When one starts reviewing twitter threads, one would get the
impression that the UPA era under the economist Manmohan Singh was a high
growth era where India outperformed global indices despite the Global Financial
Crisis (GFC) shock. The same common narrative treats the NDA under the
"tea-seller" Narendra Modi was underperforming despite significant
advantages given the oft repeated high-growth era of UPA.
I thought it would be pertinent to review this using some
standard metrices backed up with largely irrefutable data and data
sources.
But before we get into the details, it is essential to
appreciate FRBM and its centrality in this analysis. FRBM stands for
the Fiscal Responsibility and Budget Management Act, 2003 that was passed
by the Atal Behari Vajpayee government (1999-2004). This is one of the most
critical acts passed in independent (from the British) India and is
a statutory fiscal discipline framework designed to
impose rules-based control over how much the Government of India can
borrow, spend, and run deficits. I have tried to summarize what FRBM is,
why it exists, and why it matters in the context of UPA vs NDA debates.
It would be obvious to even a non-economist that prior to
the NDA (1999-2004) government, India ran chronic fiscal deficits, government
borrowing was discretionary (& completely opaque) which led to corruption
at scale. This additionally increased debt and resultant interest rates
burdens. Such debt was rarely used to create infrastructure at scale but
primarily utilised for consumption - which meant the compounding effect of
interest rate burdens resulted in high inflation, high costs of borrowing,
increased return on static capital (bank interest, bonds etc.) created an era
where large capital outlays were necessary for any private sector enterprises.
The Vajpayee government thus inherited an economy where close to two-fifths of
the revenue was used to repay interest expenses. The Vajpayee government
enacted the FRBM in 2003 (Vajpayee-led NDA) to impose hard
fiscal rules, reduce discretion in deficit financing and anchor long-term
debt sustainability. The FRBM originally required the government to hold Fiscal
deficit ≤ 3% of GDP and complete elimination of revenue deficit (borrow
only for sustainable capital expenditure – road construction for example) This
distinction is critical: for a non-economist, it means that the government can
borrow to build assets but cannot borrow to fund consumption. At one stroke,
this reins in inflation. The FRBM also eliminated “creative accounting” by
mandating complete debt transparency - fiscal deficit, revenue deficit, and
outstanding liabilities. Additionally, it mandated documenting medium-term
fiscal policy statements giving clarity on where the government plans to invest
in. Additionally, the Act proscribed limits on Reserve Bank of India (RBI)’s
monetisation abilities by stopping the RBI’s ability to provide financing for
the government deficits (routine in the Congress led governments) and prevented
inflationary money printing. The FRBM was far thinking in its approach allowing
the government leeway to loosen the austerity measures during times of war,
severe economic shock, national calamities – essentially force majeure clauses
to a lawyer. But it also mandated that
the government needs to revert to FRBM principles as soon as this black swan
event is over and its influence wanes.
The FRBM was critical for the Indian economic outlook in the
late nineties, it played a critical role in lowering interest rates, decreased
debt servicing substantially, increased private investment and provided
macroeconomic stability. The empirical data is very clear - India’s debt/GDP
fell, inflation moderated, capital inflows improved and sustainable growth
accelerated in early 2000s (especially driven by prudent investment in the
golden quadrilateral project). In simple language, the FRBM is India’s fiscal
lever, when the government respected it, there was clear sustainable growth,
health banks and financial systems and critically debt remains manageable (as
debt can only be created for developing sustainable infrastructure). When
governments have ignored it, it has created unsustainable, temporary growth
spikes where the issues surface after a few years and future governments /
generations pay the price for profligacy . This is why FRBM sits at the heart
of serious discussions on India’s economic mismanagement.
The Vajpayee government did a stellar job in reining in
inflation, creating sustainable growth and decreasing compounding interest rate
burdens. This meant the UPA inherited a growing economy, decreasing
inflationary trends (despite the financial turbulence in the early 2000s) and
sustainable growth momentum. As one can summarise, the Vajpayee bequeathed to
UPA an economy with exceptionally strong fundamentals:
A. Macro Stability
- Fiscal
consolidation under FRBM
- Debt-to-GDP
on a declining path
- Inflation
largely under control (thanks to infra led investments)
- External
account stable (despite Pokhran led sanctions)
B. Structural Reforms
- Telecom
liberalisation (foundation of India’s digital economy)
- Golden
Quadrilateral (logistics productivity)
- Power,
roads, ports reforms
- Slowly
opening up key investment markets - insurance, telecom, capital markets
C. Banking System Health
- NPAs
were low
- Credit
growth was disciplined
- Public
Sector Banks (PSB) were solvent and not recapitalisation-dependent
D. Investment Momentum
- Capex-led
growth phase already underway
- Private
sector confidence strong
- India
entering global supply chains post-WTO.
And this is not BJP propaganda — it is borne out in RBI and
Economic Survey data from the early 2000s.
