HomeNewsBusinessCompaniesThere is room for a 50 basis point rate cut: P Chidambaram

There is room for a 50 basis point rate cut: P Chidambaram

'There is room for a 50 basis point rate cut' that's the word coming in from P Chidambaram, one of the two former Finance Ministers who have lashed out against the government on the state of the economy, the other being Yashwant Sinha. CNBC-TV18's Shereen Bhan caught up with P Chidambaram to discuss more on this issue.

October 04, 2017 / 19:27 IST
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'There is room for a 50 basis point rate cut' that's the word coming in from P Chidambaram, one of the two former Finance Ministers who have lashed out against the government on the state of the economy, the other being Yashwant Sinha. CNBC-TV18's Shereen Bhan caught up with P Chidambaram to discuss more on this issue.

Below is the transcript of the interview.

Q: You find yourself with some unusual and unlikely allies in the form of the former Finance Minister Yashwant Sinha. The fact that there is a problem with growth is now widely acknowledged and documented. GDP coming in at 5.7 percent at 13 quarter low, GVA at 5.6 percent. The question now is, can we spend our way out of trouble?

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A: I don't think so. I don't think the government has that fiscal space to spend its way out of trouble. If they relax the fiscal deficit target, that would be an admission that revenues are under pressure or that expenditure is gone out of control or that they don't care about interest rates rising or they don't care about inflation rising. Every one of them would send out bad signals. The answer is not to spend your way out of trouble.

Q: There is a view that let us not obsess about the fiscal deficit. Yes the target is 3.2 percent but even if there needs to be a little bit of leeway, if we need to deviate by even 0.5 percent, if that is what is the need of the hour today, then so be it. What would be your argument against that because if I were to look at the data going back to the UPA times, FY09 fiscal deficit was 6 percent, FY10 6.5 percent, came down to 4.8 percent in FY11, FY12 5.9 percent, so you have seen the perils of profligacy. What would be your argument against a deviation?