(Bloomberg) -- Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government isn’t rushing to the aid of businesses in India clamoring for fiscal support as a 40-day lockdown to contain the coronavirus threatens their survival.
On March 26, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman announced 1.7 trillion rupees ($22.3 billion) of direct support to the poor to see them through the shutdown period, while promising more steps to shield the economy. Thirty-four days later, the government is yet to follow through with additional measures.
Ashokan Puthenpurackal is chief executive officer of Anntech Offshore Engineering Pvt., a Mumbai-based business providing offshore subcontracting services to state-owned oil companies. His main client has refused to make payments because there’s no work, leaving Puthenpurackal with very little to support his 85 employees.
“It’s a hand-to-mouth situation,” he said. “We are almost losing life without lines of credit.”
From small and mid-sized businesses like Anntech to big brands like Hero MotoCorp Ltd., India’s top motorcycle maker by volume, companies are increasing their calls for aid including loan support, wage subsidies, tax deferrals and a moratorium on utility payments. As their cash-flow dries up, and in the absence of any fiscal support, many will be forced to cut jobs to curb costs.
Businesses like Anntech fall into the category of micro-, small- and medium-sized enterprises, or MSMEs, which account for a third of India’s economy and employ more than 110 million people. These businesses are the most vulnerable to Modi’s unprecedented shutdown of an economy of 1.3 billion people.
There are signs that some support is on the way. Officials are considering a proposal to guarantee as much as $39 billion of loans to small businesses, people familiar with the matter said this week. The government is also discussing deferring tax payments and providing other incentives to critically-affected sectors such as tourism and hospitality.
K.S. Dhatwalia, a spokesman for the administration, declined to comment on fiscal support measures for the industry, while a spokesman for the Finance Ministry didn’t immediately respond to an email and a call to his mobile phone.
“A timely policy intervention to augment their cash situation is essential,” said Sonal Varma, chief economist for India and Asia ex-Japan at Nomura Holdings Inc. in Singapore.
Wealthy countries like Germany and Italy have allocated fiscal stimulus, including bank guarantees, of more than 30% of their gross domestic product. India’s support so far adds up to less than 1% of its GDP.
Economists like Soumya Kanti Ghosh of the State Bank of India and Sanjay Mathur of Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd. estimate the government’s support should be as big as 8 trillion rupees.
Part of the reason for the government’s lack of action is its limited fiscal room. Faced with a weakening economy before the virus outbreak, Sitharaman widened the fiscal deficit target for this year to 3.5% of GDP. An increase in fiscal spending to fight the virus could increase the shortfall to about 8%, according to Citigroup.
Rating companies “might take an adverse view of the fiscal push and the consequent debt buildup,” said Indranil Pan, an economist with IDFC First Bank. “Any ratings downgrade would lead India into a non-investment grade and could lead to outflows.”
Global funds withdrew a record $16 billion from local shares and bonds in March and continued to dump the country’s assets this month, making the rupee one of Asia’s worst performing currencies since the beginning of April.
The Reserve Bank of India has taken the lead in providing support to the economy, but Governor Shaktikanta Das this week highlighted the importance of fiscal measures, saying fiscal slippage was unavoidable during a crisis like this one. The central bank has delivered rate cuts and more than $50 billion of liquidity injections since last month.
Even if the government announces a significant fiscal package now, it might be too late, said Shilan Shah, an economist with Capital Economics Ltd. in Singapore.
“Low-profile indicators suggest that parts of the economy are at a standstill,” he said. “Unemployment and insolvencies will have risen. Non-performing loans are likely to surge.”
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