introduction of digital marketing
digital marketing , introduction of digital marketing
 
NAB Show Exhibitor List 2024 - Exhibitors Data
NAB Show Exhibitor List 2024 - Exhibitors DataNAB Show Exhibitor List 2024 - Exhibitors Data
NAB Show Exhibitor List 2024 - Exhibitors Data
 
GUIDELINES ON USEFUL FORMS IN FREIGHT FORWARDING (F) Danny Diep Toh MBA.pdf
GUIDELINES ON USEFUL FORMS IN FREIGHT FORWARDING (F) Danny Diep Toh MBA.pdfGUIDELINES ON USEFUL FORMS IN FREIGHT FORWARDING (F) Danny Diep Toh MBA.pdf
GUIDELINES ON USEFUL FORMS IN FREIGHT FORWARDING (F) Danny Diep Toh MBA.pdf
 
PSCC - Capability Statement Presentation
PSCC - Capability Statement PresentationPSCC - Capability Statement Presentation
PSCC - Capability Statement Presentation
 
Unveiling the Soundscape Music for Psychedelic Experiences
Unveiling the Soundscape Music for Psychedelic ExperiencesUnveiling the Soundscape Music for Psychedelic Experiences
Unveiling the Soundscape Music for Psychedelic Experiences
 
WSMM Technology February.March Newsletter_vF.pdf
WSMM Technology February.March Newsletter_vF.pdfWSMM Technology February.March Newsletter_vF.pdf
WSMM Technology February.March Newsletter_vF.pdf
 
Environmental Impact Of Rotary Screw Compressors
Environmental Impact Of Rotary Screw CompressorsEnvironmental Impact Of Rotary Screw Compressors
Environmental Impact Of Rotary Screw Compressors
 
Church Building Grants To Assist With New Construction, Additions, And Restor...
Church Building Grants To Assist With New Construction, Additions, And Restor...Church Building Grants To Assist With New Construction, Additions, And Restor...
Church Building Grants To Assist With New Construction, Additions, And Restor...
 
Driving Business Impact for PMs with Jon Harmer
Driving Business Impact for PMs with Jon HarmerDriving Business Impact for PMs with Jon Harmer
Driving Business Impact for PMs with Jon Harmer
 
Interoperability and ecosystems: Assembling the industrial metaverse
Interoperability and ecosystems:  Assembling the industrial metaverseInteroperability and ecosystems:  Assembling the industrial metaverse
Interoperability and ecosystems: Assembling the industrial metaverse
 
1911 Gold Corporate Presentation Apr 2024.pdf
1911 Gold Corporate Presentation Apr 2024.pdf1911 Gold Corporate Presentation Apr 2024.pdf
1911 Gold Corporate Presentation Apr 2024.pdf
 
business environment micro environment macro environment.pptx
business environment micro environment macro environment.pptxbusiness environment micro environment macro environment.pptx
business environment micro environment macro environment.pptx
 
Fordham -How effective decision-making is within the IT department - Analysis...
Fordham -How effective decision-making is within the IT department - Analysis...Fordham -How effective decision-making is within the IT department - Analysis...
Fordham -How effective decision-making is within the IT department - Analysis...
 
WAM Corporate Presentation April 12 2024.pdf
WAM Corporate Presentation April 12 2024.pdfWAM Corporate Presentation April 12 2024.pdf
WAM Corporate Presentation April 12 2024.pdf
 
Welding Electrode Making Machine By Deccan Dynamics
Welding Electrode Making Machine By Deccan DynamicsWelding Electrode Making Machine By Deccan Dynamics
Welding Electrode Making Machine By Deccan Dynamics
 
trending-flavors-and-ingredients-in-salty-snacks-us-2024_Redacted-V2.pdf
trending-flavors-and-ingredients-in-salty-snacks-us-2024_Redacted-V2.pdftrending-flavors-and-ingredients-in-salty-snacks-us-2024_Redacted-V2.pdf
trending-flavors-and-ingredients-in-salty-snacks-us-2024_Redacted-V2.pdf
 
How To Simplify Your Scheduling with AI Calendarfly The Hassle-Free Online Bo...
How To Simplify Your Scheduling with AI Calendarfly The Hassle-Free Online Bo...How To Simplify Your Scheduling with AI Calendarfly The Hassle-Free Online Bo...
How To Simplify Your Scheduling with AI Calendarfly The Hassle-Free Online Bo...
 

