GS 3: Economy

Why is corporate investment lagging behind?, Pg10

The article analyzes the persistent sluggishness in corporate investment despite policy measures like tax cuts, capex spending, and low interest rates, and discusses demand-side constraints in India's economy post-COVID-19.

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Key Highlights:

  • IIP growth has slowed to a 9-month low of 1.2%, reflecting weak industrial activity.
  • Corporate tax cuts (2019) and capex-driven stimulus have not led to private investment revival.
  • The private sector GFCF in machinery and IP products grew by only 35% in four years.
  • The core problem is a lack of demand, not insufficient profits or low interest rates.
  • Classical economic debates reveal that investment follows demand, not the other way around.
  • Government capex has limitations due to gestation lags, import intensity, and low employment multipliers.
  • Low interest rates alone are insufficient to spur investment without business confidence and demand revival.

Detailed Insights:

  • Investment is driven by expected demand for goods produced, not just availability of profits or cheap finance.
  • Kalecki’s (economist) argument asserts that investment determines profits, but not all profits lead to investment.
  • Luxemburg's critique explains that individual capitalists base investment on perceived demand, not on collective logic.
  • Government expenditure is a key exogenous driver to kickstart the investment-profit cycle, especially during downturns.
  • Infrastructure-led capex may fail to stimulate demand immediately due to high import content and low labor intensity.
  • Monetary easing cannot revive investment if consumer demand remains depressed, as credit uptake depends on expected returns.
  • According to Keynes, both credit availability and business confidence must revive for economic recovery to sustain.

Scientific/Technical Concepts Involved

  • Gross Fixed Capital Formation (GFCF): Investment in fixed assets by firms, crucial for long-term economic growth.
  • Capex (Capital Expenditure): Government spending on long-term infrastructure projects intended to crowd-in private investment.
  • Index of Industrial Production (IIP): Measures changes in the volume of production of industrial goods.
  • Crowding-in Effect: When public investment leads to increased private sector investment.
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