And what happened in the decade under UPA led by the
economist Manmohan Singh (& some would day remote controlled by Sonia
Gandhi)? Let us analyse.
The first phase was between 2004-2008 (just when the GFC was
unfolding). The UPA government demonstrated an illusion of growth benefitting
from incredibly high levels of global liquidity leading to significant capital
inflows into India. The commodity boom helped global macroeconomic indicators
with the global economy growing significantly all around. The momentum from the
prior reforms under Vajpayee and the thrust towards capital expenditure created
a momentum that the UPA government could leverage for some headline numbers for
the first couple of years. In summary, growth was high; but the overall quality
deteriorated. The numbers are stark – there was no significant infrastructure
programs announced or built which would have lead to sustainable growth opportunities.
The economic activity shifted from a capex-infra led investment model to a
consumption model which incidentally meant less spending discretion as opposed
to the significant discipline demonstrated under Vajpayee. Additionally, the
UPA government enacted no financial reforms which limited any scope for
forward-looking momentum. I would call this phase as an “illusion of growth”.
In summary I would say three key shifts happened:
1.
Capex → consumption
2.
Reform → redistribution
3.
Discipline → discretion
If the first four years represented a lost opportunity to build
strongly on stable and organised frameworks, the next six years represent a
fundamental negative disruption of what could have been one of the strongest
economic periods for India. This is when the real damage happened, when the
economy turned from faltering to outright disastrous. So what happened?
Firstly, fiscal indiscipline was rampant, ingrained in all
facets. The post GFC stimulus was never unwound, subsidies delivered during GFC
(which was essentially a liquidity crisis not a health crisis unlike covid and
which should have been managed adroitly – not printing easy money) for food,
fuel were never recovered and most critically, the litmus of FRBM was
effectively abandoned.
Second, it was an era of crony capitalism, the effect of
which was only visible almost a decade later. It was an era of infrastructure
lending without risk discipline (remember the Commonwealth games infra spend?),
sustained political pressure on PSBs to lend indiscriminately all of which
resulted in what the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) called the twin balance sheet
crisis. One only needs to peruse the economic survey published on 2015 and IMF
working papers to understand the depth of the created disaster.
Third, perhaps the most contentious issue and the one with
the most significant impact to the Indian economy was the amendment of the
Income Tax Act retrospectively (back to 1962) to tax indirect transfers of
Indian assets. This was triggered by the Supreme Court ruling in favour of
Vodafone (2012), which held that Vodafone’s offshore transaction was not
taxable in India under existing law. This was applied retroactively,
overturning settled judicial outcomes, negatively affecting several foreign
investors (Vodafone, Cairn Energy, Shell, Nokia) and created open-ended tax
liabilities with penalties and interest. This was disastrous and severely
damaged the Indian government’s credibility in a global flat world. India was
seen as a “policy risk” jurisdiction. The NDA government had to repeal the law
(in 2021, though why they took so long is a matter to be discussed later) and
to refund taxes.
Fourth, a complete sense of regulatory paralysis.
Additionally, when changes made, the decisions were often reverted. The FDI
policy inconsistency is a case to point. It was announced end-2011, almost
immediately put on hold, and then re-announced a few months later before
leaving this to the states to decide on implementation. So essentially, no
changes but complete confusion for a year. There was limited policy
liberalisation in key sectors like insurance, defence and aviation leading to
inconsistent FDIs at a time when global liquidity was amongst the highest on
record. Taxation and regulatory uncertainty continued throughout the UPA rule -
GAAR (General Anti-Avoidance Rules) were introduced aggressively but deferred
multiple times. MAT - Minimum Alternate Tax on foreign investors was imposed
but litigated against and then partially clarified. India’s infrastructure
assets – coal, telecom were consistently mismanaged (2G scam, Coal-gate etc.)
leading to highly elevated bank NPAs (much of which was opaque till the NDA
came back to power in 2014). The fuel subsidy reforms were inconsistent,
announced one day, paused the next and then reintroduced a few days later. And
critically from an economic perspective, the FRBM targets repeatedly breached
post-2008 without a credible medium-term framework.
So, in summary what did this do to the Indian economy?
First, it led to rampant inflation. It went from 3.77% in
2004 (with a consistently falling trend) to 6.37% in 2007 before hitting ~12%
in 2010 (two years post the GFC). The inflation when the NDA government took
over had fallen slightly to just under 11%.
Second capital dried up. Despite the global financial
crisis, India attracted robust FDI inflows (~US$ 41 billion in 2008–09),
indicating strong underlying investor interest, primarily a carryover from the
progressive NDA era under Vajpayee. FDI declined significantly after 2008–09,
with values dropping to US$ 35+ through 2010–11 – reflecting global risk
aversion and domestic policy uncertainty. The issue is not the decline between
2008-2010. The issue is that there was no rebound in Indian FDI despite liquidity
being the highest on record when the developed countries were printing money at
an unheard-of scale. The FDI actually fell from ~USD 40B in 2011 to ~USD 35B in
2013. This at a time when the ASEAN countries and China increased their FDI
inflows during the same time by several times. ASEAN is a great case to point –
their FDI inflows went from ~USD 35B in 2008 to ~USD 120B in 2014.