Economy Matters, August-September 2016

  • 1.
  • 3. 1 FOREWORD SEPTEMBER 2016 T he month of September 2016 saw two major central banks, the Bank of Japan (BoJ) and the US Federal Reserve announce their policy decisions. Both of them acted on the expected lines and delivered little surprise. The Fed decided to leave interest rates unchanged, but it strongly sig- nalled it could still tighten monetary policy by the end of this year as the labor market improved further. BoJ meanwhile revealed a new monetary policy framework in order to stimulate Japanese economy and help it reach the 2 per cent inflation target. Under the new policy framework, the central bank will target interest rates on government bonds to achieve its elusive inflation target, after years of massive money printing that had failed to jolt the economy out of decades-long stagnation. The Bank believes that its monetary policy and the Government’s fiscal policy as well as initiatives for strengthen- ing Japan’s growth potential will produce synergy effects, and thereby will navigate Japan’s economy toward overcoming deflation and achieving sustainable growth. On the domestic front, although GDP growth moderated to 7.1 per cent during the first quarter of 2016-17 as against 7.5 per cent during the corresponding period last year, there are firm indications that economic conditions would improve in the coming quarters and new growth opportunities would emerge when the anticipated boost in demand takes root propelled by good monsoons, the Pay Com- mission Award and the recent reform initiatives announced by the government. The good performance of the manufacturing sector, which grew at 9.1 per cent is indeed heartening and points towards better co-ordinated policies in this area. Inflationary pressure as measured by CPI has moderated sharply on the back of fall in food prices. The latter has been precipitated by a near normal monsoon so far. Going forward, we expect CPI inflation to settle within the RBI’s target of 5 per cent for March 2017. In its effort to breathe new life into the Indian corporate bond market, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) announced a slew of measures. RBI’s measures include, allowing corporate bonds to be accepted un- der the liquidity adjustment facility, higher ceiling on credit enhancements, providing Foreign Portfolio investors (FPIs) direct access to bond trading platforms and increasing the risk weightages for non- rated corporate borrowers. These measures are intended to further market development, enhance participation, facilitate greater market liquidity and improve communication. An active, well-oiled cor- porate bond market can help in channelising savings, both from India and abroad, through the bond route and can complement the traditional banking sector lending. Chandrajit Banerjee Director General, CII
  • 4.
  • 6.
  • 7. 5 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY SEPTEMBER 2016 Focus of the Month: Towards a Vibrant Bond Market & Developments in State Finances The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) recently announced a series of measures for the development of fixed income markets. The announcements were quite comprehen- sive and aimed to promote both market efficiency and liquidity. This came in the backdrop of the recently an- nounced report of the Working Group on development of corporate bond market in India under the Financial Stability and Development Council (FSDC) sub-com- mittee. The recommendations in the FSDC report aim to promote greater market liquidity, increased market participation and greater transparency. RBI’s measures included, allowing corporate bonds to be accepted un- der the liquidity adjustment facility, higher ceiling on credit enhancements, providing Foreign Portfolio inves- tors (FPIs) direct access to bond trading platforms and increasing the risk weightages for non-rated corporate borrowers. These measures will go a long way in en- hancing investor confidence in the Indian fixed income markets. To achieve the desired results, it is equally im- portant to ensure active participation from non-bank participants. Interlinked with the theme of a vibrant bond market is the importance of healthy condition of State Finances in India especially with the introduction of GST. In this month’s Focus of the Month, experts pro- vide their viewpoints on these two important topics. Domestic Trends GDP growth in the first quarter of the current fiscal came in at 7.1 per cent as compared to 7.5 per cent in the same quarter last year, while gross value added (GVA) at basic prices posted a growth of 7.3 per cent in 1QFY17 as compared to 7.2 per cent in 1QFY16. The sectoral data print reveals interesting insights into the data. Even as investment growth contracted in 1QFY17, government consumption expenditure growth posted double-digit growth. Private consumption growth con- tinued to post respectable growth rate. Going forward, Pay Commission payouts, contained inflation and easy monetary conditions are expected to support demand. Meanwhile, data on Index of industrial production (IIP) fell back into the negative territory, declining by 2.4 per cent in July 2016 as compared to 2.0 per cent growth in the previous month. Contraction in manufacturing and capital goods output led to the disappointing numbers during the month. On the inflation front, WPI inflation edged up in August 2016 on the back of higher prices recorded in fuel and manufacturing sectors. In contrast, CPI inflation moderated sharply, providing relief to the policymakers. Corporate Performance The corporate results at the end of the first quarter of fiscal year 2017 brought a reason for cheer in the form of rising profitability as the financial performance of In- dian companies, especially manufacturing sector firms, improved during the quarter. Manufacturing sector, buoyed by a significant fall in inputs costs following the collapse of global commodity prices, registered a sharp pickup in profitability growth in 1QFY17 as compared to the same quarter a year ago. Worryingly, both bottom- line and top-line of services sector firms has continued to remain weak so far. The analysis factors in the finan- cial performance of a balanced panel of 1749 manufac- turing companies (excluding oil and gas companies) and 815 service firms extracted from the CMIE’s Prow- ess database. Global Trends In line with expectations, US Federal Reserve main- tained status-quo and kept the Federal funds target range unchanged at 0.25-0.50 per cent in its meeting held over two days on 20-21 September 2016 as it await- ed more evidence of progress toward its goals, while projecting that an increase is still likely by year-end. As regards to its evaluation about the economic activity, the Fed upgraded its assessment of the economic activ- ity on upbeat economic data prints emanating from the economy. Back in Asia, Bank of Japan (BoJ) Governor Haruhiko Kuroda announced a new monetary policy paradigm in order to stimulate Japanese economy and help it reach the 2 per cent inflation target. The intro- duction of “yield curve control,” in which the Bank will press for the decline in real interest rates by control- ling short-term and long-term interest rates, would be placed at the core of the new policy framework.
  • 8. ECONOMY MATTERS 6 FOCUS OF THE MONTH Towards a Vibrant Corporate Bond Market side issues. However fails to fully address the demand side pressure points. The development of bond markets needs sustained participation of long-term institutional investors across the credit curve, which is a challenge the Indian bond market continues to grapple with. RBI’s measures include, allowing corporate bonds to be accepted under the liquidity adjustment facility, higher ceiling on credit enhancements, providing Foreign Port- folio investors (FPIs) direct access to bond trading plat- forms and increasing the risk weightages for non-rated corporate borrowers. RBI’s measures for the development of the fixed in- come and currency markets are a step in the right di- rection and can help broaden the market over the medium- to long-term. These initiatives along with the successful implementation of the bankruptcy laws can help broaden the markets, assuming some of the other issues relating to reissuances, stamp duty and asymme- try of information are addressed in the interim. T he Indian corporate bond market, despite nu- merous efforts by the regulator, continues to be stuck in pursuit of the ‘holy grail’. A truly vibrant and efficient corporate bond market would be char- acterised by a high degree of depth across the credit curve, greater liquidity, protection of creditor rights and low information asymmetry, among other things. The recent measures by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is a welcome step for the development of the bond market and rightly addresses some of the major supply The Indian Corporate Bond Market in Pursuit of the ‘Holy Grail’
  • 9. 7 FOCUS OF THE MONTH SEPTEMBER 2016 Higher rated corporates will directly benefit in the short-term due to the last mile efforts of Raghuram Rajan; however the investment guidelines for most in- vestor classes will require changes, to move down the credit curve. Banks and Financial institutions will largely remain the primary source of funding for corporates, particularly stressed corporates. India Ratings esti- mates that the number of borrowers above the thresh- old of Rs 100 billion debt obligation aggregates 50 - out of which potentially 24 are either stressed or fairly vul- nerable. The measures are likely to give a fillip to the lower rated category bonds in the long run as the banks reduce their reliance on loans as an instrument of providing credit to large corporate issuers. This will incentivise a more dis- ciplined corporate behavior and not necessarily a more diversified investor base for them. In the developed bond markets, the appetite for speculative/non-invest- ment grade bonds remains high and they are issued and traded widely. In the Indian bond market however it is not as easy to place a bond below ‘AA category’ and hence a successful and speedy implementation of the bankruptcy law is keenly anticipated by potential inves- tors with higher risk appetite. Measure to increase the aggregate partial credit en- hancement ceiling to 50 per cent from the earlier 20 per cent, subject to a single banks exposure of 20 per cent, will help corporates to raise money through bonds. As- suming these partial guarantees help improve the rat- ing of the underlying borrower, this potentially has the scope of widening the market for potential issuers. The development of dedicated institutions to provide credit enhancement and the introduction of the covered bond regulations, among others can be some of the other steps which can spur the bond market. The RBI has made an attempt to provide liquidity in the bond market by allowing brokers to be part of corpo- rate bond repo facility. In most developed bond mar- kets, corporate bonds are permitted to be used as collateral for liquidity operations. Allowing corporate bonds as collateral for liquidity operations will improve the demand for corporate bonds, from the perspective of banks subscribing to these bonds. This will help de- velop a robust secondary market for ‘AAA rated’ bonds (assuming the final guidelines restrict it to AAA paper). However, this is unlikely to result in investors moving down the credit curve due to uncertainties relating to recoveries and asymmetry in information sharing. In a scenario, where AAA papers remain in short supply due to bank investments, it could help in the gradual pro- cess of migrating down the rating curve. Current measures have not addressed issues with re- spect to information asymmetry. A bond holder typi- cally gets information with a lag (especially where the underlying performance is deteriorating) limiting the ability of the investors to go down the credit curve and price the product attractively. Disclosure of covenants and compliance could be made mandatory to improve information asymmetry. The recent SEBI circular relat- ing to information disclosure (including ratios like DSCR among others) is a positive step and it could be further strengthened with disclosures on covenants and com- pliance. This is an international practice that both equity and debt investors can benefit from. Long term investors namely pension, provident, gratui- ty funds’ among others are major investors in the Indian bond markets and look for long term investment oppor- tunities. The investment policies of these funds need to be aligned with the regulatory changes. The last time changes were made to the investment policies of these funds it resulted in some debt market issuers migrating to the bank loan market. Unless investment policies of these funds are aligned with other regulatory changes, it will be difficult to develop a deep and vibrant corpo- rate bond market in India. Giving direct access to FPI in the trading platform will add more vigor, especially in the shorter end of the curve. However, it will also mean faster transmission of shocks. Moreover, wide divergences in the normal ticket sizes for FPIs and retail investors compared to the normal market lot of Rs 50 million and the price impact may together deter large scale participation in the near term. Listed corporates can now park short term surplus cash under the repo facility with banks and primary dealers. Corporates holding on to high short term cash balances or parking funds with banks may turn to this window; however with better returns from liquid funds this
