"My claim is that experts often hold back their objective assessment. Instead, they censor themselves, and in public fora are insufficiently critical and independent of officialdom, whether the officials are in Mumbai or Delhi. To the extent they offer criticism, it is watered down to the point of being unidentifiable as criticism," he said.
He wondered as to why experts refuse to speak the truth to power adding that he himself has given a dissent note in a government constituted panel to review Fiscal Responsibility and Budget Management (FRBM).
All the commentary over last 15-20 years has made 3 per cent (fiscal deficit target) magic number but it has no magic validity at all, he said, adding, the important thing about fiscal deficit is that it should not be irresponsibly expansionary.
"Therefore, in my dissent note to FRBM, I said one objective should be gently declining debt and gently declining deficit path to accomplish that," he said.
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"If you ask them, they would say they are just trying to be 'constructive'. But I feel something else is at work. For a variety of reasons, experts feel the need to stay on the right side of power - whether the RBI or the government," the CEA pointed out while delivering a lecture organised by Nehru Memorial Library and Museum here.
Throwing more light on the peculiarity, Subramanian said that before policy decisions are made, observers tend to express their views that they think officials are likely to take on board. After policy actions, they try hard to endorse the decisions already taken.
"The paradox is that in other spheres - such as trade policy or development policy - one sees a more vibrant, healthy, and unself-censored debate. Why is there such little debate about macro policy? I would venture three explanations," he said.
Speaking about bankers' dilemma, Subramanian said they are careful not to get on to the wrong side of the government or the RBI, because they worry about losing access and because they are regulated by them.
Citing the example of RBI monetary policy review during demonetisation, Subramanian said a consensus had built up among the investor community and economic analysts that the RBI would lower interest rates.
This consensus, he further said, was based on a declining trend in inflation from the second quarter of 2016-17 and the projected short-term adverse impact of demonetisation on growth.
It turned out that the monetary policy committee (MPC) did not cut rate, he said, adding that it rather signalled a more hawkish stance -- by going from accommodative to neutral -- and has maintained that stance since then.
The CEA noted that while the RBI's decision may well be commendable, it is odd that before December, experts saw no inconsistency between a rate cut and the credibility of the central bank.
"On the domestic side, there is a clear relationship between expert analysis and official decisions. Before policy decisions, the expert analysis is often illuminating. But once the decisions are taken, it is truly striking how the tune and tone of the analysis change. Analysts fall over backwards to rationalise the official decision," he said.
Some, according to Subramanian, called on the government to stick to the pre-announced target while others wanted it to go slow on consolidation. Some even asked for expanding the deficit, especially this year, given the weakness of the economy after demonetisation.
He pointed to the inconsistency in opinion of experts, which is is evident from various examples of past few months.
Summing up, he said, the bottomline from this analysis is inflation pressures are easing considerably, the inflation target has been over-achieved, the inflation outlook is benign because of a number of economic developments. Real activity remains weak and well below potential, the exchange rate is appreciating, denting exports.
The CEA also referred to a famous joke about asking three economists for a view and getting four different answers.
"Today, there are hundreds of economists outside the government and the RBI and several within. Instead of getting a hundred plus views, we get about one view, the official view. Even more interesting is that about 12 months ago, when inflation was much higher and growth was higher, there were economists who called for a large cut in interest rates. Yet today, they are silent," he said, pointing to the shift in position.
"So, in the short run, it will want to shape opinion in its favour. But in the long run, that is perhaps not desirable. Public interest is perhaps better served by richer debate that encompasses critical views, including of officialdom. Officials should signal that clearly," he suggested.