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The
Indian government, after so much song and dance in the last few years about
the need for strict adherence to FRBM, has thrown it out of the window by
announcing huge expenditures. Much was also made of the RBI’s autonomy but
that is also a thing of the past with the government requiring it to act
quickly and, of all things, it has released almost Rs 2,70,000 crore of
liquidity in a month — an unthinkable amount till recently. The
latest data from the US economy points to a worsening economic situation. For
the first time in several decades, consumer expenditures have dropped and that
too sharply. Worse, this data is for the quarter immediately preceding the big
pain induced by the collapse in the financial sector in mid September. So,
analysts have argued that the last quarter of 2008 is likely to be much worse.
There
are straws in the wind, suggesting that the recent rise in the stock markets
is a blip. Reports suggest that the largest insurance firm AIG, which has been
given a total bailout package of $123 billion, has more or less exhausted this
amount in a month. The bailout of $ 85 billion announced in September looked
huge but another $38 billion had to be given and even that has disappeared
into a bottomless pit. How much more would be needed by the AIG? That
depends on the liabilities on its books and how much have its assets degraded
in the present situation of rapid economic decline. All this indicates the
difficulties that every business, and not just financial institutions, may be
currently facing. All of them may be headed for difficulties because the
assets on their books have lost value with the decline of the markets while
their huge liabilities may be intact. The balance sheet may have huge holes. The
largest Japanese bank, Mitsubishi Financial Group that took equity in Morgan
Stanley to bail it out, is now in trouble. It is trying to raise an equity of
$10.7 billion. The shares held by Mitsubishi have fallen in value by 40 per
cent. This has shaken confidence not only in Japan but also in the rest of the
world. So entities that may look healthy at one point of time and may be asked
to bail- out the not-so-healthy ones may themselves be in trouble very quickly
not only because they took on another collapsing entity but because their own
portfolio has degraded — not in years but in days and months. The
clear lesson is that given the disastrous financial situation worldwide, one
does not know which entity is headed for trouble in the coming days and
months. Under the circumstances, every entity is protecting itself. One way to
do so is to become conservative and not trust others, not invest, etc. This
becomes an added source of trouble. The
situation has gone out of the control of governments as far as the financial
markets are concerned. The losses in the books have become so large that even
the governments do not have the resources to save these entities. The monetary
authorities have lost their power to regulate since their instruments are now
blunted by the loss of trust and abnormal events in the economy. They may
lower interest rates, but investments in the current situation of growing
uncertainty will not rise. They may release money but it will simply sit with
economic agents since they do not want to take on fresh commitments and want
to stay liquid rather than commit funds. In brief, demand has collapsed. The
real economy is being severely dented since most businesses have also indulged
in buying the financial instruments that are now in trouble. After all, they
like to make as high a profit as possible and the financial markets were
promising that and luring all and sundry — everyone was trapped by greed. An
Indian conglomerate bought a Europe firm at what was then thought to be a high
price. Today the price of that asset would have collapsed in the market but
the debts taken to buy the company would stand. The financial situation of the
firm must be poor. The same company also bought two more firms later for the
sake of prestige and again they would have taken a hit. How this firm would
fare in the coming months is a moot question. Assocham
put out a report that soon some major industries will retrench in a big way.
Not so surprisingly, within a week, they have withdrawn the report under
pressure for the government which is still claiming that the economy would
grow at 7 per cent. Is this feasible, given that the industrial growth has
fallen to 1.5 per cent for the latest month and major parts of the tertiary
sector, like the financial sector, hotels, tourism, trade, travel and housing,
are seeing sharp declines? The Finance Minister has claimed that more jobs
would be generated this year than during the entire NDA regime — a poor game
of political one upmanship. The
problem is likely to aggravate as time passes because the world economy is
headed into a prolonged recession or even a depression. Major Indian
industries are likely to slow down or show negative growth. Can industry carry
surplus labour in times when its bottomline is being hit due to lack of orders
and build-up of inventories? Its losses can only mount even faster and it
would sink sooner than later unless a national strategy is worked out as to
how India will cope with the coming difficult time. There is no point in
living in denial and not preparing. Malaysia
delinked itself from international capital flows in 1997 to save itself from
the ongoing economic collapse in South-East Asia. The US and the IMF lectured
it then for wrong policies but later held it up as a model for others. We also
need to protect our interest and not open ourselves indiscriminately. The FIIs
brought in funds but now they are withdrawing and leading to the collapse of
the stock market. The government is opening up the insurance sector to greater
FDI. In these times when the insurance sector is also in deep trouble (AIG
being the biggest one) where will these funds come from? If they do come,
would they also not try to quickly exploit the situation to shore up their
parent companies, etc? We need to invest in our real economy, keep employment up, encourage investment and keep our savings moving within the economy and not let them leak out through opening up the sector. Are we learning anything from anyone? If not, that is not unusual but a part of the predictability. Dr.
Arun Kumar is the Coordinator of the EXIM Bank-JNU Library in Economics.
He is teaching Economics in Jawaharlal Nehru University since 1984.
He has been the Chairperson of the Centre for Economic Studies and Planning of
JNU, Vice President and Acting President of the Indian Academy of Social
Sciences (ISSA). This article
was first published in The Tribune, November
5, 2008. |
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