Finance Minister Arun Jaitley today remained non-committal on slippage in fiscal deficit target saying there were pros and cons of boosting growth by higher public spending.
Jaitley's comments came a day after RBI Governor Raghuram Rajan warned of borrowing more to spur spending for higher economic growth, saying such a move could risk macroeconomic stability of the country.
Speaking at The Economic Times Global Business Summit, the Minister said there are different views from industry and economists on whether the government should scale up public investment in next fiscal or stick to the deficit target.
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"Then there is another argument, and the alternate argument is also equally important with regard to credibility of government. One year you deviated from target, will you do it again and particularly if oil prices are one-third of what they were. If you still can't meet the target, when will you do that? And, therefore, both the arguments have a way," Jaitley said.
He said there is also another argument that in a fast moving situation globally, whether it was necessary to fix a target beforehand.
"Of course the government has benefit of these three views. Predominantly industry is of the view that you must spend more, economist view is sharply divided," he said.
Jaitley said the final decision on the fiscal deficit target would be spelt out in Budget based on the kind of resource, growth potential, tax buoyancy for the next year that the government anticipates.
"I think all these inputs will go into determining the policy of the government," he said.
Cautioning against higher fiscal deficit to spur growth, Rajan yesterday said: "Unfortunately, the growth multipliers on government spending at this juncture are likely to be much smaller, so more spending will probably hurt debt dynamics. Put differently, it is worth asking if there really are very high-return investments that we are foregoing by staying on the consolidation path?"
Jaitley in 2015-16 Budget deviated from the fiscal consolidation path, postponing reduction in fiscal deficit target by a year.
Originally, the target was to bring down fiscal deficit to 3.6 per cent of the GDP in 2015-16 but it has been postponed by a year. Now, government is targeting 3.9 per cent in the current fiscal and 3.5 per cent by next year.