India's 'get well soon' budget boosts healthcare
spending 135%, opens up insurance
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[February 01, 2021] By
Manoj Kumar and Aftab Ahmed
NEW DELHI(Reuters) - India boosted
healthcare spending by 135% and lifted caps on foreign investment in its
vast insurance market on Monday to help revive an economy that suffered
its deepest recorded slump as a result of the pandemic.
Delivering a budget statement to parliament, Finance Minister Nirmala
Sitharaman projected a fiscal deficit of 6.8% of gross domestic product
for 2021/22, higher than the 5.5% forecast by a recent Reuters poll of
economists.
The current year was expected to end with a deficit of 9.5%, she said,
well up from the 7% expected earlier.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi said the budget was aimed at creating
"wealth and wellness" in a country that is battling the world's second
highest coronavirus caseload after the United States.
India currently spends about 1% of GDP on health, among the lowest for
any major economy.
Sitharaman proposed increasing healthcare spending to 2.2 trillion
Indian rupees ($30.2 billion) to help improve public health systems and
fund a huge vaccination drive to immunise 1.3 billion people.
Overall, the government set capital expenditure for 2021/2022 at 5.54
trillion rupees, 35% more than the previous year's budget estimate.
"All of us decided to give impetus to the economy and that impetus, we
thought, would be qualitatively spent and give necessary demand push if
we choose to spend big on infrastructure," Sitharaman told reporters
after the presentation of the budget in parliament.
Millions of people lost their jobs when the government ordered a
lockdown last year to combat the coronavirus. Thousands of small
businesses remain shut.
Unlike other countries, India refrained from announcing a big stimulus,
offering greater liquidity to firms instead, and held off using its
fiscal firepower until curbs to contain the virus were lifted.
The government estimates the economy will contract 7.7% in the current
fiscal year ending in March, in what would be the biggest fall ever
recorded. However, it foresees a strong recovery in 2021/2022 with
growth of 11%.
That would make it the world's fastest growing major economy ahead of
China's projected 8.1% growth, but the government said it would take the
economy two years to reach pre-pandemic levels.
"In a time of unprecedented economic stress, the government's
responsibility was to spend enough to revive the economy or else face
enormous human suffering," said Anand Mahindra, chairman of Mahindra
group, an autos to technology conglomerate.
[to top of second column] |
India's Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman arrives at the finance
ministry before she leaves to present the federal budget in the
parliament in New Delhi, India, February 1, 2021. REUTERS/Anushree
Fadnavis
"So I had one expectation from this budget: that we should be very
liberal in terms of the targeted fiscal deficit. Box ticked."
THUMBS UP FROM MARKETS
India's main stock indexes surged. The blue-chip NSE Nifty 50 index was
4.7% higher in its best performance on budget day in at least two
decades. The S&P BSE Sensex climbed 5%.
Graphics: Nifty 50's best budget day in at least 26 years - https://graphics.reuters.com/INDIA-STOCKS/oakpeylynpr/chart.png
But, bond yields jumped after the government announced plans to raise
additional funds from the market over the next two months.
Sitharaman said the foreign direct investment (FDI) cap for the
insurance sector would be increased to 74% from the current 49%.
She also allocated 200 billion rupees to recapitalise state-run banks that are
saddled with bad loans and have been a drag on growth.
To bridge some of the deficit, the government plans to raise 1.75 trillion
rupees from selling its stake in the state run companies and banks including
IDBI bank, an insurance company and oil companies. It also wants to sell state
firms' surplus land.
The pandemic ruined the divestment plans for the current fiscal year with only
180 billion rupees raised so far from the sales. Stake sales and privatisation
have seldom met targets in India, due partly to resistance from unions and
political opposition.
Gene Fang, associate managing director, sovereign risk group, Moody's Investors
Service, said the budget announcements did not change the credit rating agency's
stance on India. Moody's rates Indian sovereign debt at "Baa3" - the bottom rung
of investment grade ratings - with a "negative" outlook.
($1 = 72.8370 Indian rupees)
(Additional reporting by Delhi, Mumbai and Bengaluru bureaus; Writing by Sanjeev
Miglani; Editing Simon Cameron-Moore and Toby Chopra)
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