Friday, March 10, 2023

Revenue shortfalls in Nepal

Nepal is facing a very large revenue shortfall in FY2023. According to FCGO, revenue mobilization in the first seven months of this fiscal (mid-January 2022 to mid-March 2023) is just 40% of the target. In the previous fiscal years, the revenue mobilized by this time was always higher than 50% of target. The following is the progress by the seventh month of respective fiscal:

  • FY2019: 61%
  • FY2020: 50%
  • FY2021: 57%
  • FY2022: 58%
  • FY2023: 40%
The budget projection on revenue mobilization was too ambitious in the first place. It projected about 29.5% increase over FY2022 revised estimate for total federal receipts (revenue, inclusive of revenue sharing with subnational governments, and foreign grants). Revenue was projected to increase by 25.7% and tax revenue by 31.6% over the revised estimates. 


Revenue decreased owing to a slowdown in imports and slower than expected economic recovery. A slowdown in construction and real estate and share transactions also affected revenue mobilization. Faced with the reality of a revenue shortfall, the Finance Ministry proposed a cut in expenses, especially recurrent spending, by 20% in all tiers of government. It also plans to tighten approval of projects that were included in the budget but whose procurement process has not started.

According to news report, the government suspects that informal activities have also reduced revenue mobilization. For instance, based on business operations, some have paid VAT and customs duties, but not paid income tax.

Energy deficit in India

According to Reuters, India will likely face risks of nighttime power cuts due to delays in adding new coal-fired and hydropower despite the rapid addition of solar farms, which helped India avert daytime supply gaps. The power availability during nighttime is expected to be 1.7% lower than peak demand. Coal, nuclear and gas capacity are expected to meet about 83% of peak demand at night.


April nighttime peak demand is expected to hit 217 gigawatts (GW), up 6.4% on the highest nighttime levels recorded in April last year. While Indians looking to beat the heat this summer will want steady power for their air-conditioners, night time outage risks threaten industries that operate around the clock, including auto, electronics, steel bar and fertiliser manufacturing plants.

After the Grid-India report, the government brought forward maintenance at some coal-fired power plants and secured extra gas-fired capacity to run to try to avert outages, another senior government official said. As much as 189.2 GW of coal-fired capacity is expected to be available this April, according to Grid-India's February note. That would be up more than 11% from last year, according to Reuters calculations based on Grid-India data. Together, coal, nuclear and gas capacity are expected to meet about 83% of peak demand at night.

Hydro power will be crucial not only to meet much of the remaining supply but also as a flexible generator, as coal-fired plants cannot be ramped up and down quickly to address variability in demand. However Grid-India has forecast peak hydro availability in April this year will be 18% below what it was a year earlier, when output was boosted by favourable weather conditions.

Around midnight through April last year, jostling for power was intense, with buyers making bids for five times more power than sellers offered, a Reuters analysis of data from the Indian Energy Exchange, the country's most liquid electricity trading platform, showed.



Thursday, March 2, 2023

Digital payments revolution in India

An interesting article in the NYT on how India's homegrown payment system has transformed commerce and helped formalize the economy. Excerpts:


Billions of mobile app transactions — a volume dwarfing anything in the West — course each month through a homegrown digital network that has made business easier and brought large numbers of Indians into the formal economy. The scan-and-pay system is one pillar of what the country’s prime minister, Narendra Modi, has championed as “digital public infrastructure,” with a foundation laid by the government. It has made daily life more convenient, expanded banking services like credit and savings to millions more Indians, and extended the reach of government programs and tax collection.[...] It is a public-private model that India wants to export as it fashions itself as an incubator of ideas that can lift up the world’s poorer nations.

Indian officials describe the digital infrastructure as a set of “rail tracks,” laid by the government, on top of which innovation can happen at low cost. At its heart has been a robust campaign to deliver every citizen a unique identification number, called the Aadhaar. The initiative, begun in 2009 under Mr. Modi’s predecessor, Manmohan Singh, was pushed forward by Mr. Modi after overcoming years of legal challenges over privacy concerns. The government says about 99 percent of adults now have a biometric identification number, with more than 1.3 billion IDs issued in all.

The IDs ease the creation of bank accounts and are the foundation of the instant payment system, known as the Unified Payments Interface. The platform, an initiative of India’s central bank that is run by a nonprofit organization, offers services from hundreds of banks and dozens of mobile payment apps, with no transaction fees. [...]The system has grown rapidly and is now used by close to 300 million individuals and 50 million merchants. Digital payments are being made for even the smallest of transactions, with nearly 50 percent classified as small or micro payments: 10 cents for a cup of milk chai or $2 for a bag of fresh vegetables. That is a significant behavioral shift in what has long been a cash-driven economy.


Wednesday, March 1, 2023

Effect of countercyclical investment on employment

An interesting paper by Buchheim and Watzinger (2023) published in AEJ: Economic Policy [15(1)] shows that investments in public buildings in Germany can quickly and cost-effectively increase employment in the short run. They can be a viable tool for counteracting an economic slowdown. 