Third, the banking system in India was impaired, some would
claim destroyed from within. When I write “the banking system was impaired”, I
mean this in a technical, balance-sheet and credit-transmission sense, not as a
rhetorical or political phrase. Here is precisely what it means, and why it
matters. A banking system is impaired when it cannot perform its core economic
function, even if banks are still operating. The core functions for a
(especially) commercial bank are allocating credit efficiently, price risk
accurately, support investment and growth transmit monetary policy. In an
impaired state, banks exist — but they are economically dysfunctional. By 2014,
banks were alive, but too sick to lend. They were afraid of taking risk, short
of capital, carrying dead assets and focused on survival, not growth.
Impairment was caused by several factors – most of it due to poor governance
and flawed economic policies. By the time NDA came to power in 2014 and the
results of the economic mismanagement was clear, it was obvious that a
significant share of bank assets were economically non-viable. These numbers
are hidden very well unless one reviews and analyses the banking systems in the
light of RBI, IMF and key PSB balance sheets. At the very minimum, 11% of all
assets in any Indian bank was officially non-performing. 15-17% of all loans
were under stress meaning cash flow was insufficient to pay monthly interests.
The worst affected were the PSBs with between 18-22% of all loans were under
stress. And poor (or corrupt) governance
meant these were not reported through evergreening (accounting manoeuvring or
additional loans to pay existing loans), restructuring or regulatory
forbearance (especially PSBs). That is why India’s investment engine stalled
before 2014, and why recovery took so long even after growth returned.
Fourth, the rapidly growing investment cycle was completely
broken, a symptom of an impaired banking system. The investments were
concentrated in a few areas all under government regulation – mining,
infrastructure, telecom etc – a large portion of which was impaired loan books.
It is thus obvious cause when one notices the steep downward trend in Gross
Fixed Capital Formation (% of GDP) which fell from mid-thirties through the
2010s - 34.3% (2011) to mid-twenties by the time the UPA demitted office (~28.7%
- 2015) besides the more obvious FDI inflows mentioned earlier.
Indian economy went from being strong and sustainable under
the Vajpayee led NDA era to a struggling economy – headlined by the ‘fragile’
tag given to it by Morgan Stanley, a steep fall from the 8.2% GDP growth at
less than 3% inflation with no current account deficit; and the IMF tag of a
“strong” economy in June 2004 when Vajpayee demitted office.
However, several so-called economists still defend the UPA
policies and none of them seem to be accurate or indeed logical economic
measures. The focus is purely on the headline GDP numbers (which grew primarily
by easy money – note resultant inflation) ignoring debt accumulation (& the
interest compounding thereof), asset quality (note NPAs), investment
sustainability (note investment degradation) and institutional decay (capital
allocation ratios). UPA policies looked good till the bill arrived.
In short, calling the UPA policies a structural economic
failure is not disingenuous — it is accurate.
Let’s summarise the relative
performances of the Vajpayee led NDA and the Manmohan Singh led UPA
|
Dimension |
Vajpayee NDA (1998–2004) |
UPA (2004–2014) |
|
Fiscal discipline |
Strong, rules-based |
Weak post-2008 |
|
Banking health |
Preserved |
Destroyed |
|
Growth quality |
Capex-led |
Debt-led |
|
Inflation |
Controlled |
High |
|
Infrastructure |
Foundation-building |
Stalled later |
|
Institutional legacy |
Strengthened |
Weakened |
Now let us turn our attention to the Modi led NDA from 2014.
But before we do that let us look at what this government inherited vis-à-vis
what the previous UPA government inherited.
|
Dimension |
UPA (2004) Inherited |
NDA (2014) Inherited |
|
Fiscal position |
FRBM credibility, declining debt |
Large deficits, FRBM diluted |
|
Banking system |
Low NPAs, solvent PSBs |
Hidden NPAs, impaired PSBs |
|
Investment cycle |
Strong capex momentum |
Capex collapse |
|
Inflation |
Moderate to Low |
High & volatile |
|
External balance |
Stable |
CAD stress memories |
|
Institutional credibility |
Improving |
Damaged |
The Key asymmetry was that the UPA inherited a strong
economy. NDA inherited a balance-sheet recession.
The Modi government in the initial years (2014-16) focused
on identifying the well-hidden delinquencies. The Asset Quality Review (AQR)
initiated by the Reserve Bank of India in 2015 revealed a much larger stock of
hidden bad loans, causing NPAs to be recognized formally. This initial
recognition caused headline NPA ratios to rise sharply early in the NDA period
— but this was largely recognition of previously unreported bad loans, not
necessarily new deterioration alone. This ensured more transparent reporting
which became apparent by 2017. Let’s review the key economic measures and
policies from three key perspectives – transparency & reporting,
recapitalisation (including write-offs and recoveries) and policy measures.
