INFRASTRUCTURE FOR ECONOMIC GROWTH - ECONOMY
News: Help bring capital into National Infrastructure Pipeline, PM Gati Shakti: FM to NIIF
What's in the news?
● Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman has urged the National Investment and Infrastructure Fund (NIIF) to expand its operations and explore ways to crowd in private capital for projects under the National Infrastructure Pipeline, PM Gati Shakti and National Infrastructure Corridor.
Infrastructure:
●
The basic physical
facilities (roads, buildings, power supplies) and organizational structures
(schools, hospitals, banks) needed for the operation of society are known as
infrastructure.
● Infrastructure contributes to economic development of a country both by increasing the productivity of the factors of production and improving the quality of life of its people.
Infrastructure facilitates growth:
1. Increases agriculture production and productivity:
●
Development of the
primary sector depends on development of irrigation, power, credit,
transportation, marketing, research and development and other facilities.
2. Increases flow of foreign capital:
●
Increases the confidence
of foreign investors to do business in India and thus bring FDIs.
3. Employment opportunities:
●
Road and railway
infrastructure generate more jobs in construction and maintenance sector.
4. Backward linkage:
● Economic growth makes demands for infrastructure which further facilitates more growth.
Infrastructure prevents recession:
1. Multiplier Effect:
● High-quality public infrastructure supports economic growth, generates jobs, and improves the well-being of the citizens.
2. Investment in education:
●
Directly contribute to
more productivity, efficiency, and hence higher earnings, and less
vulnerability to unemployment.
3. Improvement in productivity:
●
Infrastructure
development in sectors such as transport sector improves productivity
●
Studies show 1% growth in
infrastructure stock leads to 1% growth in GDP.
4. Key to modern technology:
●
Infrastructure bring new
technology which help the country in competition with international players.
● E.g.: Internet of things, Big Data etc
Government Initiatives to boost infrastructure sector:
1. National Infrastructure Pipeline:
●
It is a group of social
and economic infrastructure projects in India over a period of five years with
a sanctioned amount of ₹102 lakh crore.
2. National Infrastructure Investment Fund:
●
Launched with an initial
corpus of Rs 40,000 crore, aims to
develop commercially viable greenfield and brownfield projects.
3. Public-Private Partnership:
●
Government associates
itself with private entities to develop projects.
●
E.g.: Golden
Quadrilateral, North–South and East–West Corridor.
4. Infrastructure Debt Funds:
●
To address the issue of
sourcing long term debt for infrastructure projects in India.
5. Viability Gap Funding:
●
Government financially
supports the viability gap to the tune of 20%
of the cost of the project in the form of a capital grant from its viability
gap fund.
6. Foreign Direct Investment and Infrastructure
Development:
●
100%
FDI is allowed under the automatic route in
sectors such as mining, power etc.
●
FDI is also allowed
through the approval route in sectors such as the civil aviation sector etc.
7. India Infrastructure Finance Company Limited
(IIFCL):
●
To provide long term
finance to viable infrastructure projects through the Scheme for Financing
Viable Infrastructure Projects through a Special Purpose Vehicle.
8. Complementary Schemes:
●
Initiatives such as ‘Housing for All’ and ‘Smart Cities,’
are working on reducing the bottlenecks that impede growth in the
infrastructure sector.
9. Masala Bonds:
● National Highways Authority of India (NHAI) launched Masala Bonds in 2017, for raising capital for funding the infrastructure projects in India.
10. Other sector-specific schemes:
Energy Infrastructure:
●
Hydrocarbon
Exploration and Licensing Policy (HELP):
enable E&P operators to explore and extract all hydrocarbon resources under
a single license.
●
UDAY
scheme to improve operational and financial parameters of discoms.
● KUSUM Scheme to install solar pumps and sell surplus electricity
Transport Infrastructure:
●
Mission
Avataran to transform Indian Railways through 100%
electrification by 2024.
●
National Highway
Development Programme, 1998 includes Golden Quadrilateral and Diamond
Quadrilateral.
●
BharatMala
Project to upgrade & expand 24800km NHs by
2022.
●
Sagarmala
Project: Develop minor ports and improve existing
ones.
● Faster Adoption & Manufacture of (Hybrid &) Electric Vehicles (FAME).
Logistics Infrastructure:
●
Dedicated
Freight Corridor: Eastern Corridor: Ludhiana –
Kolkata.
● Multi-modal Logistic Park that interconnects different modes of transport – air, sea, and land.
Communication Infrastructure:
●
Bharatnet
Project: Connect all 2.50 lakh plus gram panchayat
with broadband National Optical Fibre Network (NOFN).
● Samarth Udyog Bharat 4.0: Make Indian industry Industrial revolution 4.0 ready by 2025.
Challenges in infrastructure sector:
1. Fiscal Burden:
●
Almost half of the total
investment in the infrastructure sector is done by the government through
budget allocations.
●
But, the government funds
have competing demands, such as, education, health, employment generation,
among others.
2. Asset-Liability Mismatch of Commercial Banks:
●
Commercial banking
sector’s ability to extend long-term loans to the infrastructure sector is
limited.
3. Subdued Investments in PPP Projects:
●
Private sector investment
is yet to revive in the backdrop of subdued interest from potential
stakeholders.
●
Legacy issues and weak
balance sheets have led to limited participation from existing infrastructure
players in India.
4. Investment Obligations of Insurance and Pension
Funds:
●
Insurance and pension
funds are constrained by their obligation to invest a substantial portion of
their funds in Government securities.
5. Need for an Efficient and Vibrant Corporate Bond
Market:
●
The corporate bond market
is still a long way to go in providing adequate financing to the infrastructure
sector in India.
6. Insufficiency of User Charges:
●
A large part of the
infrastructure sector in India especially irrigation, water supply, urban
sanitation, and state road transport is not amenable to commercialisation for
various reasons.
●
Due to this, the
government is not in a position to levy sufficient user charges on these
services.
7. Legal and Procedural Issues:
● Issues relating to land acquisition and environmental clearances add uncertainty which affects the risk appetite of investors as well as banks.
WAYS FORWARD:
1. Invest in sustainable infrastructure:
●
South
Korea, which directed 80% of its stimulus
towards green measures, rebounded faster from the 2008 financial crisis than
economies in the OECD.
2. Facilitating infrastructure investment:
●
Setting up of a Development Finance Institution (DFI) with
an initial capital of ₹20,000 Cr
3. National Monetisation Pipeline:
● To sell assets created by PSUs such as NHAI, PGCIL, Railways etc. and money raised would then be used for the creation of new infrastructure assets.
India runs among
the largest infrastructure programmes in
the world and has invested over $1.1 trillion on it in the last decade. An
efficient infrastructure is the biggest enabler for growth that can materialize
the goal of reaching a 5 trillion-dollar
economy in India.