They explore if the renovation of public buildings create jobs quickly and cost-effectively? Their paper estimates the causal impact of a sizable German public investment program, which provided 0.16% of GDP for upgrading public buildings, on employment at the county level. The program focused on improving the energy efficiency of school buildings, making it possible to use the number of schools as an instrument for investments. It also enforced tight deadlines, reducing potential implementation lags. The program was cost-effective, creating, on average, one job for one year for an investment of €24,000. The employment gains are detectable after nine months and are accompanied by an unemployment reduction amounting to half of the job creation. Employment grew predominately in the directly affected industries.

They addressed the endogeneity problem (governments may target regions that are hardest hit by the recession) by exploiting the legal structure of the stimulus bill. The bill prescribed that 65 percent of funds had to be spent on investments in the educational infrastructure, in particular on improving the energy efficiency of existing buildings. This implies that the local scope for investments was closely linked to the historically predetermined number of schools. Since the number of schools is a predetermined stock variable and thus unrelated to the magnitude of the recession in a county, it constitutes an ideal instrument for local investments. To put the cost of one job per year in perspective, the average labor costs in the construction industry was at least €45,000. The employment gains translate into a fiscal multiplier of about 1.5. 

IMF concludes 2023 Article IV Consultation and completes first and second reviews under the Extended Credit Facility

According to a press release on 28 February 2023, the IMF staff and the Nepal authorities have reached staff-level agreement on the policies needed to complete the combined first and second reviews of the ECF arrangement. Nepal would have access to about US$52 million in financing once the review is formally approved by the Executive Board. 

The IMF stated that the external audit of the Nepal Rastra Bank with the assistance of international auditors – in line with international best practices, publication of reports on both COVID-related spending and custom exemptions to enhance transparency, drafting of amendments to bank asset classification regulations, and strengthening bank supervision by launching the donor-supported Supervision Information System were notable achievements. It further notes that the monetary tightening and gradual unwinding of COVID-19 support measures helped moderate credit growth and contributed to the moderation of inflation stemming from the global commodity price shock caused by the Ukraine war. This combined with resilient remittances eased external pressures and stabilized international reserves but tax collections dampened. It recommended cautious monetary policy and expenditure rationalization while protecting high-quality infrastructure expenditure and social spending.

The ECF-supported program will help Nepal’s economy to remain on a sustainable path over the medium term with the economy projected to grow at around 5 percent and inflation at around 6 percent, while maintaining adequate levels of international reserves and keeping public debt at a sustainable level. The next priority should be given to achieving a fiscal deficit that ensures debt sustainability, while securing additional concessional financing and enhancing debt management.

The IMF projects real GDP growth to be 4.4% in FY2023, supported by recovery in tourism, agriculture sector and resilient remittances. But, Nepal remains vulnerable to exogenous shocks such as volatile and higher global commodity prices and natural hazards. So, cautious monetary policy is warranted to keep inflation at 7% targeted level and to lower pressures on international reserves. Expenditure rationalization while protecting high-quality infrastructure expenditure and social spending is also important. Structural reforms need to be pursued to establish a sustainable and inclusive long-term growth path. These include private sector development by reducing the cost of doing business and barriers to FDI. Financial instruments tailored to migrants, access to finance and financial literacy can further financial inclusion. Digitization would help in the provision of public goods. Transparency and financial oversight of public enterprises can reduce fiscal risks. 

Friday, February 24, 2023

Fiscal strain in Nepal

It was published in The Kathmandu Post, 18 February 2023. 


Hard times not over

The government should make an all-out effort to increase domestic and foreign investment.

The macroeconomic situation has improved as of the first half of the fiscal year 2022-23, but the economy is not out of the woods yet as the underlying vulnerabilities remain unaddressed. Due to interventions by the government and the central bank, economic activities have recovered from the pandemic slump, bank interest volatility is stabilising and external sector balance is gradually improving. However, the fiscal situation remains dire with lower than anticipated revenue mobilisation against high expenditure commitments and the rising cost of borrowing. The next two quarters will be crucial in terms of judicious fiscal and macroeconomic management and policy coherence.

The unrealistic budget projections are now gradually unravelling. As of the first half of the fiscal year, the government was able to mobilise just 35 percent of the annual revenue target and 74.2 percent of the half-yearly target. Revenue decreased owing to a slowdown in imports and slower than expected economic recovery. A slowdown in construction and real estate and share transactions also affected revenue mobilisation.

Faced with the reality of a revenue shortfall, the Finance Ministry proposed a cut in expenses, especially recurrent spending, by 20 percent in all tiers of government. It also plans to tighten approval of projects that were included in the budget but whose procurement process has not started.

Note that the cut in spending is not only due to lower revenue mobilisation but also less foreign aid and a dismal capital budget absorption rate, which was just 14 percent as of the first half of this fiscal year.

