HomeNewsBusinessEconomyWill Jaitley abandon Chidambaram's fiscal fundamentalism?

Will Jaitley abandon Chidambaram's fiscal fundamentalism?

In plain words, Subramanian is saying that Chidambaram left his bills for 2013-14 unpaid, and passed them on to the next government, by shifting payments to 2014-15.

December 22, 2014 / 15:53 IST
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R JagannathanFirstpost.com

The lord be praised! Wisdom has dawned in North Block after two quarters of policy drift and a nondescript NDA budget in July that was no different from what his predecessor, P Chidambaram, would have produced. Not for nothing was it called a "UPA budget with saffron lipstick" by Swaminathan Anklesaria Aiyar.

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Finance Minister Arun Jaitley's Chief Economic Advisor, Arvind Subramanian, the key man behind the government's Mid-term Economic Analysis for 2014-15, has essentially said that Chidambaram's fiscal policies were inappropriate for the current situation, as they were taking the economy downhill. Chidambaram's former finance secretary and previous Reserve Bank Governor, Duvvuri Subbarao, was also assigned his due share of blame as his monetary policy "lost credibility".

The analysis points out that under UPA (mostly the last two years of Pranab Mukherjee and two more under Chidambaram), the government followed "pro-cyclical" fiscal spending cuts rather than being counter-cyclical. Pro-cyclical means doing something that will worsen what is already going wrong. If, for example, investment has slowed down, if government cuts public spending to cure the fiscal deficit, it will worsen the slowdown.