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Asean

India’s seasons of inflation?

Author: Mathew Joseph, ICRIER Food inflation is reaching new heights in India, petrol prices have seen a hike for the second time in a month and the crisis is now threatening to arrest the country’s growth momentum. But to put the blame on crop failure alone, as the government is trying to do, is erroneous. Food inflation crossed the 20 per cent mark in December 2009 and remained at that level for several months. Wholesale price inflation moved to double-digits in March 2010. The wholesale price inflation and food inflation did come down from July 2010. After respite for a few months, inflation went up again in December 2010 and indications are that it will remain at uncomfortable levels for some time. The normal monsoon and expectations of a rebound in agricultural output are not providing the usual dampening effect on prices this time. In India, inflation is usually triggered by a poor agricultural crop. And the two successive poor kharif (summer) crops in 2008 and 2009 are considered to be behind the current inflationary situation. But then why has the normal crop of this year failed to subdue the rate of inflation? During the low-inflationary first half of the 2000s, the year 2002–03 stands out. In that year a severe rain shortfall brought down foodgrain production by 18 per cent, leading to a drop in agricultural GDP by 7 per cent. Still, inflation hardly rose in 2002–03 and averaged at about 3–4 per cent, the same as in 2001–02. Why? The seeming anomaly of low inflation in 2002–03 coinciding with a sharp decline in food output is explained by the fact that the previous year had seen a bumper crop which helped replenish public-sector food stocks sufficiently for the government to intervene effectively to keep prices down. The government released adequate grains through the public distribution system as well as open market sales. By contrast, the monsoon failure in 2009–10 followed a subnormal kharif crop in 2008–09; food stocks with the government at the end of 2008–09, and public release of these stocks in 2008–09 and 2009–10, were lower than in 2002–03. Also in 2002–03, the government kept the procurement price the same as in the previous year, except that a special one-time drought relief of Rp20 for a quintal of paddy and Rp10 for a quintal of wheat were added to the existing price. The drought in 2009–10, in contrast, followed a period of continuous and substantial annual increases in procurement prices since 2006–07. It, therefore, added to the upward pressure on food prices. The experience of 2002–03 demolishes the thesis that high inflation is inevitable when there is a crop failure. The fact is that the crop failures in 2008–09 and 2009–10 with no absolute decline in agricultural GDP were much less serious than the drop in 2002–03, when there was a huge decline in output. What mattered was the difference in government procurement, pricing and distribution policies between then and now. The main difference, however, is the demand situation and that mattered more. Since 2002–03, the GDP growth broke all previous records and the economy grew by an average of nearly 9 per cent per annum in the next five years. This implied a rise in per capita income in real terms at nearly 7.5 per cent per annum. During this period the per capita availability of major food crops had been, on the contrary, either stagnating or declining. Thus, while the flare up in inflation from 2008–09 can be attributed to crop failures, the building up of inflationary pressures since 2006 is due to the rising food demand-supply gap during the period. As the global crisis hit the world, all countries followed ultra-loose fiscal and monetary policies in 2008 and 2009. The Indian economy recovered from the second quarter of 2009–10, showing an average year-on-year growth of 7.9 per cent in the last three quarters of 2009–10 against an average growth of 6.1 per cent in the previous three quarters. The growth rate picked up further to 8.9 per cent in the first two quarters of 2010–11. As the economy picked up inflation also rose. Food inflation rose to 17.1 per cent during the last three quarters of 2009–10 from 10.8 per cent in the previous three quarters and further up to 18.8 per cent in the first two quarters of 2010–11. Wholesale Price Index (WPI) inflation rose to 4.7 per cent in the last three quarters of 2009–10 and shot up further to 9.9 per cent in the first two quarters of 2010–11. The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) began its monetary tightening only from mid-February 2010 , initially by raising the cash reserve ratio of banks, and the rate tightening began later from mid-March 2010. Since March, the repo rate has been raised seven times, each time by 25 basis points. The very high food inflation (17.1 per cent) and the CPI(Industrial Workers) inflation (13.5 per cent) during the last three quarters of 2009–10 clearly required the RBI to act earlier . In the short term, the only option available is a harder monetary tightening. It should be difficult to purge out the inflationary expectations that have got entrenched by now. The consequent rise in interest rates is bound to reduce corporate profitability and bring growth down. This is the inevitable cost that has to be incurred for bringing inflation down. Fundamentally, India is confronting a binding food constraint to its growth beyond the 7–8 per cent rate. To avoid a return to the pre-2000 period of inflation, India has to remove all the constraints against a breakthrough in food production. This requires agricultural reforms. The earlier round of reforms carried out in the 1990s were focused on industry, foreign trade, foreign investment and the financial sector, bypassing agriculture. The next round of reforms that is needed for raising India’s potential growth rate beyond 7–8 per cent should essentially have agriculture as an important component. The persistence of high inflation is rooted in the inability to raise food production in step with the rise in demand arising from increasing population and per capita income growth. The present ‘subsidy-control regime’ in agriculture is strangling the farmer and preventing him from achieving a breakthrough in production. The input subsidies provided through low or no price for water, electricity and urea fertilisers not only lead to overuse and erosion of soil fertility, but also ensures inefficient production of these inputs by companies. Farmers can sell their products only through government markets which involve a large number of intermediaries and lower prices. Consumer subsidies administered through the public distribution system lead to low food prices which scarcely reach the consumers as large scale leakages take place. On the other hand, the government’s food procurement with periodical hiking of the procurement prices leads to market shortages and rising food prices. Agricultural reform is the key to controlling inflation. That should involve lifting of government controls on pricing of all inputs and outputs, abolition of the monopsony of government mandis and administering all subsidies through direct cash transfers to poor farmers (owning land below two hectares) and poor consumers (below the poverty line). Mathew Joseph is a Senior Consultant at the Indian Council for Research and International Economic Relations (ICRIER), New Delhi. India: Controlling inflation without hurting growth Indian monetary policy and the RBI – Let’s focus upon inflation India’s need for a counter-inflation subsidy

