The single biggest imperative for the government is to get growth back to a higher orbit
Facilitating ease of doing business
The prime minister’s aspiration is that India should rank among the top 50 in the world in the global ranking of ‘Ease of Doing Business’. Currently, India is at a lowly 142nd position. This focus can concomitantly address various reform issues like improving access to electricity and other infrastructure, reducing the unnecessary regulatory burden (the so-called “Inspector Raj”), reduce tax related and contractual disputes, and speed up the approval process.
“Make In India” is a clarion call to improve manufacturing competitiveness, and not a call for protectionism. To this end, the Union Budget and economic policy can ensure that all the factors that handicap manufacturing be suitably addressed. Lowering the overall tax burden, giving incentives for skilling and training of workers and enabling credit flow would be worthwhile. Regulation should increasingly move toward e-governance and self-compliance wherever possible. India can and must exploit a window of opportunity that has arisen as China moves away from low-cost labour-intensive manufacturing. Those businesses should be welcomed and attracted to India, and whatever policy inducement can make this happen should be explored.
Incentivise financial savings
The budget could also initiate reform on direct transfer of benefits to recipients, be they subsidies or social security payments, given their potential to trim the total spending and prevent leakages. One troubling aspect of recent years is that of India’s total national savings, the financial savings component has been declining. In effect, it means a lesser proportion gets deployed productively. The budget can address this phenomenon by incentivising financial savings. New and creative offerings are needed to wean savers away from gold. A moderate rate and increased width of taxation would help augment resources. Tax incentives may be considered for long-term infrastructure-oriented contractual savings products. The finance minister has indicated that the relationship of taxpayers and tax collectors needs to become less adversarial. Recent decisions of the government about long pending tax disputes bear testimony to this approach, and further reduction in “fruitless” tax litigation can be undertaken.
A more level playing field
As the nation looks towards higher growth rates in the coming years, we must ensure that India’s consumer market doesn’t become easy pickings for below cost dumping by our trading partners. Already domestic manufacturers work under the disadvantages of infrastructure and logistics costs. In fact, some sectors suffer an inverted duty disability, i.e. they pay duty on their inputs, but their output competes with duty free/lower duty imports. Such anomalies must be removed.
Fulfilling promises: Rollout of GST, divestment
Finally, one of the biggest reforms, which will add one percent to GDP growth on a sustained basis, is the nationwide rollout of the Goods and Services Tax (GST). The government has set 2016 as the target for its implementation. GST’s potential to raise tax revenues is phenomenal, largely due to interlocking incentives for greater compliance. The GST consensus among all states of India must be forged and signed, so that we truly become a single economic market.
Alongside consolidation of the fiscal deficit, divestment of government stake in public sector companies should gather momentum. It will augment the government’s resources for long-term investments in physical and social infrastructure.
On the eve of the Union Budget 2015, the prospects for India are bright, as even corroborated by assessments of the International Monetary Fund and World Bank.
The tailwinds are favourable because of the steep fall in energy and commodity prices. The sails have been set in the proper direction by a reformist and pro-growth oriented government eager to harness the tailwinds.
The helmsmen should now set the pace and race toward our glorious future. It should be a year ahead of fulfilled promises.
(This story appears in the 06 March, 2015 issue of Forbes India. To visit our Archives, click here.)