PSUs borrowings must be included in govt debts, be aided by the sovereign guarantee

The government's total deficit rose to an uncomfortably high level of 8.5 per cent of GDP for 2018-19:economist Sajjid Chinoy.

Update: 2019-02-06 06:56 GMT
The government aims to contain the fiscal deficit for FY18 to 3.2 per cent of the GDP, and 3 per cent in FY19.

New Delhi: Among all the chaos regarding the deficit, economist Sajjid Chinoy has drawn attention to the elephant in the room. This is a sharp unhealthy spike in the government’s off-budgetary borrowings over the past few years.

Unable to borrow beyond a point for fear of sending the yield soaring and unwilling to cut back on expenditure at a time when the private sector has been strapped for cash, the government has funded and bolstered growth by enabling public sector units to borrow and guarantee their borrowings.

Chinoy estimates the government’s total deficit rose to an uncomfortably high level of 8.5 per cent of GDP for 2018-19 and that is also excluding the borrowings by the state owned PSUs. To ascertain, PSUs are can borrow to run their businesses and it is no one’s case that they shouldn’t leverage their balance sheets.

However, if the government is providing either an explicit or implicit guarantee, it cannot leave the borrowings unprotected. That is simply not at all recommendable. It is, therefore, somewhat surprising that Subhash Garg, DEA secretary, believes that the level of NHAI’s borrowings is priceless because it is due to a sovereign replacement and not a borrowing on the strength of its own balance sheet.

Even if that may be the case, but the government is indeed guaranteeing NHAI’s borrowings – or else it could not have offered retail bonds at the same rate that it does – although, there needs to be a provision in the budget.

 Merely disclosing the liabilities is insufficient and it is advisable to think that these liabilities are not part of the fiscal deficit but the government’s debt. The fact is it is the government – and the taxpayer – which will need to make good these borrowings in the event of a default by the PSU.

NHAI’s borrowings have grown to a sharp 66 per cent to Rs 75,384 crore at the end of March 2017 and are estimated to have risen further to Rs 1.2 lakh crore in March 2018. The centre’s finances are in a shambles given the combined loss in 2015-16 and 2016-17 was close to Rs 500 crore. Moreover, the business is also in a mess because the net cash generated from operating activities in the two years to 2016-17 was a negative of Rs 3,774 crore.

Meanwhile, the Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG) recently has highlighted that NHAI has not maintained proper books of accounts and other relevant records. The CAG has pointed out that the fixed assets have been overvalued by Rs 2.17 lakh crore since the assets are held on behalf of the government. Also, the CAG has stated that if we include the borrowing costs of Rs 4,068 crore for 2016-17, then the completed projects is in contravention of generally accepted accounting practices.

So it is not as though all PSUs are in fine fettle with modest debt-equity ratios as the DEA secretary Garg makes it out to be; many of them don’t have the scope to borrow but are rated AAA simply because they are backed by the sovereign.

There is no harm in the government providing a guarantee but it should build in these liabilities into its accounts. Downplaying off-budget borrowings such as those by Food Corporation of India (FCI), which borrowed 1.3 per cent of GDP in 2017-18 and 1 per cent of GDP in 2018-19, does not make for good public finances. Interestingly, the interim budget revised the EBRs via the FCI in FY19 to Rs 1.96 lakh crore, 170 per cent higher than the budget estimate.

The total off-budgetary borrowings, according to the interim budget, stood at Rs 2.74 lakh crore for 2018-19.

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