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Author: Mathew Joseph, ICRIER

Food inflation is reaching new heights in India, petrol prices have seen a hike for the second time in a month and the crisis is now threatening to arrest the country’s growth momentum. But to put the blame on crop failure alone, as the government is trying to do, is erroneous.

Food inflation crossed the 20 per cent mark in December 2009 and remained at that level for several months. Wholesale price inflation moved to double-digits in March 2010. The wholesale price inflation and food inflation did come down from July 2010. After respite for a few months, inflation went up again in December 2010 and indications are that it will remain at uncomfortable levels for some time. The normal monsoon and expectations of a rebound in agricultural output are not providing the usual dampening effect on prices this time.

In India, inflation is usually triggered by a poor agricultural crop. And the two successive poor kharif (summer) crops in 2008 and 2009 are considered to be behind the current inflationary situation. But then why has the normal crop of this year failed to subdue the rate of inflation?

During the low-inflationary first half of the 2000s, the year 2002–03 stands out. In that year a severe rain shortfall brought down foodgrain production by 18 per cent, leading to a drop in agricultural GDP by 7 per cent. Still, inflation hardly rose in 2002–03 and averaged at about 3–4 per cent, the same as in 2001–02. Why?

The seeming anomaly of low inflation in 2002–03 coinciding with a sharp decline in food output is explained by the fact that the previous year had seen a bumper crop which helped replenish public-sector food stocks sufficiently for the government to intervene effectively to keep prices down. The government released adequate grains through the public distribution system as well as open market sales. By contrast, the monsoon failure in 2009–10 followed a subnormal kharif crop in 2008–09; food stocks with the government at the end of 2008–09, and public release of these stocks in 2008–09 and 2009–10, were lower than in 2002–03. Also in 2002–03, the government kept the procurement price the same as in the previous year, except that a special one-time drought relief of Rp20 for a quintal of paddy and Rp10 for a quintal of wheat were added to the existing price. The drought in 2009–10, in contrast, followed a period of continuous and substantial annual increases in procurement prices since 2006–07. It, therefore, added to the upward pressure on food prices.

