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'Indian economy is in survival mode'

May 23, 2020 08:15 IST

'Once the lockdown is lifted, we will see some pickup in demand.'
'And my sense is that it will be a long walk this time given that we have lost three months of economic activity.'

Illustration: Dominic Xavier/Rediff.com

"Things are challenging, but an extension of the (loan) moratorium could actually help us tide over the crisis," Dr Soumya Kanti Ghosh, Group Chief Economic Advisor, State Bank of India, tells Prasanna D Zore/Rediff.com after the Reserve Bank of India cut the repo rate by 40 basis points to 4 per cent on May 22.

Now that the RBI has cut the repo rate to 4 per cent with a stance that it will be accommodative, do you see the repo rate going down further to mitigate the COVID-19 impact on the Indian economy?

Yes, it (repo rates) will go down further. And this is not for enhancing liquidity but as a signaling mechanism.

But the RBI has been doing that since January 2019. It has not signaled lower interest rates. Why are banks cautious to lend?

No. That is not correct.

Actually banks have been lending and there has been adequate transmission (of rates corresponding to cuts in repo rates).

So that (banks lending to borrowers or borrowers going to banks for loans) is also a function of demand; whatever demand is there in the system banks have been adhering to that.

So that's not correct (to say that banks are cautious to lend).

But these repo rate cuts have not been able to revive demand; depending on demand, people are borrowing or industries are borrowing.
It's not because the RBI is cutting the repo rate that people will borrow.
So with this repo rate cut, has the RBI sent a very strong signal to banks to lend?
Would these repo rate cuts instill confidence in borrowers or companies to go on an investment spree?

As of now, there are no signs of investment (revival); as of now we are yet to come out of the crisis.

The pandemic could last even one more month, at least in terms of the cases not peaking; they could possibly peak in June.

Right now the repo rate cut is only a tool to signal to the market that we are headed for a lower interest rate structure.

And maybe once the time arrives, growth will pick up.

As of now, I think, we are in a survival mode, but once the lockdown is lifted, we will see some pickup in demand.

And my sense is that it will be a long walk this time given that we have lost three months of economic activity.

Coupled with the package announced by the finance minister and the RBI loosening its purse strings, do you look forward to a rise in investment and consumption demand?

As of now, I don't see that happening. It will depend on how things pan out in terms of how people cope with their job losses and income losses.

These numbers will be very big. As of now, we are just thinking in terms of surviving this crisis.

Investment and consumption demand will manifest with a time lag.

Consumption demand will come once investment demand picks up.

Consumption demand will come in two parts. One will be pent up demand which now consumers are holding down in the first quarter because of the lockdown.

Once the lockdown lifts, you can see a surge in consumption. But can that consumption demand sustain is a matter of debate.

The second will be fresh demand. But that too will depend how people feel about their future income prospects.

Where do you see the economy headed in the next two or three quarters or how will the annual GDP print look like?

Annual GDP print will be in deep single-digit negative.

It remains to be seen how the numbers pan out, but as of now, we are expecting negative single digit contraction.

Nothing can be done about it now. It could be minus 9 per cent also or even higher in negative double digits, but as of now, we are factoring it to be in negative single digit.

What more measures do you think should the RBI, on the monetary front, and government on the fiscal front, take to boost demand and revive the economy?

There could be more rate cuts; there could be change in the asset quality norms; the government could actually come up with a targeted package for the sectors which have been ravaged by the pandemic like aviation, hospitality, tourism, real estate.

The government should come up with support for these sectors at some point of time at a later date.

Some sort of support is obviously required at some point of time.

Do you expect the government to pump prime the economy?

There is an expectation (from the government that it will do it) but let's see what happens going ahead.

How will the extension of loan moratorium till August 31 play out for both borrowers and lenders? Do you feel there will be a rise in non-performing assets going head?

No. As of now the issue is of cash flow mismatch. So we should not allow this cash flow mismatch to become an NPA issue.

So that's where the RBI has made provisions to extend the moratorium so that if people actually get time to manage their cash flows when there is no inflow of income, so that's why it has been extended (till August 31).

Hopefully, this extension should help out to some extent.

What will be the impact of COVID-19 crisis on the agriculture sector? Do you think farmers will be able to keep their heads above water?

The agriculture sector this year is likely to work a little better, but my point is that in the agricultural sector there have been several structural changes in the last couple of years.

For example, many farmers are now involved in allied activities (activities dependent on agricultural produce) and have diversified income streams. Allied activities now form a large part of farmers's incomes.

From that point of view, it remains to be seen how the allied sector is linked to the cycle, rather than the agriculture sector.

In terms of rise in unemployment rates, how badly will the manufacturing and services sector be hit and do you see subsequent defaulting on loan obligations by individuals employed in these sectors?

Things are challenging, but as I said to you that an extension of the moratorium could actually help us tide over the crisis.

PRASANNA D ZORE