  • 10. ECONOMY MATTERS 8 FOCUS OF THE MONTH mode is unlikely to witness a shift in volumes from MFs to banks. India as a country provides a superior rating distribution, as compared to other emerging markets because of the RBI’s steps to encourage ratings on bank facilities. Fur- ther, realignment of the risk weightages between low rated and unrated corporate borrowers, would improve the quality of information. RBI’s measures address a lot of the supply side issues facing the corporate bond market. Demand side meas- ures, however are in the domain of multiple regulators and each regulator comes with their own set of regu- lation/investment guidelines. The speed and scale of developments and innovation in the financial markets poses a challenge for constantly improving the regula- tors capacity. Each regulator namely Securities and Ex- change Board of India (SEBI) Pension Fund Regulatory and Development Authority (PFRDA), Insurance Regu- latory and Development Authority of India (IRDA), RBI though right in their own way but often do not have a consensus on the larger goal of development of the cor- porate bond market. Long term measures to develop investor interest with varying risk appetite would also hinge on increasing the role of alternate investors to banks, who apportion a large dominant part of financial savings in the economy. Over specifying of regulations creates artificial barriers, thereby leads to distortion and inefficient markets. For example, the credit enhancement scheme which speci- fies the amount per bond issue per bank or the rating grade restrictions for investments by insurance com- panies. Regulations targeted at tackling the risk arising out of such provisions without limiting the ability of markets to innovate would be required. Support from various stakeholders can lead to a vibrant corporate bond market in India, which otherwise continues to be dominated by the public sector and financial institu- tions. Globally, the amount of sovereign debt with negative yields has touched US$13 trillion. This provides a good opportunity for all the stakeholders to kick start the corporate bond market in India. Steps to develop masa- la bonds could also help corporate issuers to develop an overseas rupee bond market. (Views expressed are personal)
  • 11. 9 FOCUS OF THE MONTH SEPTEMBER 2016 Developing the Corporate Bond Market T he regulatory initiatives for development of cor- porate bonds so far have been primarily focused on product innovation (credit default swaps, cor- porate bond repo) and infrastructure aspect (manda- tory trade reporting, exchange based settlement, elec- tronic bidding platform for private placements). While product development and robust market infrastructure are critical enablers, it is equally necessary to have a di- versified pool of issuers, intermediaries and investors in order to provide adequate depth and breadth to the market. A well-functioning corporate bond market can not only provide the much needed alternative to tradi- tional bank financing, but can also help reduce borrow- ing costs for corporates through market based pricing of credit risk. The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has recently announced a series of measures for the development of fixed in- come markets. The announcements are quite compre- hensive and aim to promote both market efficiency and liquidity. This comes in the backdrop of the recently an- nounced report of the Working Group on development of corporate bond market in India under the Financial Stability and Development Council (FSDC) sub-commit- tee. The recommendations in the FSDC report aims to promote greater market liquidity, increased market par- ticipation and greater transparency. Firstly, the RBI has issued a discussion paper with a view to mitigate credit concentration risks in the banking sys- tem. According to the proposed framework, large cor- porates would need to rely on debt capital markets for their incremental funding requirements. This measure will give a major boost to the bond market and will lead to greater diversity of issuers in the corporate bond market. However, the investor appetite for issuers across the credit curve would be a key determinant in achieving the desired objective. Investment guidelines of insurance companies and domestic retirement funds may need to be amended for facilitating investment in these bonds. In order to make bond markets accessible to lower rated issuers, the aggregate limits for partial credit en- hancement provided by banks to corporate bonds have now been enhanced to 50 per cent of the issue size in- stead of 20 per cent earlier. This should enable greater infrastructure financing through bond markets, as the credit enhanced bonds can appeal to a wider category of bond market investors. In a very significant development, the Parliament has recently passed the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016. The key benefits include time-bound resolution of corporate defaults (much on the lines of Chapter 11 fil- ing in the US) and providing a forum to capital market participants for resolution of disputes relating to corpo- rate bankruptcies. This is a very positive development, and once implemented, investors are expected to view lower rated companies more favorably. However, the success of the Bankruptcy Code would depend upon the implementation of the associated legal infrastruc- ture to support the new framework. The progress on this front will be crucial to the bond market and will be
  • 12. ECONOMY MATTERS 10 FOCUS OF THE MONTH watched closely. RBI has permitted Indian corporates to issue Rupee de- nominated bonds overseas. This is a win-win product for both issuers and investors. While issuers can access new pools of investor capital without assuming curren- cy risk, investors can access Rupee exposure in an op- erationally convenient manner. Recently, RBI permitted Indian banks to issue Rupee bonds overseas, both for raising capital and infrastructure lending purpose. Since Indian banks are familiar names in the USD bond space, there would be investor demand for these bonds. This would also help develop the offshore quasi-sovereign Rupee yield curve and will facilitate better price discov- ery for Rupee denominated bond issuances for corpo- rates going forward. In order to promote the repo market for corporate bonds, RBI has taken positive and concrete measures toward its development. Corporate bonds would be considered as eligible securities for liquidity operations, subject to amendments to the RBI Act. The decision to include corporate bonds as collateral for LAF transac- tions may result in spread compression vis-à-vis govern- ment securities, leading to lower borrowing costs. An electronic dealing platform is also being proposed for repo in corporate bonds. This would introduce central counterparty facility for corporate bond repo transac- tions, which would help reduce counterparty risk, mini- mise documentation and bring more transparency. For enabling access to markets, RBI has permitted Foreign Portfolio Investors (FPIs) to trade on NDS-OM through primary members. FPIs can also trade directly in corporate bonds without involving brokers. In anoth- er key initiative, RBI has also permitted individual inves- tors to invest in government securities through their de- mat account (even if they don’t have a CSGL account). This would offer operational convenience and liquidity to individual investors and would help increase retail participation in government securities markets. A robust corporate bond market demands timely dis- semination of credit sensitive information and high standards of transparency. The FSDC sub-committee recommends mandating credit rating agencies to strict- ly adhere to the regulatory norms with regard to timely disclosure of defaults on the stock exchanges and on their own websites. It also suggests rating agencies to publish their credit rating transition matrix more frequently. This would help strengthen investor confi- dence and increase demand for lower rated issuers. The measures, as announced by RBI, will go a long way in enhancing investor confidence in Indian fixed income markets. To achieve the desired results, it is equally im- portant to ensure active participation from non-bank participants. This may be achieved through relaxation in investment norms of regulated entities like insurance companies and retirement funds by the respective reg- ulators. Increased participation of non-bank investors in corporate bond markets across the credit curve shall help increase the breadth of the market and will sup- port in enhancing liquidity in the secondary markets. A time-bound plan for implementation of the recommen- dations made in the FSDC sub-committee report is im- portant in this regard. The above developments, along with other measures, would help broaden the issuer and investor base and would be instrumental in creating a paradigm shift for the corporate bond markets in India. These reforms will set the stage not only for widening and deepening the market itself, but also help to play a supportive role in fi- nancing the country’s growth. An active, well-function- ing corporate bond market can channelize savings, both from India and abroad, through the bond route and can complement the traditional banking sector lending. (Views expressed are personal)
  • 13. 11 FOCUS OF THE MONTH SEPTEMBER 2016 Developments in State Finances State Finances: Assessing Near Term Prospects I ndia’s federal polity is passing through a historic phase, in which the states have come to occupy a prominent position in shaping India’s growth pros- pects. With central government strongly promoting the idea of co-operative and competitive federalism, India’s future growth is likely to be determined by the dynamism of its federal structure. Promoting both co- operative and competitive federalism has been an over- arching theme of the present government. While co-op- erative federalism encompasses Centre’s co-operation with states, competitive federalism involves competi- tion between the states. The Niti Aayog talks of com- petitive federalism as a catalyst to achieve the objective of cooperative federalism. Reinforcing its Cooperative Federalism agenda, the Gov- ernment last year took on board the recommendations of the 14th Finance Commission (FFC). With States now receiving a higher share of tax devolution from the Cen- tre i.e. 42 per cent as against 32 per cent earlier, along with greater flexibility in expenditure, their role in driv- ing regional growth momentum has been enhanced. In this backdrop, it becomes critical to analyze key issues that are likely to impact the finances of the states in the near to medium term. In particular, we assess factors such as Pay Commission, State Elections and UDAY that are likely to impact prospects of state finances in India. Performance of All India state level finances The data for consolidated All India State-level finances as released by RBI till FY16(BE) shows that states have done well to adhere to the mandated fiscal deficit tar- get of 3 per cent under the FRBM Act while steadily im- proving the quality of fiscal health since FY05. While the adverse impact of GFC amid implementation of the 6th
  • 14. ECONOMY MATTERS 12 FOCUS OF THE MONTH Pay Commission did put some strain on the finances in FY09 & FY10, states managed to revert to revenue sur- plus in subsequent years of FY12 & FY13. However, finances of states deteriorated in FY14 & FY15 led by lower revenue receipts and higher revenue spending. In both these years, states at a consolidated level saw re-emergence of revenue deficit for the first time since FY10. Moreover, data on 15 state budgets (mentioned in the table below) shows that trend of Granular Analysis of FY17 State finances Granular analysis of 15 state budgets shows that these states have budgeted for an improvement in their defi- cit indicators in FY17. Average fiscal deficit ratio as a percentage of respective state GSDP is expected to im- prove to 2.7 per cent in FY17 (BE) compared to 3.0 per cent in FY16 (which worsened by 30 bps as compared to the Budgeted levels). Moreover, we find that on average, states diverted greater quantum of incremental revenue receipts for weakening finances likely continued even in FY16. Our analysis shows that finances of state governments de- teriorated in FY16 with average revenue surplus (for 15 states under review) declining to 0.1 per cent of GSDP from 0.5 per cent budgeted and fiscal deficit rising to an average 3.0 per cent from 2.7 per cent budgeted for FY16. The deterioration in finances in FY16 has been caused mainly by slowdown in state’s revenue receipts- both tax as well as non-tax. capital spending in FY16 compared to budgeted levels for FY17. On an average, in FY17 ratio of incremental capital outlay to incremental revenue receipts for 15 states under review is budgeted at 0.25 compared to 0.39 in FY16. State-wise data shows that only UP, Pun- jab and Odisha failed to divert greater incremental rev- enue resources to capital spending in post devolution phase of FY16 & FY17 compared to pre-devolution year of FY15. As such, transfer of higher resources towards capex by a majority of larger states following greater tax devolution from Centre is encouraging.
