The deferral of the fiscal consolidation roadmap has left the task
of strengthening weak public finances to the next government after the
2019 general elections, Fitch Ratings said today. The government has
revised its 2018-19 fiscal deficit projections to 3.3 per cent of GDP
and for the current fiscal to 3.5 per cent of GDP, compared with
original targets of 3 per cent and 3.2 per cent, respectively.
The
postponement of consolidation in part reflects policies to support the
economy, which was held back last year by weak investment and
disruptions from demonetisation and the introduction of the Goods and
Services Tax (GST), Fitch said. "The Indian government’s budget has
pushed back fiscal consolidation, leaving much of the task of addressing
the country’s relatively weak public finances to the next
administration," Fitch Ratings said in a statement.
However, the
Budget target revisions are modest, and are balanced by positive reform
momentum and a strong economic outlook, the US-based agency said. New
spending initiatives announced in the Budget include measures to boost
rural incomes, an ambitious health insurance scheme intended to cover
about 50 crore people, and funding for the construction and upgrading of
medical colleges and hospitals.
"This spending will benefit a
large section of the public ahead of general elections due by May 2019,"
Fitch said. The fiscal slippage of 0.3 per cent of GDP in both 2017 -18
and 2018-19 is relative to last year’s Budget targets of 3.2 per cent
and 3 per cent of GDP, respectively. The target for the current fiscal
was missed largely because of higher expenditure, Fitch said.
This
government’s initial fiscal plan, set out in 2014, aimed to reduce the
deficit to 3 per cent of GDP by FY18 - the level consistent with the
Fiscal Responsibility and Budget Management (FRBM) Act of 2003. "It now
does not expect to hit that target until 2020-21, beyond its current
electoral term," Fitch said.
Despite this slippage, the government
stated in the Budget that it plans to adopt a ceiling of 40 per cent of
GDP for Central Government debt, as recommended by the FRBM Committee
in January 2017, compared to an estimated 50 per cent of GDP in 2017-18.
"This would be a positive step towards a more prudent fiscal framework,
if eventually adhered to, even if debt is unlikely to fall below the
ceiling by 2022-23, as recommended by the committee," Fitch said.
It
said the revenue forecasts made in the Budget appear broadly credible.
"Sluggish investment growth remains a drag on the economy, but a
recovery might be supported by a corporate tax change that makes more
companies eligible for the lower SME bracket, as well as the
government’s continued infrastructure investment drive," it said.
The
Budget decision to increase minimum support prices for agricultural
goods to 1.5 times the cost of production is likely to lift rural
incomes, but could also push up inflation and bring forward monetary
tightening, Fitch noted.