In the Name of Productivity
The jury is still out on what the proposed GST rejig could mean for the economy. State Bank of India’s economists for instance expect the reduced indirect tax burden to translate into a ₹2 lakh crore consumption boost though at the cost of an average annual revenue loss of ₹85,000 crore. Emkay Global, a financial services firm, is more cautious pegging the loss higher at ₹1.2 lakh crore and warning that states might take a disproportionate hit. Even if consumption does rise, Emkay points out that any pullback in public spending on capital expenditure or social spending or rural welfare could quickly blunt aggregate demand.
Another layer of concern is that both the government and corporate sector are deleveraging at the same time. Public debt has eased from its pandemic peak of 88% of GDP to 82% by December 2024, while corporate debt has slid from 66% in 2017 to around 50% now. Where the government’s fiscal consolidation has been rewarded with a long-overdue credit rating upgrade from S&P, a global credit ratings agency, after 18 years, the simultaneous pullback in corporate debt is more troubling. Economists warn that such a cycle could further weigh on household incomes especially when families themselves are carrying higher loan burdens. The deleveraging, partly a fallout of the 2019 corporate tax cuts, is now seen as a drag on growth explaining why the Ministry of Finance is pressing India companies to pay and hire more.