Transparency & reporting – the NDA introduced the
concept of AQR in 2015 to rigorously examine the loan books and report
transparently on NPAs, write-offs and capitalisation requirements to ensure the
Indian banking system remained fair, transparent and safe. It needs to be noted
that before the AQR was introduced, asset quality was assessed using a
rules-based, bank-reported framework with significant discretion. This allowed
the UPA government significant leeway to lend leading to evergreening, poor
asset quality, and crony capitalism. As an example of crony capitalism,
group-wide stress was not forced to be recognized, instead if one project
failed but another loan was technically current, the underlying asset could
remain ‘standard’ requiring no addition margins or capital allocation. The UPA
government allowed NPA classifications by restructuring, interest moratoriums,
extension of repayment schedules and conversion of interest to equity (thereby
increasing tier 1 capital risk). Thus, while the reported NPAs was under 4%,
the actual numbers were far higher which became apparent under the AQR regime.
The AQR model did four things –
1.
Loan scrutiny – unlike in the past, AQR did not
merely accept a bank’s (often qualitative) model for risk and asset quality,
RBI appointed supervisors reviewed individual large exposures at each bank and
stress tested against cash-flow (not merely repayment status) and ability to
repay. There was increased focus on key infrastructure projects, power, mining
which are usually large and significant loan books.
2.
Economic Default vs Technical Default – the
measurement model was recalibrated to ensure that any loan was classified as
stressed if the project could not service debt from operating cash flows and/or
the promoter equity was impaired. Thie meant that the repayment could not
depend on refinancing, restructuring or additional loans to pay interest and
principal effectively removing the insidious practice of evergreening. The
model recalibrated a loan as stressed even if the interest was being paid
regularly as the focus was not just on past cash flows but measured on future /
balance sheet-based cash flows.
3.
Loan classification was moved from individual
loans to a group wide review of loans. Thus, if one firm in a group defaulted
or had impaired assets, the overall group exposures were re-examined and often
downgraded. This ensured intra-group juggling of assets to present a
better-than-reality picture.
4.
Fourth and most importantly, the government
mandated strict recognition timelines and deadlines to reclassify assets,
provision against potential bad debts, raise necessary capital and prevented
any discretionary roll-overs, thus making the whole process of reporting and
allocation completely transparent.
It is essential to note that AQR did not create bad loans or
bad banking models – it merely reclassified and provided transparency to the
already-impaired loan books. In plain English, before AQR was introduced; banks
reported what they hoped would be repaid, often with limited transparency of
data or models. After AQR, banks had to report what could realistically be
repaid with transparent access to data and analytical models – under the
supervision of RBI. This required strong government backing as it forced the
banks to report the existing large losses, required massive recapitalisation,
negatively impacted short term growth and some say most importantly impacted
politically connected corporate houses. Modi’s NDA absorbed the political
fallout while allowing RBI complete independence to report accurately and
transparently.
Recapitalisation & PSB systems overhaul – Bank
recapitalisation was critical to inject capital into banks so that they can
absorb losses from NPAs (provisions & write-offs), Meet Basel capital
adequacy norms and resume lending. After the UPA regime this was primarily
directed for the PSBs which held the bulk of stressed assets. Even prior to the
transparency afforded by the AQR which only got institutionalised in 2016, the
NDA government identified that banks were impaired and needed tier 1 capital
infusion to keep them alive. The first phase of recapitalisation involved the
government pumping in Rs 60,000 crores (~USD$ 1B at the then exchange rate)
between 2014-16. Once the disaster with clear transparent data unfolded, the
government pumped in more than double the initial tranche (~1.2 lack crores) to
offset the AQR shock (2016-18). The disaster was especially concentrated in the
PSBs with SBI, PNB, IDBI, UCO and many others effectively trading insolvent
breaching Basel III norms unable PSBs would have breached Basel III norms. Most
of the initial recapitalisation was done through direct budgetary infusions to
ensure the banks remained ‘bankable’. Over the next couple of years, NDA
introduced the innovative recapitalisation bonds scheme introduced in 2017.
This was an innovative scheme whereby Government issues recap bonds to PSBs,
then PSBs subscribe to these bonds and then then Government injects equivalent
equity capital into PSBs. This ensured minimal net fiscal cash outflow (keeping
inflation and spending under control) but provided significant balance sheet
support to PSBs making India’s banking sector stronger. Most importantly it
provided the government breathing time to enact a couple of key policy changes
to ensure the Indian banking system remained transparent, robust and capable of
supporting India’s targeted growth rates while ensuring a decreasing inflation
trend. It needs to be noted that Private banks required almost no taxpayer
capital indicating the banking rot was primarily with the PSBs which are more
easily influenced by the government of the day. The actions provided immediate
results - PSB CAR/CRAR improved from less than 8% in most cases to ~14–15%
effectively providing necessary capital for NPAs and future lending. Bank
credit growth recovered from less than 5% in 2015 to 12+% in 2022. The overall
recapitalisation along with AQR led transparency to clean PSB balance sheets
and prepare them for sustained growth. And unlike what many commentators imply,
this was no crony capitalist bail out – the capital infusion restored banks, not
capitalists. Promoters lost equity, control and some had to exit their
companies’ leaving banks with loans that were transparent in their asset
ratios.