  • 15. 13 FOCUS OF THE MONTH SEPTEMBER 2016 Near term factors that could influence state finances States endeavor to improve their deficit indicators is likely to be affected by two factors in the near term: Pay scale revision on the lines of Seventh Pay Commis- sion and UDAY. While elections in key states of Uttar Pradesh and Punjab could add to some pressure on their finances through possible increase in spending, astute management of spending priorities could help to limit the impact. a) The impact of UDAY With an objective of financial turnaround of state elec- tricity distribution companies, the government in Nov- 15 announced UDAY (Ujwal DISCOM Assurance Yojana). UDAY aims at financial revival of DISCOMS through (i) improvement in operational efficiencies of DISCOMs; (ii) reduction of cost of power; (iii) reduction in interest cost of DISCOMs; (iv) enforcing financial discipline on DISCOMs through alignment with State finances. More- over, since UDAY seeks to bring to the fore and duly rec- ognize the contingent liabilities of the states, it adds to transparency. Additionally, timely intervention to mend the finances of DISCOMs before the debt on their books became unsustainable is expected to be long term posi- tive for the sector.
  • 16. ECONOMY MATTERS 14 FOCUS OF THE MONTH However, in the short term, UDAY could lead to some increase in the liabilities of the state governments. For instance, our analysis shows that while total interest li- ability is expected to be a lower by Rs 170 billion (due to lower funding cost) leading to net interest saving for states and DISCOMS, states may have under budgeted interest liabilities on SDLs to be issued under UDAY. Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Punjab, Bihar, b) Pay Commission With states having budgeted fiscal consolidationin FY17, it becomes important to assess the ability of states to absorb the impact of higher revenue spending that is likely to come on board for states post implementation at the Centre. During 6th Pay Commissions, the fiscal deficit of all States combined deteriorated by 1.6 per cent between FY08 and FY10. In order to analyze ability of states to fund Pay Commission relation expenditure, Jharkhand and Haryana are estimated to have under budgeted their interest liabilities for FY17 by a cumula- tive of Rs 56.50 billion. Moreover we find that the issu- ance of bonds under UDAY along with cash compensa- tion for financial institutions other than banks (leading probably to issuance of additional SDLs) is likely to in- crease the outstanding liabilities of all states but Chhat- tisgarh to a level greater than the mandated 25 per cent of GSDP in FY17. we rely on two proxy indicators – one, salaries, wages and pension expenses as per cent of respective reve- nue expenditure (for 2015-16 BE) and two, proportion of state government employees in total organized sector. Basis the above two parameters we arrive at a vulner- ability matrix for states and find that Kerala and Punjab stand out in terms of high pension and wages liabilities while having relatively higher share of state govern- ment employees in the organized sector and as such look most susceptible in terms of pay scale revisions.
  • 17. 15 FOCUS OF THE MONTH SEPTEMBER 2016 Recommendations and Way Forward • States need to complement Centre in its endeavor towards fiscal consolidation While the Centre has consolidated its finances each year between FY13-FY16, by showing restrain in spending, states have expanded their budget deficits during the same period. Given the criticality of fiscal consolidation amid quality spending for inflation management, states need to prioritize expenditure rationalization to contain deficits. • Need to divert greater resources towards capex In light of the continued slack in the private capex de- mand anticipated for most of FY17, it is vital for states to complement Centre’s efforts at reviving capex by al- locating greater resources towards capital expenditure. Data shows that ratio of incremental capital outlay to incremental revenue receipts for 15 states under re- view has been budgeted to decline to 0.25 from 0.39 while being modestly higher than 0.20 in FY15. Given the transfer of higher tax resources by the Centre, there is room for states to allocate greater spending towards capex. • Success of UDAY rests on states The DISCOM restructuring plan that was launched in 2012 failed to improve the performance of DISCOMS mainly because of low tariff hikes, lack of progress in reducing losses, higher electricity purchase costs and continuous increase in debt. With UDAY making it com- pulsory for states to absorb losses FY18 onwards, a failure on part of states to improve the performance of DISCOMs through timely revision of tariffs would dilute the purpose for which UDAY was launched. (Views expressed are personal)
  • 18. ECONOMY MATTERS 16 FOCUS OF THE MONTH State Finances: Overcoming Fiscal Imbalances S tate finances are slated to be subjected to trans- formational changes with the implementation of the Goods and Services Tax (GST) and the aboli- tion of the distinction between plan and non-plan ex- penditure. Fortunately, they are in a good fiscal position to handle these changes having overcome the problem of large fiscal imbalances over the last decade and a half. Deficit and Debt Recentexperienceindicatesthatthestategovernments have shown significant improvement in the profile of their fiscal imbalances after enacting Fiscal Responsibil- ity Legislations (FRLs). In Chart 1, we depict fiscal defi- cit and revenue surplus relative to GDP from 1990-91 to 2015-16. Individually, states have committed to achieve a balance on revenue account and limit their fiscal defi- cit to 3 per cent of their respective GSDPs or equivalent in terms of interest payments to revenue receipts. The Twelfth Finance Commission (TFC) had suggested that state fiscal deficits considered as an aggregate should be limited to 3 per cent of GDP. States’ fiscal deficit was at its peak at 4.7 per cent of GDP in 1999-2000. In this year, the revenue deficit was also at its highest at 2.8 per cent. Given these high levels of fiscal imbalances, the Eleventh Finance Commission had introduced a States’ Fiscal Reform Facility (FRF) scheme for the period 2000-01 to 2004-05 to incentivise states to collectively eliminate revenue deficits. Twelfth Finance Commission linked substantial debt and inter- est rate relief to the enactment of State Fiscal Responsi- bility Legislation. To avail of the incentives recommend- ed by the TFC, this legislation was required to provide, at a minimum, for (a) Eliminating revenue deficit by 2008-09; (b) Reducing fiscal deficit to 3 per cent of GSDP or its equivalent defined as ratio of interest payment to revenue receipts. The Thirteenth Finance Commission recommended that the Debt Consolidation and Relief Facility may be ex- tended to West Bengal and Sikkim, provided they enact their FRBM Acts. With these successive incentives given by the Finance Commissions, states progressively enacted their re- spective Fiscal Responsibility Legislations (FRLs). Three states had passed their FRLs even before the central government. Five states had passed FRBM Acts before the Twelfth Finance Commission award. Twenty one states enacted FRBM legislations, incentivised by the Twelfth Finance Commission award in terms of debt and interest rate relief. Two states, namely, West Ben- gal and Sikkim enacted their FRBM legislations in 2010 after the recommendations of the Thirteenth Finance Commission.
  • 19. 17 FOCUS OF THE MONTH SEPTEMBER 2016 Clearly, the FRLs have had a beneficial impact in improv- ing the profile of fiscal imbalances of the state govern- ments. From 2005-06 onwards, the state governments considered together, have always been below the benchmark of 3 per cent of GDP except for 2009-10, when it marginally crossed this limit at 3.01 per cent. In the case of revenue balance, states achieved a revenue surplus in 2006-07 and maintained it up to 2012-13 with the exception of 2009-10, when revenue deficit was at 0.42 per cent of GDP. However, since 2013-14, there has been some deterioration in state finances. The improvement in fiscal deficit also led to a reduction in the states’ outstanding liabilities to GDP ratio. At its peak, this ratio was close to 32 per cent in 2003-04. It progressively fell to about 22 per cent in 2013-14, that is an improvement of 10 per cent points. This implied a fall in the interest payments-GDP ratio for the state governments facilitating improvement in their revenue account. While states successfully improved their fiscal balance position, there have been considerable inter-state vari- ations. In Charts 2 and 3, we have shown a comparison between two points reflecting averages over the peri- ods 2003-04 to 2005-06 and 2013-14 to 2014-15/ 2015-16. Comparing these ratios with a benchmark line drawn at 3 per cent of GSDP, it is seen that earlier most of the states were above this benchmark. In the latter refer- ence period, most of these are below it. The states that have still not achieved the desired level of fiscal consoli- dation are Bihar, Karnataka, Jammu and Kashmir, West Bengal, Himachal Pradesh, Andhra Pradesh and Mizo- ram. In the case of revenue deficit also, there is noticeable im- provement. In the earlier reference period, it is mostly only the special category states that show revenue sur- plus. This was not on account of fiscal discipline. Rather it was the effect of fiscal transfers that they received from the central government in the form of very large plan and non-plan grants. In the latter reference peri- od, a number of general category states show surplus on revenue account. These are Odisha, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Madhya Pradesh, Gujarat, Jharkhand and Karna- taka. Further, there are some general category states which are only marginally in revenue deficit. These are Rajasthan, Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu and Chhattisgarh. Thus, there is a widespread improvement in many of the large states that include some of the low-income states.
  • 20. ECONOMY MATTERS 18 FOCUS OF THE MONTH
  • 21. 19 FOCUS OF THE MONTH SEPTEMBER 2016
  • 22. ECONOMY MATTERS 20 FOCUS OF THE MONTH Improvement in Tax Performance Table 1 shows that the improvement in states’ fiscal imbalance profile was largely due to the improvement in states’ tax-GDP ratio which increased in two notice- able phases, first from 1998-1999 to 2006-07 when it increased from 4.95 per cent to 6.13 per cent. It briefly fell in 2007-08 and 2008-09 on account of the global economic crisis also leading to a fall in India’s growth rate. In the next phase from 2008-09 to 2012-13, it in- creased from 5.51 per cent to 6.83 per cent. Thus, com- paring 1998-99 to 2012-13, there was an overall increase Goods and Services Tax With the introduction of the GST, there would be major changes affecting state finances. First, tax autonomy so far vested exclusively with individual states, will now be the joint responsibility of the GST Council. Second, states will share the value added beyond manufactur- ing with the central government. At the same time, they will have the additional power to tax value added in services. In the initial stages, the revenue of the net consuming and net producing states will be affected dif- ferently. The net consuming states would gain while the net producing states would lose but would be brought on par after compensation. Thus, the net gainers would be some of the larger but low income states like Ut- tar Pradesh, Bihar, Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan. In the present structure of GST, no explicit allowance has been made for mineral-rich states such as Odisha, Mad- hya Pradesh, Jharkhand and Chhattisgarh who are net exporters of minerals. These minerals are inputs and not items of final consumption. Therefore, any GST paid in states’ own tax revenue to GDP ratio of 1.9 per cent points. This large increase came about first by states agreeing to floor rates in their sales tax regimes and preparing ground for the implementation of VAT. Sub- sequently, they gained from VAT as well as high global crude prices which resulted in relatively high sales tax revenues on petroleum products since these were largely ad-valorem in nature. The fall in the states’ own tax-GDP ratio in more recent period starting 2013-14 could also partially be due to the fall in global crude prices and the corresponding adjustment in the prices of petroleum products in India. on these minerals will have to be rebated at later stag- es. These states will lose revenue in the long run while suffering from the adverse consequences of the local- ized pollution related to mineral activities which their residents will be forced to suffer. As long as alcohol, petroleum products, electricity and real estate remain outside the purview of the GST, the tax reforms would still not be complete. The impact of GST on states’ fiscal imbalances would depend on two factors: first, whether the GST rate structure proves to be revenue-neutral and second, dis- tribution of states in the categories of net-consuming vis-à-vis net-producing states. If GST involves revenue losses, at least in the initial stages, the central govern- ment would be a net loser since through the compensa- tion mechanism, if it works efficiently, states would be either net gainers or at least will remain revenue-neu- tral. However, a net revenue loss to the central govern- ment will imply a reduction in grants or transfers that it gives to the state governments. (Views expressed are personal)