The experience of 2002–03 demolishes the thesis that high inflation is inevitable when there is a crop failure. The fact is that the crop failures in 2008–09 and 2009–10 with no absolute decline in agricultural GDP were much less serious than the drop in 2002–03, when there was a huge decline in output. What mattered was the difference in government procurement, pricing and distribution policies between then and now. The main difference, however, is the demand situation and that mattered more.

Since 2002–03, the GDP growth broke all previous records and the economy grew by an average of nearly 9 per cent per annum in the next five years. This implied a rise in per capita income in real terms at nearly 7.5 per cent per annum. During this period the per capita availability of major food crops had been, on the contrary, either stagnating or declining.

Thus, while the flare up in inflation from 2008–09 can be attributed to crop failures, the building up of inflationary pressures since 2006 is due to the rising food demand-supply gap during the period.

As the global crisis hit the world, all countries followed ultra-loose fiscal and monetary policies in 2008 and 2009. The Indian economy recovered from the second quarter of 2009–10, showing an average year-on-year growth of 7.9 per cent in the last three quarters of 2009–10 against an average growth of 6.1 per cent in the previous three quarters. The growth rate picked up further to 8.9 per cent in the first two quarters of 2010–11. As the economy picked up inflation also rose. Food inflation rose to 17.1 per cent during the last three quarters of 2009–10 from 10.8 per cent in the previous three quarters and further up to 18.8 per cent in the first two quarters of 2010–11. Wholesale Price Index (WPI) inflation rose to 4.7 per cent in the last three quarters of 2009–10 and shot up further to 9.9 per cent in the first two quarters of 2010–11.

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) began its monetary tightening only from mid-February 2010, initially by raising the cash reserve ratio of banks, and the rate tightening began later from mid-March 2010. Since March, the repo rate has been raised seven times, each time by 25 basis points. The very high food inflation (17.1 per cent) and the CPI(Industrial Workers) inflation (13.5 per cent) during the last three quarters of 2009–10 clearly required the RBI to act earlier.

In the short term, the only option available is a harder monetary tightening. It should be difficult to purge out the inflationary expectations that have got entrenched by now. The consequent rise in interest rates is bound to reduce corporate profitability and bring growth down. This is the inevitable cost that has to be incurred for bringing inflation down.

Fundamentally, India is confronting a binding food constraint to its growth beyond the 7–8 per cent rate. To avoid a return to the pre-2000 period of inflation, India has to remove all the constraints against a breakthrough in food production. This requires agricultural reforms. The earlier round of reforms carried out in the 1990s were focused on industry, foreign trade, foreign investment and the financial sector, bypassing agriculture. The next round of reforms that is needed for raising India’s potential growth rate beyond 7–8 per cent should essentially have agriculture as an important component.

The persistence of high inflation is rooted in the inability to raise food production in step with the rise in demand arising from increasing population and per capita income growth. The present ‘subsidy-control regime’ in agriculture is strangling the farmer and preventing him from achieving a breakthrough in production. The input subsidies provided through low or no price for water, electricity and urea fertilisers not only lead to overuse and erosion of soil fertility, but also ensures inefficient production of these inputs by companies. Farmers can sell their products only through government markets which involve a large number of intermediaries and lower prices. Consumer subsidies administered through the public distribution system lead to low food prices which scarcely reach the consumers as large scale leakages take place. On the other hand, the government’s food procurement with periodical hiking of the procurement prices leads to market shortages and rising food prices.

Agricultural reform is the key to controlling inflation. That should involve lifting of government controls on pricing of all inputs and outputs, abolition of the monopsony of government mandis and administering all subsidies through direct cash transfers to poor farmers (owning land below two hectares) and poor consumers (below the poverty line).

Mathew Joseph is a Senior Consultant at the Indian Council for Research and International Economic Relations (ICRIER), New Delhi.