Once the base was established, the Modi led government commenced
optimizing the number of PSBs reducing them from 27 to 12 by a sequence of bank
mergers consolidating scale, creating efficiencies, optimizing capital
allocation, shoring up weaker banks and overall creating a more robust,
structurally safe banking system. Along with recapitalisation and optimization,
there we key banking model governance & incentive Reforms. The Banking
governance model was fundamentally restructured with the Bank Boards Bureau
(later FSIB) leading to professionalised board appointments, significantly reducing
political micromanagement, performance-linked selection, separation of Chairman
& MD roles, independent and strong risk committees and accountability (with
autonomy) for credit decisions.
Banks were then brought under significant scrutiny for their
credit discipline & monitoring process and the overall PCA (Prompt
Corrective Action) framework was completely revamped. Automated restrictions
were imposed on banks with lower CAR by placing limits on lending, dividends or
expansion. Banks had to follow a new large exposures framework where any risk
exposure was capped to group firms reducing concentration risk and addressed too
big-to-fail corporate lending. Banks were additionally subject to stringent and
structurally stronger credit markets. Loan evergreening was stopped which
eliminated restructuring loopholes, NPA norms were strengthened for both recognition
and reporting with clear timelines for mandatory provisioning and most
critically an introduction of a risk-based supervision. This meant banks were subjected to a
continuous monitoring model instead of periodic inspection ensuring any lending
or provisioning stress was immediately apparent. These were extremely
politically painful decisions especially with the well-known crony capitalism
the earlier UPA government was accused of, and NDA deserves kudos for taking
some very strong steps.
Key economic policy framework reforms – the third key action
the NDA government under Modi took was several key policy decisions and
reforms. To put the process in perspective, it can be viewed as a five-step
process: 1. Force recognition (use AQR
model) → 2. absorb losses (transparency afforded by AQR) → 3. Recapitalise (as
mentioned in the previous section) → 4.resolve (increase CAR) → 5. reform
governance. The most critical of the
reforms was Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC), 2016 that replaced a
fragmented, toothless system (BIFR, DRTs, NCAT etc) with a unified,
transparent, reportable policy standard. The IBC perhaps is independent India’s
most critical banking system change representing a structural reform and not
merely a legislative change. There are a dozen key policy changes as part of
this.
- Time-Bound Insolvency
Resolution - must be completed within 180 days, extendable by 90 days,
with an outer limit including litigation of 330 days. This hard deadline
prevents value erosion, a major failure under pre-IBC laws, when it would
take years, sometimes decades to resolve an insolvency claim.
- Global alignment with the
Creditor-in-Control Model (Not Debtor-in-Control). When a case is
admitted, the Board stands suspended and the management is vested with an
insolvency resolution professional / firm. Any decisions or
recommendations are subject to approval from the committee of creditors
(next point). This mirrors best practices in the US (Chapter 11) and UK
insolvency regimes.
- Committee of creditors
(COC) – have financial supremacy. The committee is composed of financial
creditors (usually Indian banks) and key resolutions require a 66% voting
share. Courts cannot intervene in commercial decisions of this committee.
This was a landmark reform where courts could only adjugate on the
process, not on the business result itself.
- Moratorium on legal
proceedings – a critical step that prevented any suits, enforcement
actions, asset seizures etc on admission, essentially allowing the firm to
operate as usual minimizing asset erosion.
- Resolution Over
Liquidation to decrease any value erosion. The primary aim should always
be revival; liquidation is recommended only if no viable time-denominated
resolution plan is not feasible and the CoC explicitly recommends
liquidation. There was thus a
paradigm shift from the earlier recovery-focused enforcement approach to
enterprise value preservation model.
- Priority of claims - IBC
defines an explicit distribution hierarchy in liquidation which
prioritizes employee & secured creditors dues and government and
equity shareholders are least prioritises. This ensure the most critically
impacted resources are reimbursed first. This means government is no
longer a priority claimant improving credit pricing and investor
confidence.
- Unified Institutional
Framework - IBC created a single ecosystem, replacing multiple weak
institutions replacing IBBI (Insolvency and Bankruptcy Board of India –
the earlier regulator), NCLT / NCLAT (adjudicating authorities),
Insolvency Professionals (IPs), Information Utilities (for verified debt
records). This institutional depth and one single independent regulator is
a key reason for India’s global credibility.
- Trigger-Based Admission
(Default, Not Sickness) – The IBC insolvency process is triggered purely
on default at a default threshold of Rs 1 crore (USD ~1.2M) increasing
from the earlier threshold of Rs 100,000. This ensures intervention for
the right reasons and at an optimal level with no need to prove erosion of
net worth. This encourages early intervention at the right financial level
reducing eventual losses and focusing only on cases where intervention
will yield results.
