Poging GOUD - Vrij
FALLING SHORT
Business Today
|May 03, 2020
Government measures to tackle the current situation are not enough to revive the economy
The central government’s response to the economic fallout of coronavirus has been a mix of a few procedural and compliance relaxations, liquidity injection in the banking sector through the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) and a small package aimed at the poor and underprivileged. In short, it has been tepid and cautious.
With several agencies predicting doom and gloom for the economy — the latest is World Bank forecast of 1.5-2.8 per cent FY21 real GDP growth versus 6 per cent previously — the government’s response to the situation has baffled many. The size of the package for the poor and underprivileged — ₹1.7 lakh crore — is less than 1 per cent of GDP, even when a large number of economists and experts are asking for a package that’s 4-5 per cent of GDP or ₹10 lakh crore. Even a large portion of the ₹ 1.7 lakh crore package has been mostly budgeted for earlier; the government is incurring an incremental cost of only ₹70,000-80,000 crore. And then there are bits and pieces measures such as relaxation in tax and other regulatory compliances and transfer of some pending funds to states, local bodies, etc.
Of course, the RBI has announced a series of measures like a 75 basis points repo rate cut and a 100 basis points cut in CRR, releasing ₹3.74 lakh crore into the system. Besides, it has eased norms for working capital financing and rescheduling of term and working capital loans. The benefits are yet to be seen.
RBI LIQUIDITY PUSH: FAILING THE TEST
Dit verhaal komt uit de May 03, 2020-editie van Business Today.
Abonneer u op Magzter GOLD voor toegang tot duizenden zorgvuldig samengestelde premiumverhalen en meer dan 9000 tijdschriften en kranten.
Bent u al abonnee? Aanmelden
MEER VERHALEN VAN Business Today
Business Today India
LOST IN TRANSMISSION
INDIA'S SOLAR CAPACITY HAS INCREASED, BUT THE LACK OF AN EFFICIENT EVACUATION INFRASTRUCTURE IS IMPACTING ITS ADOPTION
4 mins
June 21, 2026
Business Today India
“SUCCESS WITH DISCLOSURE”
Four years into the mandatory Business Responsibility & Sustainability Reporting regime, the data is finally large enough to tell us what's working and what isn’t
3 mins
June 21, 2026
Business Today India
THE MISSING ‘E’ IN CSR
CORPORATE INDIA SPEAKS THE LANGUAGE OF ESG. SO, WHY HAS ENVIRONMENTAL RESTORATICN REMAINED A WEAK CSR PRIORITY?
4 mins
June 21, 2026
Business Today India
GAP IN GREEN FINANCING
INDIA REQUIRES ABOUT $170 BILLION ANNUALLY IN CLIMATE INVESTMENTS, BUT AVERAGE CLIMATE FINANCE FLOWS HAVE ONLY BEEN AROUND $44 BILLION PER YEAR
5 mins
June 21, 2026
Business Today India
“THE FAIRYTALE OF BESS IN INDIA”
Powering the renewable transition, India’s battery storage boom face its first real stress test—rising prices of lithium carbonate, a key ingredient for lithium-ion batteries
3 mins
June 21, 2026
Business Today India
THE COST OF AIR POLLUTION
PERSISTENT AIR POLLUTION IN MOST CITIES IS NOT ONLY A CHRONIC HEALTH PROBLEM BUT ALSO HURTING BUSINESSES AND IMPACTING ECONOMIC ACTIVITIES. INDIA’S SUPERPOWER AMBITIONS RIDE ON FINDING A SOLUTION TO THIS CHRONIC PROBLEM
5 mins
June 21, 2026
Business Today India
THE HUM OF RECYCLING
THE SMELL ARRIVES first.Burnt metal, ethanol fumes, grease.
1 min
June 21, 2026
Business Today India
NO TAKERS?
INDIA'S CARBON-CREDIT START-UPS ARE ATTRACTING GLOBAL INTEREST FROM THE LIKES OF AMAZON AND MICROSOFT, BUT VENTURE CAPITAL REMAINS CAUTIOUS BECAUSE OF LONG GESTATION CYCLES AND CREDIBILITY CONCERNS
4 mins
June 21, 2026
Business Today India
DRIVING THE CHANGE
From staff performance goals to driving the EV charge, Hero MotoCorp is racing ahead in its quest to build a sustainable business
3 mins
June 21, 2026
Business Today India
HOW SUSTAINABLE IS ETHANOL?
THERE ARE CONCERNS REGARDING ETHANOL PRODUCTION, NOT LEAST AMONG THEM THE WATER INTENSITY OF CROPS SUCH AS PADDY, MAIZE AND SUGARCANE THAT CURRENTLY PREDOMINATE THIS SPACE
5 mins
June 21, 2026
Translate
Change font size