  • 23.
  • 24. ECONOMY MATTERS 22 DOMESTIC TRENDS GDP Growth Moderates in 1QFY17 G DP growth in the first quarter of the current fiscal came in at 7.1 per cent as compared to 7.5 per cent in the same quarter last year, while gross value added (GVA) at basic prices posted a growth of 7.3 per cent in 1QFY17 as compared to 7.2 per cent in 1QFY16. The sectoral data print reveals interest- ing insights into the data. Even as investment growth contracted in 1QFY17, government consumption ex- penditure growth posted double-digits growth. Private consumption growth continued to post respectable growth rate. Going forward, Pay Commission payouts, contained inflation and easy monetary conditions are expected to support demand. From supply-side, GDP growth driven entire- ly by services sector From the supply side, agriculture growth moderated to 1.8 per cent in 1QFY17 as compared to 2.6 per cent growth in 1QFY16. However, farm growth is expected to pick up in line with the improvement in monsoons and the increase in Kharif crop sowing. Manufacturing posted robust growth of 9.1 per cent, while construc- tion sector growth moderated sharply in 1QFY17. Go- ing forward, lower interest rates and smart recovery in private consumption expenditure will help drive in- dustrial growth in remaining quarters of FY17. Services sector was the star performer as it grew by 9.6 per cent in the reporting quarter cushioned by strong growth in government spending. However, components such as trade, hotels showed moderation as compared to the same quarter last year.
  • 25. 23 DOMESTIC TRENDS SEPTEMBER 2016 Consumption growth continues to outpace investment growth At market prices, private consumption expenditure has not shown signs of any significant distress and posted a growth of 6.7 per cent in 1QFY17 from 6.9 per cent in the same quarter last year. Government spending growth was very strong for Q1FY17 as it posted 18.8 growth which was the highest since December 2014. Since the Going forward, in the short-run, growth will receive a boost from the cumulative impact of economic reforms and improved inflationary expectations. Therefore in government has a strong commitment to stick to fiscal deficit targets, support on this scale is unlikely to con- tinue in the second half of the year. Gross fixed capital formation continued to remain a drag on growth and given the current balance sheet constraints for corpo- rates, private capex recovery still seems far away. The external sector showed some recovery as exports grew by 3.2 per cent in 1QFY17 as compared to a contraction of 5.7 per cent in 1QFY16. FY17, CII is projecting a base case of 7.75-8.25 per cent growth, higher than the 7.6 per cent posted in FY16.
  • 26. ECONOMY MATTERS 24 DOMESTIC TRENDS Manufacturing output remains lackadaisical The manufacturing sector contracted by 3.4 per cent in July 2016 as compared to 0.7 per cent in the previous month and 4.8 per cent in the same month last year. The dismal growth in manufacturing sector since November 2015 is a matter of concern and calls for a results orient- ed action from the government. For the April-July 2016 quarter, the sector’s output contracted by 1.4 per cent, as against a growth of 4.0 per cent a year ago. Growth also decelerated in the mining and electricity sectors. Outlook Although GDP growth moderated to 7.1 per cent during the first quarter of 2016-17 as against 7.5 per cent dur- ing the corresponding period last year, there are firm indications that economic conditions would improve in the coming quarters and new growth opportunities would emerge when the anticipated boost in demand takes root propelled by good monsoons, the Pay Commission Award and the recent reform initiatives announced by the gov- ernment. The good performance of the manufacturing sector, which grew at 9.1 per cent is indeed heartening and points towards better co-ordinated policies in this area. The numbers show that consumption demand has been the main driver of growth in the first quarter of 2016-17 with investment continuing to reflect a subdued performance as compared to last year. CII expects a rebound in investment, going forward, as the government continues to rev up public expenditure and in the process crowd in private investment leading to a new demand cycle in the economy. Industrial Output Contracts in July 2016 The growth in Index of industrial production (IIP) fell back into the negative territory, declining by 2.4 per cent in July 2016 as compared to 2.0 per cent growth in the previous month. Contraction in manufacturing and capital goods output led to the disappointing numbers during the month. On a cumulative basis, factory output in the April-July 2016 quarter contracted by 0.2 per cent compared to 3.5 per cent growth in the same period a year-ago. However, going forward, we can expect the industrial output to recover cushioned by the govern- ment’s pro-reform agenda. Overall in FY17, we expect industrial production to grow at a higher rate as com- pared to the previous fiscal on the back of policy aided domestic upturn and low global commodity prices.
  • 27. 25 DOMESTIC TRENDS SEPTEMBER 2016 Capital goods output contracts for the ninth consecutive month According to use-based classification, the capital goods output witnessed a ninth straight month of contraction in July 2016, thus raising doubts about the recovery of investment cycle in the country. The sector’s output contracted by a hefty 29.6 per cent in July 2016 as com- pared to a decline of 16.7 per cent in the last month partly due to high base of last year. To be sure, indus- trial production excluding the output of the capital goods sector stood at 2.1 per cent during the month as compared to 4.8 per cent in the previous month. Going forward, capital expenditure by the Government will be crucial to support recovery in this segment. Mirroring IIP output, core sector output too moderates in July 2016 In tandem with the deceleration witnessed in indus- trial output growth, core sector output also slowed to 3.2 per cent in July 2016 as compared to 5.2 per cent growth posted in the previous month, partly due to the impact of monsoon that hit output in sectors such as ce- ment. Among the individual segments, cement sectors’ growth slowed to 1.4 per cent in July 2016 from of the impressive 10.3 per cent posted in June 2016. Similarly, fertiliser production declined to 2.5 per cent in July 2016 from 9.8 per cent in June 2016. Further, electricity gen- Consumer goods output also decelerates during the month Consumer goods growth declined to 1.3 per cent in July 2016 as compared to 2.7 per cent in June 2016. Amongst its sub-sectors, consumer non-durables growth moved into the negative territory once again in July 2016, after posting positive growth in June 2016. In contrast, out- put of consumer durables sector quickened to 5.9 per cent in July 2016 as compared to 5.6 per cent posted in the last month. The boost in consumption due to the implementation of 7th Pay Commission report is expect- ed to improve the growth of this sector further, going forward. eration registered a mere 1.6 per cent in July 2016, which was the lowest since the zero per cent growth in No- vember 2015. Steel production also contracted by -0.5 per cent, the lowest since it shrunk by the same margin in February 2016. Crude oil production also shrunk by -1.8 per cent in the reporting month. On a cumulative basis, core sector output stood at 5.4 per cent during April-July 2016 as compared to 2.5 per cent in the same period last year. In contrast, output of refinery prod- ucts accelerated to 13.7 per cent – the highest growth achieved since 17.9 per cent in April 2016. Natural gas also recorded 3.3 per cent growth in July 2016 after four months of contraction
  • 28. ECONOMY MATTERS 26 DOMESTIC TRENDS Outlook The contraction in industrial output during July 2016 is worrisome as it indicates that industry is performing much below its underlying potential. What is causing concern is that both manufacturing and capital goods sectors are witnessing an anemic trend in output implying that growth impulses are still weak. But we hope that going for- ward, aggregate demand would pick up based on pay rise of government employees and the reform initiatives recently taken by the government to induce demand in the economy. CPI Inflation Moderates, While WPI Inflation Inches Up Wholesale Price Index (WPI) based inflation quickened to a two-year high of 3.7 per cent in August 2016 from 3.55 per cent in July 2016 on high fuel and manufactur- ing inflation. This was the fifth straight month of WPI inflation after continued deflation for over a year. In contrast to a jump in WPI inflation, CPI inflation cooled sharply to 5.1 per cent in August 2016 as compared to 6.1 per cent in the previous month. The main driver be- hind the deceleration in CPI inflation was food inflation which edged down to 5.8 per cent in August 2016 from 7.96 per cent in the previous month. The most signifi- cant development was the sharp plunge in vegetables inflation to 1 per cent in August 2016 from 14 per cent seen in the previous month.
  • 29. 27 DOMESTIC TRENDS SEPTEMBER 2016 Outlook WPI inflation edged up in August 2016 on the back of higher prices recorded in fuel and manufacturing sectors. In contrast, CPI inflation moderated sharply, providing relief to the policymakers. Going forward, CII expects CPI infla- tion to settle within the RBI’s target of 5 per cent for March 2017 as food prices are expected to ease going forward on account of a spate of reforms undertaken by the present government to address the supply bottlenecks and the expectation that monsoon would be normal after two consecutive years of drought. This should spur RBI to resume its rate easing cycle as investments continue to be sluggish. WPI primary articles inflation moderates in August 2016 Coming to WPI sub-categories, inflation in primary ar- ticles slowed down to 7.5 per cent in August 2016 as compared to 9.4 per cent posted in July 2016. Within primary articles, inflation in both food and non-food sub categories decelerated during the reporting month. Pri- mary food inflation moderated to 8.2 per cent (as com- pared to 11.8 per cent in July 2016) while non-food infla- tion stood at 8.4 per cent (as compared to 9.5 per cent in July 2016). A normal monsoon so far has boded well for reining in high food prices. Inflation in fuel category moves to positive territory after a gap of 21 months Inflation in the fuel group of WPI moved to the positive territory after a gap of 21 months in August 2016 as it stood at 1.6 per cent. The upward movement in global crude oil prices owing to the ongoing political tensions in Venezuela, Libya and Nigeria has pushed fuel inflation into the positive territory. Inflation in high speed diesel quickened to 12.2 per cent during the reporting month as compared to 6.6 per cent in July 2016. Petrol infla- tion too moved to -8.6 per cent as compared to -10.3 per cent in the previous month. Manufacturing inflation quickens in August 2016 Inflation in manufactured group quickened to 2.4 per cent in August 2016 – its highest reading since October 2014, as compared to 1.8 per cent posted in the previous month. Manufacturing food inflation which had moved to double-digits in July 2016 continued its upward tra- jectory, rising further to 11.4 per cent in August 2016 from 10.2 per cent in the previous month. Meanwhile manufacturing non-food inflation (popularly called as core inflation and a proxy for demand-side pressures in the economy) too accelerated mildly to 0.6 per cent in the reporting month from 0.1 per cent in the previous month. With core inflation recording an increase after a prolonged period of deflation, there are indications that demand is returning to the economy.