  1. India: Controlling inflation without hurting growth
  2. Indian monetary policy and the RBI – Let’s focus upon inflation
  3. India’s need for a counter-inflation subsidy

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India’s seasons of inflation?

Asean

ASEAN weathering the COVID-19 typhoon

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Vietnam's Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc addresses a special video conference with leaders of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), on the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in Hanoi 14 April, 2020 (Photo:Reuters/Manan Vatsyayana).

Author: Sandra Seno-Alday, Sydney University

The roughly 20 typhoons that hit Southeast Asia each year pale in comparison to the impact on the region of COVID-19 — a storm of a very different sort striking not just Southeast Asia but the world.

 

Just how badly is the COVID-19 typhoon thrashing the region? And what might the post-crisis recovery and reconstruction look like? To answer these questions, it is necessary to investigate the strengths and vulnerabilities of Southeast Asia’s pre-COVID-19 economic infrastructure.

Understanding the structure of the region’s economic house requires going back to 1967, when Southeast Asian countries decided to pledge friendship to one another under the ASEAN framework. While other integrated regions such as NAFTA and the European Union have aggressively broken down trade barriers and significantly boosted intra-regional trade, ASEAN regional economic integration has chugged along slower.

Southeast Asian countries have not viewed trade between each other as a top priority. The trade agreements in the region have been forged around suggestions for ASEAN countries to lower tariffs on intra-regional trade to within a certain range and across limited industries. This has lowered but not eliminated barriers to intra-regional trade. Consequently, a relatively significant share of Southeast Asian trade is with countries outside the region. This active extra-regional engagement has resulted in ASEAN countries’ successful integration into global value chain networks.

A historically outward-facing region, in 2010 around 75 per cent of Southeast Asian commodity imports and exports came from countries outside of ASEAN. This share of extra-regional trade nudged closer to 80 per cent in 2018. This indicates that ASEAN’s global value chain network embeddedness has deepened over time.

Around 40 per cent of ASEAN’s extra-regional trade is with the rest of Asia. From 2010 to 2018 Southeast Asian countries forged major trade relationships with four Asian countries: China, Japan, South Korea and India. Outside Asia, the United States is the region’s major trading partner. ASEAN’s trade focus on Asia’s largest markets is not surprising. Countries tend to establish trade relationships with large, geographically close, and culturally similar markets.

Fostering deep relationships with a few large markets, however, is a double-edged sword. While it has allowed ASEAN to benefit from integration in global value chains, it has also resulted in increased vulnerability to the shocks affecting its network connections.

ASEAN’s participation in global value chains has allowed it to transition from a net regional importer in 1990 to a net regional exporter in 2018. But the region’s deep embeddedness in a small and tightly-coupled network cluster of extra-regional global value chain partners has exposed it to disruption to any and all of its external partners. By contrast, ASEAN’s intra-regional trade network structure is much more loosely-coupled: a consequence of persistent intra-regional trade barriers and thus lower intra-regional trade intensity.

In the pre-COVID-19 period, ASEAN built for itself an economic house held up by just five extra-regional markets, while doing less to expand and diversify its intra-regional trade network. The data shows that ASEAN trade became increasingly concentrated in these few external markets between 2010 and 2018.

This dependence on a handful of markets does not bode well for risk and crisis management. All of the region’s major trading partners have been significantly affected by COVID-19 and this in turn is blowing the ASEAN economic house down.

What are the ways forward? The immediate task at hand is to get a better picture of the region’s position in global value chain networks and to get on top of managing its network risk exposure. Already there are red flags around the region’s food security arising from its position in food value chains. It is critical to look for ways to introduce flexibility into existing supply chains for greater agility in responding to crises.

It is also an opportune time for ASEAN to harness the technology transfer gains of global value chain participation and invest in innovation-driven diversification of products and markets. The region’s embeddedness in global value chain networks certainly places it in a strong position to readily access large export markets not just in Asia but also Europe and the Americas.

Over the longer term, ASEAN is faced with the question of whether it should seriously look…

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Asean

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