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India
This Week in AsiaPolitics

India’s Modi expected to curb populist welfare spending in pro-growth budget

  • While Modi may introduce welfare programmes after his recent electoral setback, he would not go overboard with handouts, analysts say

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Supporters carrying cutouts of India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi at an election campaign rally in Pushkar. Photo: AFP
Biman Mukherji
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi is expected to maintain a focus on long-term growth and not steer the economy towards significant populist welfare spending in the coming budget, despite his party losing its outright majority.

Modi’s ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) is dependent on coalition allies in the National Democratic Alliance (NDA) following the loss of 63 seats in the April-June elections, which reduced the BJP’s tally to 240 from 303 seats in 2019.

The next federal budget is expected to be introduced at the beginning of the new parliament’s first session on July 22. Electoral losses have sparked concerns over whether Modi would be tempted to give more handouts rather than focus on reforms.

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India has emerged as the fastest-growing major economy and a focal point for global investors following steps such as introducing productivity-linked incentives for manufacturing, upgrading roads and airports and maintaining financial discipline.

“The relatively poor showing of Modi and the BJP are partly because the voters are trying to push the government to refocus efforts on the economy and improve the lives and livelihoods of the public,” David Tay, head of Asia country risk at BMI, told a webinar titled “The Modi Operandi: India’s Outlook Post-Election on June 5.”

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The BJP fared poorly in states where it tried to push a Hindu nationalist agenda like Uttar Pradesh, where Modi presided over a high-profile opening of a temple to the Hindu god Ram at the site of a disputed mosque in January, according to Tay.

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