  • 30. ECONOMY MATTERS 28 DOMESTIC TRENDS SW monsoon expected to be normal despite 3 per cent monsoon deficit so far India is heading towards a normal South-west mon- soon this year, notwithstanding the monsoon deficit of 3 per cent below long period average (LPA) till 28th September 2016. The India Meteorological Department (IMD) categorizes rainfall in the 96-104 per cent long- period average range as normal and rainfall between 104-110 per cent of LPA as above normal. Much of the rainfall deficit has been seen in East & Northeast parts and South peninsula of the country, which are either predominantly non-agriculture dependent or are well irrigated. Record production of kharif foodgrains as per 1st advance estimate The importance of a normal monsoon this year is par- ticularly crucial given the high food inflation rates seen currently. In this context, the news of 1st advance esti- mates of total kharif foodgrains estimated at a record high of 135.03 million tonnes is heartening. This year the estimated production is higher by 11.02 million tonnes Kharif crops sowing progressing well, ex- cept for cotton Kharif sowing starts with the onset of June and the crop is harvested during September-October. Area sown un- der kharif crops increased to 1067.53 lakh hectares by 23rd September 2016. This is 3.6 per cent higher than the area sown at this time last year. Much of the food inflation last year was driven by high inflation in pulses, but encouragingly pulses have recorded the largest in- crease in area sown to the tune of 29.1 per cent this year so far. As of 23rd September 2016, area under pulses measured 145.84 lakh hectare as compared to 112.93 lakh hectare a year-ago. Among pulses, arhar recorded the maximum increase in acreage. Area sown under as compared to last year’s kharif foodgrains production of 124.01 million tonnes. Further, kharif foodgrains pro- duction is also higher by 7.65 million tonnes than the last five years’ (2010-11 to 2014-15) average production of 127.38 million tonnes. Notably, production in pulses (which has seen double-digit inflation in the last couple of months) has been estimated at a record level of 8.70 million tonnes which is higher by 3.16 million tonnes than the last year’s production of 5.54 million tonnes. Kerala records the highest rainfall deficiency so far Among the major states, rainfall deficiency has so far been the highest for Kerala, with the rainfall gap (from 1st June to 23rd September, 2016) standing at 32 per cent followed by Punjab and Haryana (each at 25 per cent below LPA). North Eastern states have also received large deficit in rainfall so far. In contrast, the states which have received bountiful rainfall so far include- Ra- jasthan (30 per cent above LPA), Madhya Pradesh (18 per cent above LPA), Maharashtra (11 per cent above LPA), Andhra Pradesh (7 per cent above LPA) and Telan- gana (3 per cent above LPA). rice increased by 2.6 per cent to 387.04 lakh hectare while under coarse cereals expanded by 3.3 per cent to 189.58 lakh hectares in the period 1st June-23rd Septem- ber 2016. Coarse cereals include jowar, bajra, maize and ragi. The acreage under oilseeds, as a group, stood at 189.16 lakh hectares, up 3.0 per cent compared with last year, with groundnut recording a staggering 29.0 per cent increase, chiefly due to the higher plantings in Andhra Pradesh, Rajasthan, Karnataka and Gujarat. A key pres- sure point with regard to the sowing of major kharif crops has been that of cotton, whose acreage has fallen by 11.6 per cent over the last year, mainly due to poor rainfall in Gujarat, which happens to be the key cotton growing state in the country. Monsoon Deficit: Nothing to Worry About
  • 31. 29 DOMESTIC TRENDS SEPTEMBER 2016 Going forward, improved reservoir levels and high re- sidual soil moisture will be supportive of forthcoming Rabi crop. Rabi crop accounts for nearly 50 per cent of country’s total food output. In addition, Northeast monsoon over October to December are important for 5 metrological subdivisions of southern India (Tamil Nadu, Coastal Andhra Pradesh, Rayalaseema, Kerala and south interior Karnataka) as they receive 30 per cent of their annual rainfall in these months. Merchandise exports continued to remain in the nega- tive territory for the second consecutive month, albeit the magnitude of contraction reduced sharply in August 2016, aided by a favorable base. Exports fell by 0.3 per cent on year-on-year basis to US$21.5 billion in August 2016 as compared to contraction to the tune of 6.8 per cent in July 2016. Export performance improved sharply with 14 out of 30 major commodities posting positive growth as com- pared to 8 commodities seen last month. The key sec- tors posting positive growth during the month were iron ore, fruits & vegetables, marine products, gems & jewellery and electronics. Cereals, oil seeds and pe- troleum products exports contracted sharply. On a cumulative basis, for the period April-August 2016, mer- chandise exports stood at US$108.5 billion, registering a contraction of 2.98 per cent on a year-on-year basis. Imports continue to post contraction Merchandise imports contracted by 14.1 per cent to US$29.1 billion in August 2016 as compared to a decline of 19 per cent in the last month. During April-August FY17, India’s cumulative merchandise imports stood at US$143.2 billion, registering a negative growth of 15.89 per cent on a year-on-year basis. Coming to the sector bifurcation, oil imports during August 2016 contracted by 8.5 per cent to US$6.74 billion during the month. Meanwhile, non-oil imports during August 2016 were estimated at US$22.4 billion which was 15.7 per cent lower than non-oil imports of US$26.1 billion in August 2015. Magnitude of Contraction in Exports Narrows
  • 32. ECONOMY MATTERS 30 DOMESTIC TRENDS Current Account Deficit Contained in 1QFY17 Merchandise trade deficit narrowed marginally to US$7.7 billion in August 2016 from US$7.8 billion in the previous month. A much steeper fall in imports vis-a-vis exports, led to this contraction in trade deficit. Cumu- latively, during April-August 2016, India’s trade deficit stood at US$34.7 billion, 40.6 per cent lower than the Current account deficit (CAD) for the first quarter of the current fiscal (1QFY17) stood at US$0.3 billion or 0.1 per cent of GDP, the same as the preceding quarter. In the same quarter last year, CAD stood at US$6.1 billion or 1.2 per cent of GDP. The contraction in CAD in the June quarter was primarily on account of narrowing of the trade deficit to US$23.8 billion from US$34.2 billion a year ago. On a balance of payments (BoP) basis, mer- chandise imports declined sharply (by 11.5 per cent) as compared to merchandise exports (which declined by 2.1 per cent), leading to a lower trade deficit in Q1FY17. year-ago period. Going forward, while improving do- mestic competitiveness through structural reforms is crucial to improve exports performance; we believe that this can only materialize in the medium-term. In the near-term, a weaker rupee can act as a catalyst to revive competitiveness. Lower remittances offset by sharp narrow- ing of merchandise trade deficit Invisibles related flows were lower at US$23.5 billion in 1QFY17 as compared to US$28.0billion in the same quar- ter last year. Component wise, net services receipts de- clined on a y-o-y basis, largely due to a fall in net earn- ings on account of travel, financial services and other business services. Private transfer receipts, which rep- resent remittances by overseas Indians, amounted to US$15.2 billion, declining from their level in the preced- ing quarter as well as from a year ago. Going forward there is a risk of further lower inflows from Middle East region amid decline in crude oil prices and economic slowdown in that part of the world.
  • 33. 31 DOMESTIC TRENDS SEPTEMBER 2016 Concerns persist on lower foreign invest- ment front Net capital account moderated sharply to US$7.1 billion in 1QFY17 as compared to US$18.6 billion in the same quarter last year mainly on account of lower net foreign investment. The global financial market uncertainty, led by the slowdown in China, steep decline in commodity prices and the likely trajectory of US Fed rate hikes, has weighed on the capital flows across EM economies and India was not immune to the trend. To be sure, net foreign direct investment moderated to US$4.1 billion in Q1FY17 from US$10.0 billion in Q1FY16 and US$8.8 billion in the Q4FY16. On the other hand, We expect CAD to come below 1 per cent of GDP in FY17. The key risk to the outlook is volatility in portfolio relat- ed flows and deceleration in remittance related inflows. From a longer term perspective, although the external portfolio investment, recorded a net inflow of US$2.1 billion in Q1FY17 as against a marginal outflow in the cor- responding period of last year and an outflow of US$1.5 billion in the preceding quarter, primarily reflecting net inflow in the equity component. Higher repayments un- der external commercial borrowings led to a net out- flow under loans to India in Q1FY17 as against net bor- rowings in the same period last year. Foreign exchange reserves (on a BoP basis) increased by US$6.9 billion in Q1FY17 as compared with an accre- tion of US$11.4 billion in Q1FY16 and US$3.3 billion in the preceding quarter. sector performance remains favorable, the sustainabil- ity of the same is still doubtful. Continued weakness in exports performance due to global headwinds is a po- tential risk for the sector.
  • 34. ECONOMY MATTERS 32 CORPORATE PERFORMANCE Corporate Profitability on the Upswing in 1QFY17 Manufacturing firms register rising profit- ability in 1QFY17 as compared to 1QFY16 The corporate results at the end of the first quarter of fiscal year 2017 brought a reason for cheer in the form of rising profitability as the financial performance of In- dian companies, especially manufacturing sector firms, improved during the quarter. The manufacturing sec- tor, buoyed by a significant fall in inputs costs following the collapse of global commodity prices, registered a sharp pickup in profitability growth in 1QFY17 as com- pared to the same quarter a year ago. Worryingly, both bottom-line and top-line of services sector firms has continued to remain weak so far. The analysis factors in the financial performance of a balanced panel of 1749 manufacturing companies (excluding oil and gas com- panies) and 815 service firms extracted from the CMIE’s Prowess database. Bottom-line of firms on an aggregate basis registers a stellar performance in 1QFY17 In the 1QFY17, the bottom-line of the firms improved to 9.4 per cent on an aggregate basis, as compared to contraction of 10.1 per cent a year ago. Manufacturing companies registered growth in PAT as high as 14.7 per cent as compared to a contraction of 23.2 per cent in the same quarter previous year. Though, profitability in service firms moderated to 2.9 per cent in 1QFY17 from double-digits growth of 13.8 per cent in 1QFY16.
  • 35. 33 CORPORATE PERFORMANCE SEPTEMBER 2016 In contrast, net sales growth is recovering slowly Growth in net sales remained a bit of a sore point, even though falling input costs provided a respite. In 1QFY17, net sales growth on an aggregate basis remained low albeit stable as it stood at 0.7 per cent as compared to 0.5 per cent in the same quarter a year ago. Net sales growth of manufacturing sector moved to the positive Struck with weak domestic and external demand, the Indian companies are trying hard to clutch a straw of hope. Efforts are in force by firms to improve their own production efficiencies and employ cost effective meas- ures. Simultaneously, there are also expectations of territory in 1QFY17 as compared to contraction a year ago. In contrast, net sales growth of services sector firms moderated to 1.3 per cent in the reporting quarter as compared to 2.0 per cent a fiscal ago. Though, net sales growth has been recovering, it still remains lacka- daisical, reflecting in part the lack of ample demand in the economy. The slowing demand in the external mar- kets has been doing no good either. some serious economic reforms, some of which have already come in form of necessary rate cuts by the RBI, that would elevate the economy, help pick up sales and raise the profitability for the Indian corporates further in the months to come.
