scorecardresearch
Saturday, November 2, 2024
Support Our Journalism
HomeIndiaSale of Air India an 'important milestone' in India's privatisation efforts: IMF...

Sale of Air India an ‘important milestone’ in India’s privatisation efforts: IMF official

IMF official Alfred Schipke said that to maximise the benefits from privatisation, medium-term privatisation plans, solid regulatory frameworks, competitive markets are important.

Follow Us :
Text Size:

Washington: The International Monetary Fund on Monday said the sale of national carrier Air India will constitute an “important milestone” in India’s privatisation efforts.

Tata group has emerged as the winning bidder for the loss-making Air India, and on October 11, a letter of intent (LoI) was issued to the group.

“We welcome the recent agreement on the sale of Air India, which constitutes an important milestone,” Alfred Schipke, Director of IMF-STI Regional Training Institute and a former IMF India Mission Chief, told PTI in an interview.

Earlier this month, the government accepted an offer by Talace Pvt Ltd, a unit of Tata group, to pay Rs 2,700 crore cash and takeover Rs 15,300 crore of Air India’s debt.

After Tatas accept the LoI, the share purchase agreement (SPA) for the sale will be signed. Along with Air India, Tatas will acquire low-cost carrier Air India Express and Air India’s 50 per cent stake in equal joint venture AISATS.

“In general, to maximise the benefits from privatisation, the international experience highlights the importance of medium-term privatisation plans, solid regulatory frameworks, competitive markets and the buy-in of key stakeholders,” Schipke said as the IMF released its annual report on India.

As with all structural reforms during the transition, he said it is important to strengthen social safety nets to maximise the benefits and minimise any adverse implications.

The annual report lists more than 130 key policy actions that have been undertaken by Prime Minister Narendra Modi-led government in the last one year as part of efforts to liberalise and reform the country’s economy.

On the fiscal front, Schipke said it was important to highlight two areas where actions taken stand out. First is the swift expansion of support to low-income households with the onset of the pandemic by effectively leveraging existing social support schemes.

The in-kind food transfers through PM Garib Kalyan Anna Yojana, which have been extended several times since the pandemic, and later improvement of the portability of benefits through the One Nation One Ration Card system have been critical to help alleviate the significant impact of the pandemic on livelihoods, he noted.

According to him, the second policy area is the authorities’ new privatisation policy and asset monetisation pipeline that can, if implemented successfully, improve the return from government assets and help finance much-needed public expenditure on infrastructure, health and education.

“On monetary policy measures, the RBI has provided significant, broad-based, and appropriate monetary easing through interest rate cuts and an accommodative stance,” Schipke said.

These were aided by time and state-contingent forward guidance on policy rates and, more recently, on asset purchases, to better anchor market expectations amid unprecedented uncertainties. Various liquidity measures resulted in a cumulative injection of over six per cent of GDP during February 2020 March 2021 and helped avoid a broad-based liquidity crunch for both financial and non-financial corporates, he added.

“Among financial sector measures, the creation of the National Asset Reconstruction Company Ltd is a welcome development that shows the authorities’ efforts to secure financial stability and to address the problem of distressed bank assets,” the IMF official said.

Furthermore, he said the recent recapitalisation of PSBs and the privatisation of two public sector banks and one state-owned insurance company are welcome developments and “we await further details”.

“We are hopeful that these initial privatisations will pave the way for further reforms, a substantial reduction in the government’s footprint in the sector, and ultimately a boost to the resilience of the sector,” he noted.

“We also welcome structural reforms such as in the labour market reform bills, which, among other things, include the easing of administrative bottlenecks and expanding social security benefits for fixed-term and migrant workers, are likely to speed up formalisation of the labour force,” Schipke said.

He also said that recent measures to liberalise FDIs and the country’s commitment to meeting the Paris agreement climate mitigation pledges support a greener and more globally integrated India. -PTI


Also read: Air India’s privatisation comes two decades late, but taxpayers should be relieved


 

Subscribe to our channels on YouTube, Telegram & WhatsApp

Support Our Journalism

India needs fair, non-hyphenated and questioning journalism, packed with on-ground reporting. ThePrint – with exceptional reporters, columnists and editors – is doing just that.

Sustaining this needs support from wonderful readers like you.

Whether you live in India or overseas, you can take a paid subscription by clicking here.

Support Our Journalism

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Most Popular