- Market-Based Resolution
via Competitive Bidding – a key factor in the IBC is transparent
resolution plans. Proposals are invited through an open, competitive
bidding process which are evaluated by the CoC based on feasibility, value
and the background of the proposer. This encourages transparency and
promoted optimal price / value arbitrage.
- Binding Nature of
Approved Resolution Plans - This is in my opinion the most far-reaching
component of the IBC. Any approved plan is binding on all stakeholders
including the government and dissenting creditors. This eliminates
post-resolution litigation risk and completely transformed India’s credit
culture.
- Coverage Beyond Corporates
- IBC extends to corporates, individuals and partnerships, personal
guarantors to corporate debtors. This closes long-standing loopholes.
- Strong Deterrence Effect
(Even Without Resolution). The threat of IBC meant that a significant
share of dues is recovered even before admission or soon after notice. The
threat of IBC (as an independent, time-bound process) often works better
than the process itself.
Besides the critical IBC,
the NDA government improved market discipline & accountability by passing
the Fugitive Economic Offenders Act in 2018. The Act was brought in following
high-profile economic offenders (notably Vijay Mallya and Nirav Modi) fleeing
India to evade prosecution. This empowered government authorities to confiscate
properties (including benami and overseas-linked assets) of individuals who
evade Indian jurisdiction after committing economic offences above ₹100 crore. The
law deters wilful defaulters from absconding and significantly strengthens the
credibility of India’s financial and legal enforcement framework signalling a zero-tolerance
outlook for wilful default. This completely changed borrower behaviour.
Additionally, while not strictly market reforms, the government’s
focus on financial infrastructure & inclusion by the Jan
Dhan–Aadhaar–Mobile (JAM) Stack significantly expanded formal deposit base, Improved
CASA ratios for banks, enabled DBT, reducing leakages (& obvious
corruption) and strengthened retail banking stability. Along with the digital
payments infrastructure, this brought over 80% of Indian population into the
formal banking sector slashing (almost eliminating) cash handling costs, transaction
traceability and enhanced core data for credit underwriting. The other key
reforms were in GST introduction and tax reforms which are too impactful for
this little summary. GST (deployed from July 2017) imposed short-term pain,
formalised the economy, created a national market, expanded the tax base, and
lowered long-term growth volatility — at the cost of temporarily depressing
headline growth numbers under Modi.
Let us review some key data from these actions and how they
have impacted Indian economy.
NPAs in the banking system are one of the key financial
measures – their transparent, accurate calculation and reporting is fundamental
to any banking system.
|
Year (FY end) |
Gross NPA Ratio |
Net NPA Ratio |
|
2013–14 |
~3.8% |
~2.1% |
|
2014–15 |
~4.3% |
~2.4% |
|
2015–16 |
~7.5% |
~4.4% |
|
2016–17 |
~9.3% |
~5.3% |
|
2017–18 |
~11.2% |
~6.0% |
|
2018–19 |
~9.1% |
~3.7% |
|
2020–21 |
~7.3% |
~2.4% |
|
2024–25 |
~2.3% (~2.1% in late 2025) |
~0.5% |
Key takeaways: when the NDA took over from the UPA, gross
NPA ratios were relatively low (3.8 %). Under the NDA government and after the
RBI began the Asset Quality Review (AQR) from 2015, NPAs rose sharply, peaking
at 11.2% in 2017–18 before improving again. Net NPAs also rose from ~2.1% in
2013–14 to ~6.0% in 2017–18 following the recognition of stressed assets. The
sharp increase from 4.3% in 2014–15 to 7.5% in 2015–16 and onward reflects
recognition of previously hidden stressed loans, not just new defaults alone. This
can be interpreted as the impact of the AQR and stricter recognition standards
introduced by RBI from 2015 onward. The peak of reported stress in the banking
system occurred roughly between 2016 and 2018. These levels were among the
highest recorded in recent decades, even though part of that rise was due to recognition
of stress rather than purely new bad loans. Following enforcement of resolution
frameworks (including IBC), recapitalisation, and recoveries/write-offs, gross
NPAs had declined to ~9.1% (FY 19), ~8.2% (FY 20) and continued moderating. Despite
covid and its financial impacts, NPAs had reduced to ~7.3% in FY 21. These
declines reflect efforts at cleanup, provisioning, recoveries, and write-offs. According
to the latest RBI reporting, gross NPA ratio for all banks was ~2.3% as of
March 2025 and near 2.1% by September 2025, the lowest in decades. Net NPA
ratio stood at around 0.5% by late 2025. This is a substantial improvement from
the peak stress years and reflects sustained clean-up action.