  • 36. ECONOMY MATTERS 34 POLICY FOCUS POLICY FOCUS 1. Cabinet approves Agreement and the Protocol between India and Cyprus for the Avoidance of Double Taxation and the Prevention of Fiscal Evasion The Union cabinet on 24th August, 2016 approved a re- vised India-Cyprus tax treaty that seeks to plug loop- holes used by investors to avoid paying taxes in India. The new agreement, which will replace the 1994 treaty, will enable Indian authorities to tax capital gains on in- vestments routed through Cyprus; it will also lead to the removal of the Mediterranean island nation from an Indian government blacklist on which it was placed for not providing financial information sought by India. The revisions in the treaty are on the lines of the recent changes notified in the India-Mauritius tax treaty and those still being negotiated in the India-Singapore trea- ty. India will get the right to tax capital gains from sale of shares on investments made by Cyprus-based com- panies after 1 April 2017. 2. Cabinet Approves Initiatives to Revive the Construction Sector The Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs, chaired by the Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi on 31st August, 2016 has approved various measures to revive the con- struction sector which has been undergoing stress. Under the proposal put forward by NITI Aayog and ap- proved by the CCEA, government agencies would pay 75 per cent of the arbitral award amount to an escrow account against margin free bank guarantee, in those cases where the award is challenged. The escrow account can be used to repay bank loans or to meet commitments in ongoing projects. This is a major step which will allow recovery of loans by banks and allow construction companies to speed up execu- tion of ongoing projects. It will also increase the ability of construction companies to bid for new contracts and the resulting competition will be beneficial in contain- ing the costs of public works. This measure will provide a stimulus to the construction industry and to employ- ment. Government Departments and PSUs have also been instructed to transfer cases under arbitration to the amended Arbitration Act which has an expedited pro- cedure, with the consent of the contractors. In the long run, other measures are also under consideration, in- cluding changes to bid documents and model contracts, The important policy announcements by the Government in the months of August-September 2016 are covered in this month’s Policy Focus. Our endeavor through this section is to keep our readers abreast of the latest happenings on the policy front so that they can take an informed decision accordingly.
  • 37. 35 POLICY FOCUS SEPTEMBER 2016 and increased use of conciliation. NITI will also examine the idea of creating “claim take out funds” financed by private sector investors, while the Department of Finan- cial Services will examine a suitable scheme for address- ing stressed bank loans in the construction sector. CII’s Reaction The Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs (CCEA)’s announcement of a revival package for the ailing con- struction sector has come at an opportune time as it seeks to destress the liquidity woes of construction companies and the infrastructure sector, said the Con- federation of Indian Industry (CII). “Indian industry wel- comes this positive and timely initiative taken by the government as this would unclog stressed assets and revive projects that have been stuck over years in litiga- tion and courts,” said Mr Chandrajit Banerjee, Director General, CII. Mr Banerjee added, “The revival package for the con- struction sector by the government will translate into a huge liquidity boost for the system and would save many construction companies from being declared NPAs.” The package will also allow recovery of loans by banks and facilitate construction companies to speed up execution of ongoing projects. Further, it will in- crease the ability of construction companies to bid for new contracts and the resulting competition will be beneficial in containing the costs of public works, he said. One of the major decisions by the CCEA includes a di- rection to PSUs to pay 75 per cent of award amount to contractors against a margin fee in cases where the PSU has lost the Arbitration case and goes in for appeal in Courts. This amount will infuse liquidity and will be used by the contractors to repay bank loans or to meet com- mitments in ongoing projects. Government Departments and PSUs have also been instructed to transfer cases under arbitration to the amended Arbitration Act which has an expedited pro- cedure, with the consent of contractors. This will help disputes to be settled expeditiously, with minimum cost and time overruns and unlock stuck money to go back into circulation in the economy. It would be worth mentioning here that an estimated amount of around Rs 70,000 crores is expected to be unlocked due to this measure. Given the fact that the construction sector generates the highest level of direct and indirect jobs employing about 40 million people with a 2.7x multiplier effect on the economy and being the second largest contributing nearly 8 per cent economic activities to the GDP, these initiatives are all set to trigger massive expansion of the infrastructure sector, industrialization, urbanization, rise in disposable incomes and success of various Gov- ernment initiatives to improve India’s residential and transport infrastructure. A few suggestions for possible additional amendments that will further streamline ease of doing business could include adoption of ICC’s Uniform Rules for De- mand Guarantees (URDG) which are being followed in most major countries. Also, revision of clauses in Public Contracts so that the interest of both the Client and the Contractor are taken care of, is essential for the full re- covery of this crucial sector. While the effect of the amendment may be visible after a few months, in the long run these initiatives would en- able Construction Sector to attract foreign investments and help in reviving sectors crucial for rebooting India’s growth story. 3. Cabinet approves creation of GST Council and its Secretariat The Constitution (122nd Amendment) Bill, 2016, for intro- duction of Goods and Services tax in the country was ac- corded assent by the President on 8th September, 2016, and the same has been notified as the Constitution (101st Amendment) Act, 2016. As per Article 279A (1) of the amended Constitution, the GST Council has to be consti- tuted by the President within 60 days of the commence- ment of Article 279A. The notification for bringing into force Article 279A with effect from 12th September, 2016 was issued on 10th September, 2016. As per Article 279A of the amended Constitution, the GST Council which will be a joint forum of the Centre and the States, shall consist of the following members: Union Finance Minister will be the Chairperson, the Un- ion Minister of State-in-charge of Revenue will be its Member and the Minister-in-charge of Finance or Taxa- tion or any other Minister nominated by the State Gov- ernments will be its Members as well.
  • 38. ECONOMY MATTERS 36 POLICY FOCUS Additionally, the Union Cabinet under the Chairmanship of Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi has also approved setting up of GST Council and setting up its Secretariat on 12th September, 2016 as per the following details: (a) Creation of the GST Council as per Article 279A of the amended Constitution; (b) Creation of the GST Council Secretariat, with its of- fice at New Delhi; (c) Appointment of the Secretary (Revenue) as the Ex- officio Secretary to the GST Council; (d) Inclusion of the Chairperson, Central Board of Ex- cise and Customs (CBEC), as a permanent invitee (non-voting) to all proceedings of the GST Council; (e) Creation of one post of Additional Secretary to the GST Council in the GST Council Secretariat (at the level of Additional Secretary to the Government of India), and four posts of Commissioner in the GST Council Secretariat (at the level of Joint Secretary to the Government of India). The Cabinet also decided to provide for adequate funds for meeting the recurring and non-recurring expenses of the GST Council Secretariat, the entire cost for which shall be borne by the Central Government. The GST Council Secretariat shall be manned by officers taken on deputation from both the Central and State Govern- ments. The steps required in the direction of implementation of GST are being taken ahead of the schedule so far. 4. Finance Minister announces the exemp- tion threshold and administrative control mechanism for GST The two day meeting of the newly constituted GST Council comprising of Union Finance Minister, Union Minister of State for Finance and the State Finance Min- isters concluded on 23rd September, 2016. Based on the proceedings of the meeting, the announcements made by the Union Finance Minister are as follows: • Exemption threshold for GST has been fixed at Rs 20 lakhs for all the States except the North-Eastern States and other small states. For these states the exemption threshold has been fixed at Rs 10 lakhs. • State Authorities shall assess the taxpayers with annual turnover not exceeding Rs 1.5 crore. • For annual turnover above Rs 1.5 crore, the taxpay- ers will be cross examined either by the Central or State Authorities on the basis of risk assessment. • Centre shall continue to assess the existing Service tax assessees irrespective of their annual turnover till the state officers are trained for said purposes. However, new assessees which would be added to the list shall be divided between Centre and States. • The Council has also agreed that all cesses shall be subsumed in the GST. • Union Finance Minister further announced that the GST Council shall try and finalise the tax rate and slabs in the meeting to be held from17 October 2016 to 19 October 2016. 5. Centre Issues Model Guidelines on Direct Selling The Government on 12th September, 2016 issued model guidelines for State governments to regulate the busi- ness of direct selling and multi-level marketing with an aim to protect consumers from Ponzi schemes. The ‘Direct Selling Guidelines 2016’ framework, released by Food and Consumer Affairs Minister Ram Vilas Pas- wan, prohibits pyramid as well as money circulation schemes. In the guidelines, direct selling has been defined as “marketing, distribution and sale of goods or providing of services as a part of network of direct selling other than under a pyramid scheme”. Pyramid Scheme has been defined in the guidelines as “a multi layered network of subscribers to a scheme formed by subscribers enrolling one or more subscribers in order to receive any benefit, directly or indirectly, as a result of enrolment or action or performance of additional subscribers to the scheme”. Amongst the major measures, the guidelines make it mandatory for e-retailers and online marketplaces to get prior written consent of the direct selling enti- ties like Amway before soliciting sales. The norms also provided for direct selling companies for setting up a Grievance Redressal Committee to attend to consumer complaints that will necessarily have to carry a unique number through which they can be tracked for redres-
  • 39. 37 POLICY FOCUS SEPTEMBER 2016 sal. The guidelines have also made provision for ap- pointment of monitoring authority at both the Centre and State levels to deal with the issues related to direct selling. Further, the guidelines also place conditions on the contract between direct sellers and the direct sell- ing entity, saying that all such agreements should be in writing describing the material impact of the participa- tion. 6. Report Released on “Incentivising Pulses Production through Minimum Support Price (MSP) and Related Policies” Chief Economic Adviser, Dr. Arvind Subramanian sub- mitted a Report titled “Incentivising Pulses Production through Minimum Support Price (MSP) and Related Policies” to Finance Ministry on 16th September, 2016. The panel was set up in the wake of a recent surge in retail prices of pulses. The major suggestions of the re- port are as follows: - Government should procure pulses on a “war foot- ing”, - Government should create buffer stock of 2 million tonnes, - States should be pushed to delist pulses from Ag- ricultural Produce Market Committee (APMC) and promote development of GM technologies. It also prescribed subsidies to farmers for growing pulses, - Government should immediately announce higher MSP of gram (chana) to Rs 4,000 a quintal for rabi 2016 and Rs 6,000 a quintal for both urad and tur for kharif season 2017, - It suggested that new agencies should handle pro- curement under PPP model, - The report suggested that there should be no bans on exports of pulses or ad hoc controls. 7. Cabinet approves merger of rail budget with general budget; advancement of budget presentation and merger of plan and non-plan classification in budget and accounts The Union Cabinet on 21st September, 2016 approved the proposals of Ministry of Finance on certain landmark budgetary reforms relating to (i) the merger of Railway budget with the General budget, (ii) the advancement of the date of Budget presentation from the last day of February and (iii) the merger of the Plan and the Non- Plan classification in the Budget and Accounts. All these changes will be put into effect simultaneously from the Budget 2017-18. Merger of Railway Budget with the General Budget: The arrangements for merger of Railway budget with the General budget have been approved by the Cabinet with the following administrative and financial arrange- ments- (i) The Railways will continue to maintain its distinct entity -as a departmentally run commercial under- taking as at present; (ii) Railways will retain their functional autonomy and delegation of financial powers etc. as per the exist- ing guidelines; (iii) The existing financial arrangements will continue wherein Railways will meet all their revenue ex- penditure, including ordinary working expenses, pay and allowances and pensions etc. from their revenue receipts; (iv) The Capital at charge of the Railways estimated at Rs.2.27 lakh crore on which annual dividend is paid by the Railways will be wiped off. Consequently, there will be no dividend liability for Railways from 2017-18 and Ministry of Railways will get Gross Budgetary support. The presentation of separate Railway budget started in the year 1924, and has continued after independence as a convention rather than under Constitutional provi- sions. The merger would help in the following ways: • The presentation of a unified budget will bring the affairs of the Railways to centre stage and present a holistic picture of the financial position of the Gov- ernment. • The merger is also expected to reduce the proce- dural requirements and instead bring into focus,
