India’s Modi releases budget to get growth back up

Prime minister has set a target of growing India into a $5tn economy by 2024/2025

India’s prime minister Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party recently won a landslide general election.
India’s prime minister Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party recently won a landslide general election.

India prime minister Narendra Modi’s government unveiled the budget for the coming year on Friday, seeking to reverse weakening growth and investment that threaten to take the shine off a recent landslide election victory.

Finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman, presenting the annual budget statement to parliament, said the government planned structural reforms to kick-start foreign and domestic investment.

Modi has set a target of growing India into a $5 trillion economy by 2024/2025 from $2.7 trillion that a government report on Thursday said will be done on the back of higher investment, savings and exports in the way China’s growth was propelled.

“We need to invest heavily in infrastructure, digital economy, job creation,” Sitharaman said, adding India is set to become a $3 trillion economy in the current fiscal year.

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But economists say scaling up Asia’s third largest economy in rapid fashion will need bold reforms including freeing up land and labour markets, which Modi shied away from in his first term for fear of political backlash.

Capital Economics said in a note on Friday that reaching that target “is dependent in large part on achieving real GDP growth of 8 per cent a year, which we think is unlikely.”

Land and labour reforms are difficult in a democracy like India and it seems unlikely Modi will risk drawing the ire of his Bharatiya Janata Party voters that re-elected him with a huge mandate.

India’s economy is also running into global headwinds with growth weighed down by trade wars and protectionism.

Asia’s third largest economy grew at a much slower-than-expected 5.8 per cent in the last quarter, the weakest growth in five years and far below the pace needed to generate jobs for the millions of young Indian’s entering the labour market each month.

The unemployment rate rose to a multi-year-high of 6.1 per cent in the 2017/18 fiscal year.

New investments proposals in 2018/19 fell to 9.5 trillion rupees, the lowest investment proposals recorded in 14 years, according to Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy (CMIE), a Mumbai based think tank. – Reuters