Friday, October 18, 2019

Household consumption trends in India

In my discussion on household economics in past two days, I have discussed the changes in the composition of household savings, debt and avenues for deployments of savings. (See here and here) over past few years. In the concluding part, I would like to highlight some interesting trends in the household consumption in past 5-6years.
Household expenditure in India has grown at a rate of ~13% CAGR over 6years during FY12-FY18.
(i)    The expenditure on health has recorded the highest growth of 17.5% during this period. The available data does not clarify if the rise is due to rise in affordability or rise in incidence of disease. However, the anecdotal evidence suggests that it is a mix of both; though the rise in incidence of disease may account for almost three fourth of the incremental expenditure on health.
(ii)   Miscellaneous goods and services now account for one sixth of the total household expenditure, and have the highest share in consumption basket after food. Personal care expenditure accounts for almost 8% of this category.
(iii)  Clothing and footwear account have the same share as education. Footwear is growing at the rate of 16% CAGR. Affordability is one major factor in this. But a more significant factor is the social reform. A lot of people from socially backward communities who were traditionally not allowed to use footwear are now using it.
(iv)   Household are spending almost double the sum on communication as compared to recreation and culture. Spending on festivals etc seems to growing at much slower pace.
(v)    Food and non-alcoholic beverages account for just one fourth of the total household expenditure. The inflation basket needs to take cognizance of this fact. In this category Meat is the fastest growing item, growing @16% CAGR. Seafood and Eggs are also growing over 13%. Milk, edible oils, Sugar are the slowest growing categories. Non Specified food items (Junk Food) is growing at 20% CAGR.
(vi)   Alcohol, tobacco and narcotics account for 2% of the consumption basket. But the fastest growing element in this is narcotic which is growing @14% CAGR.
(vii)  Expenditure on transport accounts (15%) for more than health, education and communication taken together. It is growing at a faster rate of ~14% CAGR vs overall expenditure growth of ~13%CAGR. The fastest growing element in this category is "cost of operation of personal vehicles", which is growing over 16% CAGR. Poor public transport and misplaced priorities of household could be responsible for this trend.
(viii) Housing (rent, water, electricity) and house maintenance (furnishing, appliances etc) account for one sixth of the household expenditure and growing in proportion to the overall expenditure. In this category, Furniture, carpets and home textile is the fastest growing segment. Electricity and Water expenses are growing 13-15% CAGR.
(ix)   Education now accounts for ~7% of total household expenditure and this expense is growing ~15% CAGR. The consumer inflation basket may not be accounting for this category appropriately.
A deeper study is needed for this category. The high growth rate in this category may not necessarily mean higher affordability or improving skill conditions. The anecdotal evidence suggests that "private education & coaching", which essentially indicates to abject failure of public education system, may be a significant part of the expenditure on this item.
(x)    The slowest growing consumption category for households is mineral water, soft drinks & juices.


 

Thursday, October 17, 2019

Indian household finances

Continuing from yesterday (see here).
As per the latest data available from CSO, the demonetization appears to have a material impact on the financial savings of the Indian household. The composition of financial savings deployment has changed substantially in the period following demonetization. The currency in hands of people has seen a sharp jump mainly at the expense of bank deposits.
Another interesting feature of the changes in household savings deployment is rise in private financial securities, e.g., shares & debentures of private companies and units of mutual funds. This component of household savings deployment has seen decent growth post FY16. This trend has in fact been much talked about in popular discourse.
Three key take away from this trend are -
(i)    Most of the growth in this component may be coming from shift of bank deposits, confirming the trend that corporates are now increasingly seeking funds directly from public as against banks (see here);
(ii)   Stagnant real wages in private sectors might be forcing people to look out for higher return on savings; and
(iii)  Despite the recent rise in the proportion of private securities component in household savings, the ratio is still far below the highs seen during mid 1990s or even during years immediately preceding the global financial crisis.
The key highlights of the components of household savings could be noted as follows:
  • The currency component in household savings almost doubled to 25% of gross financial savings (GFS) in FY18, from 13% of GFS in FY16.
Prima facie it appears that not only the entire currency that was deposited in the banks during demonetization (FY17) has been withdrawn from the banks in subsequent year (FY18), but the households are keen to hold more currency in hand rather than deposit in the banks. This could be due to sharp rise in working capital requirement in the self owned cottage, micro and small scale enterprises.
  • The bank deposits surprisingly saw a deep contraction to ~28% of GFS in FY18, from 43% of GFS in pre demonetization period. This is rather counterintuitive.
  • The deployment in private securities (shares, debentures and mutual fund units) increased to 3.4% of GFS in FY18 from 1.9% of GFS in FY16. This rise came mainly from contraction in bank deposits from 43% in FY16 to 28.6% of GFS in FY18.
  • The financial security (pension funds and provident funds) savings have grown steadily from 10% of GFS in FY11 to ~20% of GFS in FY18.
However, insurance has not seen any sustained change in household savings deployment. Insurance payments accounted for 21% of GFS in FY11 and ~19% of GFS in FY18.
  • High real rates in the economy in past couple of years are fully reflected by the sharp increase in the small savings and other government securities like KVP etc.
This component has been steadily more than 4% of GFS during FY16-FY18. Incidentally this is the period when the government's reliance on small savings to fund fiscal deficit has risen the most.
See this space for trends in household consumption trends.