In summary three phases are clear – the first phase was
pre-AQR when gross NPAs were moderate but there was clear under-reporting or
under-recognition of stressed assets. The second phase was post AQR when transparent
and rigorous reporting meant the NPAs jumped to historically high levels. The third
phase is when banking and economic sector reforms brought the NPAs back to
multi-decade lows. The Modi government has done remarkably well in not just bringing
the NPAs under control but more importantly ensuring consistent, continuous,
accurate and transparent reporting with minimal interference.
The headline GDP numbers are something large portions of the
Indian media use to beat up the NDA government.
|
Period |
Approx. Real GDP Growth |
|
Vajpayee NDA (1998–2004) |
~5.5–6.5% |
|
UPA (2004–2014) |
~7.0% |
|
Modi NDA (2014–present) |
~6.0–7.0% (varies by sub-period/pandemic adjustments) |
While the GDP numbers
do indicate years of significant growth under the UPA (a percentage point more
than the preceding Vajpayee led NDA government and peaking at about 10% in
2007, raw GDP numbers mean little to an economy. GDP growth needs to be analysed
for consistency (volatility indicates underlying concerns and stress, a notable
feature under the UPA) and with other key data like inflation to present a more
rounded story.
|
Year |
Real GDP Growth (%) |
CPI Inflation (%) |
|
1999 |
~5.0 |
~4.0* |
|
2000 |
~6.1 |
~4.5* |
|
2001 |
~4.9 |
~3.8* |
|
2002 |
~3.8 |
~4.0* |
|
2003 |
~7.9 |
~3.9* |
|
2004 |
~7.8 |
~3.8* |
|
2005 |
~9.3 |
~4.4* |
|
2006 |
~9.3 |
~6.7* |
|
2007 |
~10.3 |
~6.2* |
|
2008 |
~3.9 |
~9.1* |
|
2009 |
~7.9 |
~12.3* |
|
2010 |
~8.5 |
~10.5* |
|
2011 |
~6.6 |
~9.5* |
|
2012 |
~5.5 |
~10.0* |
|
2013 |
~6.4 |
~9.8* |
|
2014 |
~7.4 |
~6.7* |
|
2015 |
~8.0 |
~4.9* |
|
2016 |
~8.3 |
~4.9* |
|
2017 |
~6.8 |
~3.3* |
|
2018 |
~6.5 |
~3.9* |
|
2019 |
~3.9 |
~3.7* |
|
2020 |
−5.8 |
~6.6* |
|
2021 |
~9.7 |
~5.1* |
|
2022 |
~6.99 |
~6.7* |
|
2023 |
~8.2–8.3 |
~5.5* |
|
2024 |
~6.5 |
~5.0* |
|
2025 (est.) |
~6.1 (or 6.4–6.7 by forecasts) |
~3.2 (projected) |
This table can be statistically interpreted as:
- The
late 1990s and early 2000s saw moderate growth and relatively contained
inflation. Most importantly, stable inflation (within 10% of the 4.0 mark)
with growing GDP (except in the aftermath of the dot com bust).
- The
UPA period were high headline GDP and inflation growth years with large volatility.
The UPA government took a positive trending GDP growth (7%+) and a stable
but decreasing inflation trend (<4%) to a volatile GDP peaking at 10+%
but consistently increasing inflationary trends peaking at 12%.
- Post-2014
(Modi/NDA) shows a mix of strong growth and generally falling inflation,
particularly under inflation targeting and RBI monetary policy frameworks.
Recent years (2023–2025) demonstrate continued growth momentum with
inflation often within or near RBI’s target band.
A naïve comparison of headline averages (GDP growth,
per-capita growth) will mechanically make the UPA look better—but that
conclusion is analytically weak. The issue is not political bias; it is methodological
error. Below is a rigorous way to review performance correctly, using tools
that professional macroeconomists, rating agencies, and sovereign analysts would
use and report against:
- Peak-to-trough
analysis
- Growth
volatility & quality
- Inflation-adjusted
growth
- Banking
system health
- Sustainability
of investment
- Global
cycle adjustment
Let’s review growth quality – let us ask – what kind of
growth are we seeing?
Under the Singh led UPA, growth was credit-fuelled and
unsustainable, growth was driven by indiscriminate capex printing money. Inflation
is a key symptom of such growth. NDA under Modi delivered lower-volatility growth
consistent with the balance-sheet numbers – NPAs and banking sector strength are
key symptoms of this.
Economists who support the UPA point to high investment
volume – sometimes 40% of GDP. However, one needs to measure investment efficiency,
not investment volume. The 40% measure fails the basic sniff test – ROIC (return
on invested capital) << Cost of capital, projects are stalled and rarely
completed on budget or schedule, and the banking system absorbs these costs later
in the invested cycle. This misallocation of capital led to banking impairment (discussed
earlier) and needed capital infusion to stay relevant. High investment that
later becomes NPAs is negative growth, not positive growth.
