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Indian-American Abhijit Banerjee who is among the 2019 Economics Nobel winners, recently critiqued the Indian economy, calling the fall in consumption an “extremely serious issue.”
Banerjee won the award along with fellow economists Esther Duflo and Michael Kremer, as announced on Monday, 14 October. Banerjee, born in 1961 in India, studied at the University of Calcutta and the Jawaharlal Nehru University in Delhi. He got his PhD in 1988 from Harvard University.
Delivering an address at the Brown University 9 October, the 58-year-old slammed the Indian government, stating that institutions were turning into “zombies” and the centre’s big-ticket economic decisions were responsible for the “demand problem,” reported NDTV.
He added that institutions in India went from being “hyperactive to zombies” and the latter was worse as it means that they are now “completely frozen.”
Banerjee also pointed that a combination of demonetisation and GST implementation has created a “demand problem.”
"In addition, there is a demand problem. And this is a combination of demonetisation, which had a huge effect on demand and had a multiplier, GST implementation, and also in the monitory policy regime, that basically tries to pin down inflation pretty low," he said.
In the same address at Brown University, former Reserve Bank of India (RBI) Governor Raghuram Rajan has said that “majoritarianism is taking India down a dark path”.
Rajan also said that India was experiencing a weakening of institutions.
Watch Abhijit Banerjee’s the full address here.
(With inputs from NDTV)
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