As a
result, our fiscal position had come under severe strain well before Covid-19
pandemic: as estimated by the Controller General of Accounts, fiscal deficit in
2019-20 stood at 4.65 — 0.8% higher than the revised estimate. The pandemic has
further worsened it in 2020-21: fiscal deficit was estimated at about 7% of GDP
as against 3.5% of the Budget estimate, while the consolidated deficit of the
Union and States put together could be as high as 12% of GDP. The debt burden
may as well climb to 85%. And the need of the hour is further loosening of
purse strings to effectively meet the challenges posed by the pandemic.
Over it, the report of the Comptroller and
Auditor General of India reveals many obfuscations—borrowing from the National
Small Saving Fund by the Food Corporation of India towards meeting food subsidy
and its arrears, financing irrigation projects from the Long-Term Irrigation
Fund (LTIF) created by the NABARD, and financing of railway projects through
borrowings from the Indian Railway Finance Corporation (IRFC)—done to keep the
liabilities hidden and present a lower deficit.
It is against this backdrop that the 14th
Finance Commission recommended establishment of an independent Fiscal Council
by Parliament to undertake ex ante assessment of budget proposals and to ensure
their consistency with fiscal policy and rules. Even the former Deputy Governor
of the RBI, Viral Acharya proposed a bipartisan, independent Fiscal Council to
restore financial stability.
Fiscal
councils are defined as independent, non-partisan agencies with an official
mandate to assess fiscal policies, plans, rules, and performance (Debrun et al., 2013). According to Robert Hagemann (2011),
Fiscal Council is “…a publicly funded entity staffed by non-elected
professionals mandated to provide nonpartisan oversight of fiscal performance
and/or advice and guidance—from either a positive or normative perspective—on
key aspects of fiscal policy”.
Over the
last decade a rapidly growing number of over 50 countries have introduced
independent fiscal councils to encourage better fiscal policies. Of course,
they cannot play an independent role in setting policy instruments but they can
certainly influence policy outcomes through three channels: one, by ensuring
transparency over the political cycle it improves democratic accountability,
besides discouraging opportunistic shifts in fiscal policy; two, raises public
awareness about the consequences of the adopted policy paths and thereby raise
the reputational/electoral costs of unsound policies through independent
analysis and forecasts; and three, it can also provide direct inputs to the
budget process leading to closure of technical loopholes that aid governments
in circumventing numerical fiscal rules.
A study
carried out by IMF in 2013 on the functions and impact of fiscal councils found
that the presence of fiscal councils led to: stronger primary balances; more
accurate macroeconomic and budgetary forecasts; and a raise in public awareness that
resulted in an animated debate over fiscal policies adopted by the nation. In
short, their presence resulted in improved fiscal performance of the countries.
According
to OECD (2013), their successful functioning however squarely rests on their:
independence and non-partisanship, mandate, resources, relationship with
legislature, access to information, transparency, communication and external
evaluation.
Looking to
the recent developments in the Indian financial system—widening fiscal deficits
owing to the pandemic coupled with contraction in GDP growth, introduction of
GST, no constitutional check like the one that limits States’ borrowings on
centre’s borrowings, financial engineering undercutting the basic spirit of
devolution process, etc.—one is tempted to conclude that it is time for India
to have an independent institutional mechanism to enforce fiscal rules and keep
an eye on centre’s fiscal consolidation.
Of course,
there are also arguments that there being already a Chief Economic Advisor,
Economic Affairs Dept., National Institute of Public Finance and Policy,
Comptroller and Auditor General of India, etc., to aid Finance Minister, we
need not create one more institute under the name, Fiscal Council.
Prof.
Govinda Rao, a Public Economics expert, argues (2021) that when markets fail,
we have government to intervene, but when governments fail, what do we have?
According to him Fiscal Council, if established, can undertake macroeconomic
and budgetary forecasts and also evaluate the realism of the budget forecasts,
monitor the implementation of the budget to see compliance with the declared
rules and targets and estimate the costs and liabilities of the various
programs and policies announced by the government from time to time. And, that
is what commends establishment of an independent Fiscal Council to impart
checks and balances and ensure better fiscal policies.
May be to
begin with, it may be appointed with a limited mandate of undertaking
macroeconomic and fiscal forecasts, policy costing of new measures with
significant fiscal implications and evaluating fiscal performance against
targets.
No comments:
Post a Comment