Business Studies, asked by Anonymous, 10 months ago

What are the advices given by Manmohan Singh to make Indian economy strong

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Answered by neeraj1251
3

Cutting to the chase yet again, former prime minister Manmohan Singh advised the government to acknowledge the economic crisis and solve the problems that have led to a sharp drop in GDP growth.

The government has not yet realised the full potential of the economic slowdown, Manmohan Singh told The Hindu BusinessLine during an interview.

He said the government first has to admit that India is going through an economic crisis. Only then it could aim at rationalising Goods and Services Tax (GST), accelerate demand growth, revive agriculture and fixing lack of credit, Singh added.

Having said that, here are five points shared by the Manmohan Singh for the revival of the economy:

RATIONALISE GST

Manmohan Singh reiterated that two of the government's policies -- demonetisation and flawed GST implementation -- have led to the slowdown. While the former cannot be fixed, Manmohan Singh advised the government to rationalise GST rates even if it leads to short-term revenue loss. Not just Singh, several sectors including the ailing auto industry have asked the government to cut GST.

REVIVE DEMAND

Secondly, the former prime minister said the government needs to find "innovative ways" to increase consumer demand, which is a key reason behind the slowdown. Manmohan Singh said slowdown could become a prolonged affair if the government fails to boost consumption, which is one of the key indicators of economic growth. "The fact that sales of Rs 5 biscuits (Parle) have declined tells its own story," Singh said. He said India is already facing the short-term effects of decline due to a drop in consumption.

FIX LABOUR-INTENSIVE SECTORS

The recent slowdown in the automobile and real estate sector, according to Singh, is an early warning and the government should not waste any time in finding remedies to fix labour-intensive sectors. For instance, the automobile industry employs a total of over three million people, out of which more than three lakh have lost their jobs. The figure could go up to 10 lakh given the current mood of the sector, according to industry trackers. Real Estate, which employs lakhs of daily wage labourers, is also going through a period of acute slowdown, which needs to be immediately addressed.

LIQUIDITY BOOST

Manmohan Singh also discussed how liquidity crunch is another trigger behind the economic slowdown. Singh said the liquidity crisis since 2018 has crippled Indian banks and NBFCs, forcing them to choke credit to businesses, especially Medium and Small Scale Enterprises (MSMEs). During the interview, Singh explained how the slowdown among MSMEs is a prolonged affair which started in 2016 due to demonetisation. He also pointed out flaws in GST, which further crippled the MSMEs that are considered to be the backbone of multiple sectors.

RECOGNISE EXPORT OPPORTUNITIES

Last but not the least, Manmohan Singh also advised the government to recognise new export opportunities that arise out of the trade tussle between the US and China. During the interview, Manmohan Singh said a new export roadmap could be beneficial for India. Manmohan Singh also signalled that the government has to find opportunities to attract private investments.

Answered by senikale278
1

Answer:

Dr Manmohan Singh, primarily an economist who was thrust into the position of a politician late in life, has offered sane advice to the Modi government to come out of the current economic crisis. In doing so, he was playing the role of a senior statesman.

His first advice is that the government must come out of its denial mindset and recognise that there is a full blown economic crisis.

Dr Singh referred to his stint as finance minister and later as prime minister when the country was struck by severe economic storms in 1991 and subsequently in 2008. By any measure, those were far more serious crises than the present one. However, during the first crisis when India was staring at an external payment default, the government led by Narasimha Rao had taken bold reform measures which set a new paradigm for the economy. By and large, we have moved in the direction set by the 1991 reforms ever since.

I recall meeting Dr Singh at his North Block office. He had then confided that the biggest worry for the reformers was not to totally disrupt the Indian economy and bring untold misery to the people. Dr Singh gave a long free-wheeling interview to this correspondent. India’s 1991 crisis was not then far removed from the devastating downfall of Soviet Union and abysmal collapse of its economy.

The Russian reforms had taken a head-long plunge into making its economy completely market-based (in imitation of the West), suddenly unhinging itself from the command and planned one. This had created large scale unemployment, food shortages causing huge suffering for its common people. Its financial system had vanished and banks went bankrupt because the volley of reforms was introduced in too much of haste.

Dr Singh has now suggested several critical steps to restore confidence. His advice is bipartisan and a sane voice for reconstruction of the economy.

Dr Singh has given a five-point basic agenda of reform in his media interaction. What he had articulated is not so unknown but coming from him these suggestions assume a different hue. Admittedly, he has only given broad hints. The details will have to be worked out.

The bunch of measures in the last few years has in effect tried to touch a hitherto untouched segment of the Indian economy – the informal sector. The presumption was that the informal sector should be brought within the purview of the formal sector and thereby should be under the tax net though maybe not paying taxes. This meant they should be monitored.

The informal sector of the economy was the quintessentially entrepreneurship of the people. In the numerous small and tiny units individual entrepreneurs specialized in doing small little things in the manner of assembly line functioning of large factories.

In small side lanes in Delhi, for example, there are units which do nothing but stitch buttons on garments. And these could be very specialized buttons of fairly high-end readymade garments. They do not come under tax obligation because neither their earnings nor their turnover qualifies for the tax threshold. But for that matter, they are not illegal or their earnings are not black money.

Introduction of GST discriminated against these cottage units because larger buyers in the supply chain preferred those having GST registration or tax returns.

It these units in their aggregate who prop up employment and create the basic purchasing power. It is their employees who would go for a Rs 5-biscuit package. Along with the introduction of GST, the demonetisation done earlier, had hurt their cash flows. Digitisation was good for the big and organised, but not for these tiny units.

The government has to somehow help unwind the wires which had tied up the operations of the small and tiny units. Cash flows must start for these smaller informal units and they should regain their normal old rhythm of functioning.

We should recognise that the informal small sector is the primary cushion of the Indian economy. Their real contribution is difficult to measure and only vaguely sought to be estimated into the GDP calculations. But these amorphous unorganized individual based economic units are the basic building blocks of Indian economy. Do not try to formalize them or seek taxes from these units.

Give them a boost and we will bounce back.

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