As the finance ministry begins
drafting the 2016-17 Union Budget - to be presented in a mere 12 weeks -
Minister of State for Finance Jayant Sinha told Business Standard on Tuesday
that "three or four themes" would guide the finance ministry through
the lengthy and complex process.
The
first, and major theme, he said, would be the expansion of universal social
security, which he hoped would be a historic accomplishment for the National
Democratic Alliance government. The roll-out of universal social security would
be based on the direct benefits transfer platform, which he said was already
working effectively in the employment guarantee programme, for the liquefied
petroleum gas subsidy and for pensions and scholarships.
The
second theme in the Budget-2016
would be agriculture, "an area where we can do much more". The minister
singled out crop health cards, agricultural credit, funding for state-led
irrigation schemes among others.
The
third theme, Sinha said, would be job creation and the various associated
programmes - 'Make in India', 'Skill India', 'Start-up India', and so on. The
Union government's much-anticipated draft start-up policy, he indicated, would
be finalised soon but probably not made public till the end of the year or in
the New Year.
The
Budget's final theme would be "simplifying the tax structure… Let us see
if the committee we have formed has some suggestions by then that we can put in
the Finance Bill".
The
Budget News drafting
process would take place in the context of a recovery in economic growth that
Sinha cautioned was "patchy" - there were as yet "not enough
data points" to determine if it was broad-based and could be sustained.
"The [recently-released] GDP numbers are good but I want to see a real
trend before we can say that the economy is really and seriously on an
upswing."
"You
cannot say in an unalloyed way that the economy is moving", he added,
adding that the government was facing some significant headwinds: successive
below-par monsoons, a commodity meltdown that had hit sectors such as steel and
metals, poor export demand and the overhang of stressed assets. Given the
headwinds, he said 7.4 per cent growth was "creditable".
He
argued that "every time the Indian economy has done over eight per cent...
it has been when exports are strong". When both agriculture and exports
were struggling, "to really power beyond 7.5 per cent is a tall
task".
Nevertheless,
he pointed to the government having turned around India's macro-economic
indicators, including the fiscal deficit, in just over a year as an important
component towards making a recovery possible. He added that there were several
signs, including an increase in the number of hotel rooms booked for business
travel, that domestic demand had begun to revive around Diwali. When asked if
the government would meet its disinvestment targets - set at an ambitious Rs
69,500 crore for the ongoing fiscal year - Sinha said simply that "fiscal
deficit targets would be met".
While
granting that the quarterly growth numbers were partly driven by front-loaded
government spending, he insisted that high public investment could be sustained
into the new fiscal year, in spite of the Seventh Pay Commission award and
other fiscal stresses: "We have modelled the extra expenditure burden for
next year. We can continue to make public investments that are necessary."
On
the prospects for the Goods and Services Tax (GST) Constitution amendment Bill
in this session of Parliament, the minister said that the government had
earlier managed to build consensus - except for the Congress - in the Select
Committee of Parliament, and was "in consultation with colleagues of the
Opposition" in order to rebuild that consensus.
Sinha
did indicate that the government viewed the GST as just one in a bouquet of
broad structural reforms that it intended to undertake, which would create both
hard and soft infrastructure, with the "right balance between regulation
and market forces".
The
finance ministry's legislative agenda for the winter session of Parliament
extended beyond the GST, he said. The number two priority was the new
bankruptcy bill. "Number three on our agenda is the legislative action
required to form the Public Debt Management Agency and the Monetary Policy
Committee. Apart from that we are working on arbitration and conciliation
laws."
Discussing
reform of state-controlled banks, Sinha said that each leadership position
would be dealt with on a case-by-case basis, and that they were still open to
private sector candidates - if the pipeline of executive directors within the
public-sector banking system was not strong enough.
The
bank board bureau to advise public-sector banks was a first step towards a
holding company, but there were "several moving parts" to handle
before a second step was taken, he indicated. It would require legislative
approval, and some banks might need to be changed into corporations, which they
at present were not.
Meanwhile,
he stressed the government would continue to look at the non-performing asset
situation, which he said was under control in absolute terms and would be
settled through transparent processes.
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