13 May,2026 08:58 AM IST | Mumbai | Mitil Chokshi
People wait with empty LPG cylinders to avail the refilled ones in Dharavi on March 12. File pic/Shadab Khan
The Prime Minister's austerity message must not be heard merely as an appeal for restraint. It must be decoded as a serious macroeconomic signal. Growth was never going to be a one-way street.
This is not about switching off one light, saving one litre of fuel, or postponing one purchase. This is about protecting India's external stability at a time when the global economy is once again becoming uncertain.
CA Dr Mitil Chokshi is a senior partner at Chokshi & Chokshi
To understand the economics behind this announcement, we must realise that India is not just a growth economy; it is also an import-dependent economy. We import a large part of our crude oil, gold, fertilisers, edible oils and many critical industrial inputs.
Charting the trail, we will see when global crude prices rise, when shipping routes become risky, and when geopolitical tensions disturb supply chains, the pressure does not remain outside our borders. It enters our trade deficit. It pressures the rupee. It increases inflation. It affects government finances. And ultimately, it reaches the common household.
PM Narendra Modi. File pic
Every unnecessary dollar spent on oil, gold, luxury imports or avoidable foreign travel has to be earned through exports, financed through capital flows, or defended through foreign exchange reserves. That is the hard truth of external economics. Hence, why spend foreign exchange when the same product can be bought in rupees?
When the Prime Minister speaks of austerity, the message is clear: reduce avoidable dollar demand before the situation forces tougher policy action.
Fuel conservation is not just a moral duty; it is an economic necessity. Oil is India's biggest external vulnerability. Once again, see the pattern. A crude price shock first widens the import bill, then pressures the rupee, then raises transport costs and finally pushes up food and retail inflation.
People wait with empty LPG cylinders to avail the refilled ones in Mumbai on March 27. File pic/PTI
An oil shock never remains an oil shock. It becomes an inflation shock. It becomes a fiscal shock. It becomes a household budget shock. Indians not wasting on travel to the office, and reverting to the same work from home during COVID is a wise choice. This should have been announced within a week of the war, but like they say, better late than never.
Gold is another example. We love gold culturally, emotionally, and financially. Yet, economically, gold imports are a direct foreign exchange outflow. When we buy imported gold in excess, we are also importing pressure on the current account deficit. The more Indian rupees that circulate within India, like during COVID, the more efficient future growth will be.
The fertiliser issue is equally important. Fertiliser prices are linked to global energy markets. If costs rise, either the farmer pays more, or the government subsidy bill rises. Both outcomes affect the economy. Services should be completely procured from Indian entities only; some more joint services by âMade in India' entities should be mandatory, and countries like South Africa, France, and China have done these in the past. No harm in customised replication.
Therefore, this austerity call is not anti-growth. It is pro-stability. It is not about stopping consumption. It is about distinguishing productive consumption from avoidable leakage. Markets will read this message carefully. Import-heavy sectors, crude-sensitive sectors, companies with dollar borrowings, logistics, aviation, chemicals, and consumer discretionary businesses may feel pressure. At the same time, exporters, domestic manufacturing, energy efficiency, and import-substitution businesses may gain relevance. Already, we are seeing that defence outlay to Indian entities is increasing!
The punchline is simple: this is not a crisis announcement, but it is a cautionary signal. India's growth story is strong. Despite significant outflows from FPIs, the Stock markets have held up firm. But even a strong economy must respect external shocks. Austerity, in this context, is not weakness. It is preparedness. We are staring at a weaker rupee and more expensive life due to the rising import bill, but we have seen worse days in the 1990s and are smart Indians who know how to optimise. In economics, confidence and consumption matter. Growth matters too. Optimisation, indigenousness, thinking Indian at every step is key. Decoding for the layman, we can say reach out for your pizza and pasta, but when cooking it, go for âdesi' ingredients. When on pizza or pasta, I end with a cheeky or saucy sign-off. May the sauce be with us.
The punchline is simple: this is not a crisis announcement, but it is a cautionary signal. India's growth story is strong. Despite significant outflows from FPIs, the Stock markets have held up firm. But even a strong economy must respect external shocks. Austerity, in this context, is not weakness. It is preparedness. Decoding for the layman, we can say reach out for your pizza and pasta, but when cooking it, go for âdesi' ingredients.
CA Dr Mitil Chokshi is a senior partner at Chokshi & Chokshi