The most critical aspect for any national economy is Inflation-adjusted
GDP/welfare, not headline GDP numbers. The persistently high, volatile inflation
under UPA destroyed real household income, forced RBI to keep rates high
(thereby increasing Cost of capital) and negatively impacted wage earners by
consistently decreasing value of money. The Modi era made formal inflation targeting
a key outcome, focusing on low volatility and ensured better income protection.
This matters a lot more than mere headline GDP numbers.
Let’s do something interesting – a counterfactual test. What
would UPA-style policy have produced in the world Modi faced? UPA faced the GFC
but largely was in a world with the highest liquidity ever seen, buoyant global
economy, a China construction boom the like of which the world had never seen
and a largely stable geopolitical order. Modi faced post-GFC stagnation, end of
China super-cycle, tight global liquidity, Covid / pandemic shock and
increasing geopolitical fragmentation/insurgency. Yet India remained the
fastest-growing large economy with no sovereign stress, financial stability and
a robust banking system. UPA-style delay + forbearance in 2016–2020 would
likely have produced a banking crisis much more severe than 2012-14 making
India more like socialist Venezuela.
Structural indicators across the UPA and NDA era beats headline
GDP growth.
|
Metric |
2013 |
2024 |
|
Gross NPAs |
~11% |
~2–2.5% |
|
Inflation regime |
Unanchored, volatile, increasing trend |
Anchored, stable, decreasing trend |
|
Insolvency framework |
None |
IBC |
|
Formalisation |
Low |
High (GST, UPI) |
|
Tax base |
Narrow |
Broad |
|
External buffers |
Thin |
Strong |
The timing of the key events matters in analysing economics.
It will help us understand when the Indian economic story went from being strong
and resilient in 2004 to struggling and fragile in 2013. Numbers indicate investment peaked in
2010-11. The growth sharply declined in the 3 years leading to NDA’s victory in
the general elections of 2014. The economic collapse happened under UPA, not NDA.
Modi’s NDA inherited the downturn; UPA presided over the peak and the
crash.
|
Dimension |
UPA under Singh |
NDA under Modi |
|
Growth driver |
Debt + capex boom |
Productivity + formalisation |
|
Bank health |
Hidden NPAs |
Cleaned balance sheets |
|
Inflation |
High & volatile |
Lower & anchored |
|
External vulnerability |
Fragile |
Resilient |
|
Sustainability |
Cyclical |
Structural |
A deeper analysis indicates what economists have often suspected
·
Singh’s UPA rode a global boom and left behind a
mess
·
Modi’s NDA absorbed the pain, cleaned the
system, and rebuilt foundations
While the NDA government has done far better than the
previous UPA government as is obvious from this article, a lot more could have
been done and hope the NDA government will take necessary steps rapidly.
While IBC cleaned NPAs and brought in structure, the focus
still remains on the larger corporates. More could be done to bring the smaller
corporates into its fold. While capital markets deepened with the IPO reforms
and SEBI transparency, market instruments remain underutilized, regulatory
bottlenecks still exist for risk capital deployment in smaller firms and
several PSBs remain inefficient.
The agriculture sector is crying out for reforms and the
farm laws rolled back after announcement are a tragedy for the Indian farmer. This
could have potentially led to crop diversification & high-value crops, more
seamless logistics, cold storage, private investment in irrigation and
mechanisation etc. The NDA government
did commence eNAM but its implementation has been tawdry.
The tax / GST structure needs significant additional reforms
and improvements. GST streamlined indirect taxes but compliance burden is high
for small firms. Direct tax reforms (corporate rate rationalisation, personal
income simplification) have been incremental. The NDA government needs to
rationalise and simplify the whole direct tax structure. There is significant
untapped potential for wider digitisation: linking GST, income tax, e-way
bills, and customs could boost efficiency multi-folds and easily add 2-3% to
the GDP growth while keeping inflationary trends consistent.
Key takeaways: missed opportunities:
|
Area |
Reform Done |
Gap / Could Have Done More |
Potential Economic Impact |
|
Labour |
Consolidation into 4 codes |
Faster state adoption, broader coverage, integrate with
skills |
Higher employment, faster factor allocation, higher
investment |
|
Land |
Limited amendments, housing |
Full liberalisation, urban & industrial land markets |
Faster industrial growth, lower logistics costs |
|
Agriculture |
MSP, eNAM |
Diversification, private investment, irrigation |
Higher rural income, consumption growth, reduced inflation |
|
Capital Markets |
IBC, SEBI reforms |
SME financing, PSU governance |
Higher investment efficiency, lower cost of capital |
|
Taxation |
GST |
Simplify compliance, integrate systems |
Broader tax base, higher fiscal space |
|
Investment Climate |
FDI liberalisation |
Environmental and state-level clearance bottlenecks |
Faster capex, higher growth |
In summary, while much still needs to be done, the strong
fundamentals, key policy changes, transparency and accountability implemented by
NDA under Modi are all reasons why the Trumpian tariffs and tantrums have had limited
impact on India – no industry or citizen group is protesting at Shaheen Bagh
demanding assistance or welfare status.
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