As per the Appropriation Act 2022, the federal government needs to make fiscal transfers in four instalments—on August 18, 2022; October 19, 2022; January 16, 2023 and April 15, 2023—to sub-national governments. These fiscal equalisation, conditional, complementary and special grants should have amounted to Rs129.46 billion for the seven provincial governments and Rs300.37 billion for the local governments. The provincial and local governments are supposed to get an additional Rs163 billion through a revenue-sharing mechanism. It will be challenging for the federal government to honour these commitments, undermining the agenda of cooperative and competitive fiscal federalism.

Fiscal management

Fiscal management is becoming challenging due to internal and external factors. First, sound fiscal discipline, accountability and transparency will be critical to ensure that fiscal deficit and public debt are at manageable levels. Recurrent expenses must be rationalised, and capital projects must be prioritised and well vetted before including them in the budget. For instance, the Ministry of Finance was forced to increase allocations for social security, subsidies, national priority projects and debt payments. It is high time that these were targeted and rationalised because they together account for about 35 percent of the recurrent budget.

Similarly, debt payment has become costlier in recent years as the government attempts to borrow more domestically despite a tight liquidity situation. The depreciation of the Nepali rupee, which makes foreign loan repayments expensive, is also contributing to high fiscal costs. Note that public debt increased by about 19 percentage points in the last five years, reaching 41.5 percent of the gross domestic product (GDP). Interest payments alone account for about 1 percent of the GDP. Coherent fiscal and debt policies anchored to sound medium-term rules-based frameworks are long overdue.

Second, although Nepal’s revenue as a share of the GDP is higher than the average of middle-income countries, greater efforts are needed to boost revenue collection given the high expenditure commitments and fiscal liabilities. Efforts could focus on broadening the tax base, closing loopholes, reducing tax expenditures such as multiple layers of concessions that are not growth-enhancing, employing a sound compliance risk management framework and reducing compliance costs, maintaining accurate and reliable taxpayer registry, boosting uptake of e-payment options, and reducing high and growing level of arrears, among others. For instance, the Finance Ministry has been providing tax concessions to projects that are initiated by government-owned or non-profit organisations, and projects funded by foreign loans or grants. In the first half of the fiscal year, these concessions amounted to Rs3.1 billion. Similarly, additional tax concessions of Rs24.5 billion were given through the Inland Revenue Department during the same period.

Third, to relieve pressure on internal borrowing, the government could focus on increasing foreign grants and loans in the immediate term. Note that the government is borrowing at around 11 percent for 91-day and 364-day treasury bills compared to less than 1 percent in January 2021. Almost all foreign loans are concessional in nature with an interest rate of less than 2 percent and longer grace and maturity periods. However, to boost foreign borrowing, the government will have to accelerate project implementation as project loans are reimbursed based on physical progress, that is, the capital budget absorption rate.

No coordinated effort

During the first half of fiscal 2022-23, the government was able to realise just 11.6 percent of the targeted foreign loans and grants for the year. It could also opt for more budgetary support to relieve interim fiscal pressures, but this kind of lending is contingent upon fulfilling legal, regulatory, policy and institutional conditions that aim for structural reforms over the medium term. However, budget support loans should be discouraged over time so that the focus is on project loans as necessary.

Finally, the government should make an all-out effort to increase domestic and foreign investment. Nepal occasionally tinkers with investment laws, regulations and policies in response to long-running concerns raised by the private sector. However, there has been no proactive and coordinated effort to review and resolve the entire gamut of issues affecting private sector activities, ranging from crippling laws and policies to infrastructure supply and human resources availability. An approach that involves the whole government is required instead of the marginal and siloed focus by the Ministry of Industry, Commerce and Supplies and Investment Board Nepal. Higher private investment, exports and competitiveness will boost growth, revenue and employment. It will make fiscal management a bit less challenging.

Tuesday, January 17, 2023

High cost of geoeconomic fragmentation

Geoeconomic fragmentation, a policy-driven reversal of global economic integration, may be caused due to trade restrictions, barriers to the spread of technology (technology diffusion), restrictions on cross-border migration, reduced capital flows, and a sharp decline in international cooperation. These will affect various segments of the population and country differently. For instance, lower income consumers in advanced economies will lose access to cheaper imports, and economies heavily reliant on trade will suffer and per capita income catch up becomes challenging and adjustment costs rise.

According to a new IMF staff discussion note, the cost to global output from trade fragmentation could range from 0.2 percent (in a limited fragmentation / low-cost adjustment scenario) to up to 7 percent of GDP (in a severe fragmentation / high-cost adjustment scenario); with the addition of technological decoupling, the loss in output could reach 8 to 12 percent in some countries.

The IMF recommends a pragmatic approach to increasing geoeconomic fragmentation. These include strengthening international trade system including diversification of supply; helping vulnerable countries deal with debt as fragmentation makes it harder to resolve sovereign debt crises if key official creditors are divided along geopolitical lines; stepping up climate action including setting a floor on international carbon price and innovative use of public balance sheets—such as credit guarantees, equity and first-loss investments— to help mobilize funds for private financing. 

About 15 percent of low-income countries are already in debt distress and an additional 45 percent are at high risk of debt distress. Among emerging markets, about 25 percent are at high risk and facing default-like borrowing spreads.