  • 40. ECONOMY MATTERS 38 POLICY FOCUS the aspects of delivery and good governance. • Consequent to the merger, the appropriations for Railways will form part of the main Appropriation Bill. Advancement of the Budget presentation: The Cabinet also approved, in principle, another reform relating to budgetary process, for advancement of the date of Budget presentation from the last day of Febru- ary to a suitable date. The exact date of presentation of Budget for 2017-18 would be decided keeping in view the date of assembly elections to be held in States. Merger of Plan and Non Plan classification in Budget and Accounts: The third proposal approved by the Cabinet relates to the merger of Plan and Non Plan classification in Budget and Accounts from 2017-18, with continuance of ear- marking of funds for Scheduled Castes Sub-Plan/Tribal Sub-Plan. Similarly, the allocations for North Eastern States will also continue. This would help in resolving the following issues: • The Plan/Non-Plan bifurcation of expenditure has led to a fragmented view of resource allocation to various schemes, making it difficult not only to as- certain cost of delivering a service but also to link outlays to outcomes. • The bias in favour of Plan expenditure by Centre as well as the State Governments has led to a neglect of essential expenditures on maintenance of assets and other establishment related expenditures for providing essential social services. CII’s Reaction The decision to merge the rail budget with the Union Budget and removal of the distinction between Plan and non-Plan expenditure are commendable initiatives to simplify and streamline decision-making within the government and move towards efficiency of resource use. Purely from a policy point of view, the recent Cabi- net decisions send a clear message that the govern- ment is orchestrating big bang reforms in a major way. Expediting the passage of the Budget is a move in the right direction as it would facilitate early implementa- tion of Budget decisions. This is a historic move in the direction of less government and more governance, the credo of the present government. Global and domes- tic business sentiment would get a further fillip and so would the environment for doing business in the coun- try.
  • 41. 39 GLOBAL TRENDS Federal Rate Hike on Cards in December 2016 SEPTEMBER 2016 I n line with expectations, US Federal Reserve main- tained status-quo and kept the Federal funds target range unchanged at 0.25-0.50 per cent in its meeting held over two days on 20-21 September 2016 as it await- ed more evidence of progress toward its goals, while projecting that an increase is still likely by year-end. In- terestingly, three members from the hawkish Fed bloc — Esther George, Loretta Mester and Eric Rosengren — dissented from the statement as compared to only one member dissenting in the previous meeting. In the policy statement, the Federal Open Market Commit- tee (FOMC) indicated that the labor market had con- tinued to strengthen and growth of economic activity had picked up from the modest pace seen in the first half of this year. It however added that the household spending had been growing strongly but business fixed investment had remained soft. Further, the Fed state- ment highlighted that it had been concerned about global developments; particularly the Brexit vote and a slowdown in China, however the near-term risks to the economic outlook were put as being roughly balanced. Fed upgrades its assessment of econom- ic activity As regards to its evaluation about the economic activ- ity, the Fed upgraded its assessment of the economic activity, citing that “growth of economic activity has picked up from the modest pace seen in the first half of this year” as compared to the moderate rate of growth cited in the last meeting. However, in the Summary of Economic Projections (SEP) that accompanied the statement, the FOMC revised slightly lower its projec- tion for GDP growth for 2016. The median growth pro- jection for 2016 was cut to 1.8 per cent from 2 per cent, mirroring the drop in the longer-run forecast, based on median estimates. On the inflation front, Fed noted that inflation had con- tinued to run below the Committee’s longer-run objec- tive, partly reflecting earlier declines in energy prices and decreasing prices of non-energy imports. Hence, it revised its projection of CPI to 1.3 per cent in the fourth quarter, down from a forecast of 1.4 percent made in June 2016. However, it retained its view that inflation was expected to rise towards the 2 per cent target in the medium-term.
  • 42. ECONOMY MATTERS 40 GLOBAL TRENDS Notwithstanding the moderation in NFP seen in August, labour market conditions remain upbeat On the labour market conditions, Fed acknowledged that a range of indicators pointed to “continued strengthening of the labour market”. However, the Au- gust 2016 non-farm payrolls (NFP) came in lower than expectations, increasing by 151,000 in August 2016 as compared with the market consensus of 180,000. While the June 2016 print was revised downwards to 271,000 from 292,000, the July 2016 print was revised up from 255,000 to 275,000. The less volatile three-month aver- age NFP came in above its psychological 200,000 mark at 232,000. Bank of Japan (BoJ) Governor Haruhiko Kuroda an- nounced a new monetary policy paradigm in order to stimulate Japanese economy and help it reach the 2 per cent inflation target. The introduction of “yield curve control,” in which the Bank will seek for the decline in real interest rates by controlling short-term and long- term interest rates, would be placed at the core of the new policy framework. Large scale monetary easing has released surfeit of easy money in the economy More than three years ago, BoJ had introduced Quan- titative and Qualitative Monetary Easing (QQE) in April In December 2015, the Fed had signaled that four rate increases were likely in 2016, but had scaled back these projections in March 2016 due to a global growth slow- down, financial market volatility and concerns about tepid inflation. In the years ahead, the FOMC sees two hikes in 2017 and three each in 2018 and 2019 that would bring the funds rate to about 2.6 per cent, assuming that each increase would come in quarter-point incre- ments. Fed rate hike expected in December 2016 Going ahead, incoming data and developments in the global and financial markets will remain critical for de- termining the next policy action. However, a rate hike in December 2016 remains on the cards. 2013. In this period, Japan’s economic activity and prices had improved significantly and Japan’s economy was pulled out of deflation. However, despite the Bank’s large-scale monetary easing, the price stability target of 2 per cent had not been achieved. In order to com- plement this policy, in January 2016, the Bank had intro- duced “QQE with a Negative Interest Rate”. Since the introduction of this measure, Japanese government bond (JGB) yields, lending rates and interest rates on corporate bonds and commercial paper had declined considerably, implying that the measure has had sub- stantial effects. Bank of Japan Introduces New Monetary Policy Paradigm
  • 43. 41 GLOBAL TRENDS SEPTEMBER 2016 In line with market expectation, the Bank of England (BoE) in its monetary policy meeting held on 15th Sep- tember, 2016 kept key policy rate unchanged at 0.25 per cent and Asset Purchase Facility (APF) at GBP 435 billion. All nine members of the Bank’s Monetary Policy Com- mittee (MPC) voted to leave interest rates at a record low, following signs that businesses and households have largely shrugged off the initial shock of Brexit. BoE adopts dovish stance; rate cut ex- pected most likely by end of 2016 However, the accompanying statement was broadly dovish on the stance front but BoE’s assessment of in- coming data was mildly positive, with the Committee highlighting the need to act further if data disappoints. The Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) admitted that a number of indicators of near-term economic activity had been somewhat stronger than expected. It now expects less of a slowing in UK GDP growth in the sec- ond half of 2016. For now, an internal judgment by Bank staff suggests GDP growth will come in at about 0.2-0.3 per cent in the third quarter, the minutes said. That was stronger than their view at the time of the August rate cut, when they forecast that growth would be close to zero. The meeting record showed a majority of policymak- ers were still open to another rate cut, probably to 0.1 per cent, before the end of the current year. However, much will depend on the Bank’s next inflation report due on 3rd November, 2016, when it produces new fore- casts for the economy based on the latest indicators. Bank of England Adopts Dovish Policy Stance BoJ introduces ‘’ QQE with Yield Curve Control” But still, price target of 2 per cent had remained elu- sive. Hence, BOJ decided to introduce a new monetary policy framework called as “QQE with Yield Curve Con- trol”, which consists of two major components: the first is “yield curve control” in which the Bank will control short-term and long-term interest rates; and the second is an “inflation-overshooting commitment” in which the Bank has committed itself to expanding the monetary base until the year-on-year rate of increase in the ob- served consumer price index (CPI) exceeds the price stability target of 2 per cent and stays above the target in a stable manner. In order to achieve the yield control, BoJ has speci- fied guidelines for market operations which enunciate a short-term policy interest rate and a target level of a long-term interest rate. Specifically, short-term interest rates will be decided by applying a negative interest rate of minus 0.1 per cent to the policy-rate balances in cur- rent accounts held by financial institutions at the Bank. The long-term interest rates will be the rate at which the Bank will purchase Japanese government bonds (JGBs) and also ensure that the 10-year JGB yields will remain more or less at the current level (around zero per cent). The experience so far with the negative interest rate policy shows that a combination of the negative inter- est rate on current account balances at the Bank and JGB purchases is effective for yield curve control. Further, the Bank also decided to introduce the follow- ing new tools of market operations so as to control the yield curve smoothly: (i) Outright purchases of JGBs with yields designated by the Bank (fixed-rate purchase operations) and (ii) Fixed-rate funds-supplying operations for a period of up to 10 years (extending the longest maturity of the operation from 1 year at present). Achieving inflation target of 2 per cent remains critical for BoJ To sum it, BoJ has showed resolute determination in pursuing “QQE with Yield Curve Control” and achieve the price stability target of 2 per cent at the earliest pos- sible time. The Bank believes that its monetary policy and the Government’s fiscal policy as well as initiatives for strengthening Japan’s growth potential will pro- duce synergy effects, and thereby will navigate Japan’s economy toward overcoming deflation and achieving sustainable growth.