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Indian budget: pro-business agenda dressed up in a pro-poor
disguise
By Deepal Jayasekera
24 July 2004
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The first budget of Indias new Congress-led government,
brought down on July 8, amounts to a confidence trick aimed at
duping the rural and urban poor, many of whom voted for the coalition
in May as a means of expressing their hostility to the economic
policies of the previous administration.
Finance Minister Palaniappan Chidambaram presented a budget
designed above all to reassure big business and foreign investors
that the basic economic framework of the former Bharatiya Janatha
Party (BJP)-led government would remain intact. Chidambaram and
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh were well aware that failure to
do so would result in an immediate adverse reaction by the markets.
Both Chidambaram and Singh are former finance ministers who,
in the 1990s, championed the program of economic restructuring
that has deepened the countrys immense social divide between
rich and poor. Singh was only installed as prime minister after
share prices plunged in the aftermath of the election, forcing
Congress leader Sonia Gandhi to step aside in favour of a figure
who would bolster business confidence.
At the same time, Chidambaram had to dress up his budget as
being pro-poor and pro-rural in order
to placate voters. He did this with a series of largely empty
gestures, which failed to meet Congresss limited election
promises or the common minimum program agreed with its coalition
partners in the United Progressive Alliance (UPA) and with the
Left Front. The minority government relies on the Left , led by
the Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPI-M), to ensure a parliamentary
majority on key issues.
A central feature of the budget was its acceptance of the constraints
imposed by the previous governments Fiscal Responsibility
and Budget Management Act. These include a limit of 4.4 percent
on the budget deficitdown from 4.6 percent last year. Having
reduced the deficit and included a huge hike in defence spending,
the budget leaves little room for increased spending on desperately
needed social programs.
New programs and measures were announced to help farmers, the
unemployed and the rural poor and to boost education and health.
However, much of this is illusory. For instance, the budget called
for a doubling of agricultural credit in the next three years,
but there are serious doubts that the regional rural banks have
the capacity to do so.
The budget proposed increased funding for agriculture, irrigation
and water schemes. It also included an enhanced subsidy for health
insurance schemes and an accelerated AIDS control program.
However, funding is heavily reliant on enhanced tax revenue collection,
which commentators regard as completely unrealistic. If the projected
tax revenues are not collected, the government will have to breach
the fiscal responsibility legislation and risk the wrath of the
markets, impose new taxes or axe programs.
The government has effectively shelved its election promise
to provide 100 days of employment at minimum wage for one member
of every needy family in Indiaestimated to number between
30 to 40 percent of the total. The pledge, along with others,
has been sent to the Planning Commission for assessment. While
an additional 100 billion rupees ($US2 billion) has been allocated
to the commission, the amount is completely inadequate to meet
the governments promises.
The budget announced food-for-work programs for
150 backward districts, but did not increase the allocations for
the program overall. What is spent in those districts will have
to come from food-for-work measures in other areas.
The overall amount of money assigned for rural development and
employment has in fact declined.
The only significant new social measure is a 2 percent special
tax on top of a range of existing taxes, which is calculated to
raise 40-50 billion rupees annually. The money has been earmarked
to improve basic public education, including the provision of
a nutritious cooked midday meal for all school children.
Even if these programs are actually implemented they will have
a limited impact on the huge social problems confronting the majority
of the population. According to the latest government figures
in 2001, the literacy rate in India is just 65.4 percent. Official
statistics put the number of rural people living below the poverty
line at 193.2 million. Some 30 million people live in urban slums
without access to basic facilities. Life expectancy is 64 and
67 years for males and females respectively.
The government did not hesitate, however, in boosting military
spending by 17.9 percent from 653 to 770 billion rupees. The bulk
of the increase will go toward capital expenditure on sophisticated
new weapons, including combat trainer jets, airborne strategic
radar and an aircraft carrier to enhance Indias strategic
ambitions for regional dominance. The sharp rise in defence spending
highlights the rather uncertain character of talks currently underway
to ease tensions with Indias regional rival Pakistan.
Market reforms
Chidambaram was cautious about immediately pressing ahead with
further economic restructuring. But he declared in his speech
that his goal was to make the environment in India attractive
to investors and announced the establishment of an investment
commission for that purpose. In addition to his pledge of fiscal
responsibility, he announced several new measures designed to
benefit business and boost foreign investment.
The budget lifts the upper limits on foreign direct investment
in key economic sectors, including telecommunications from 49
to 74 percent, civil aviation from 40 to 49 percent and insurance
from 26 to 49 percent. Global corporations have been demanding
greater access to these highly profitable activities for some
time. The ceiling for foreign institutional investors in debt
funds has been raised from $1 billion to $1.75 billion.
The budget slashed the short-term capital gain tax from 33
percent to 10 percent and exempted long-term capital gains completely
from tax. The only new business tax was a 0.15 percent tax on
share transactions on stock exchanges. Chidambaram hinted that
big business would benefit from a major tax overhaul that he foreshadowed
in the next budget.
The government has been compelled, at least temporarily, to
slow the privatisation program, which has provoked widespread
opposition from workers. Rather than outright privatisation, Chidambaram
is emphasising selective disinvestment in profit making
state enterprisesthat is, selling off shares to private
investors. While still publicly owned, these enterprises will
nevertheless be compelled to axe jobs and restructure in order
to maintain profits.
The revenue target from disinvestment is 40 billion rupeesdown
from 145 billion last year. Disinvestments and privatisation
are useful economic tools. We will selectively employ these tools,
consistent with the declared policy, the finance minister
emphasised in his budget speech.
Business leaders generally commended the budget. An article
in the Singapore-based Business Times reported that industrialists
and businessmenwho were out in force at the India conference
[in Singapore] last weekwere satisfied with what Indias
finance minister has dished out. A CEO with a prominent
Indian finance company aptly described the budget as talk
left, act rightin other words, for all its talk of
helping the poor, the budget was in reality assisting business.
Lord Raj Bagri, former head of the London Metal Exchange, expressed
his satisfaction: The process of reform continues, the Indian
government is on the growth path. Thats the message I get
and so does the City (Londons financial hub) and people
who watch India with warmth.
The reaction on the Bombay Stock Exchange was mixed. After
an initial rise, the share index fell by 100 points to 4,855 points
on news of the share transaction tax. Kirit Somaiya, president
of the Investors Grievances Forum, grimly warned:
The turnover tax will ruin the capital market and along
with it the small investors and small traders will perish.
In response to the pressure of the markets, Chidambaram quickly
promised to re-look at the proposal.
As far as the corporate elite is concerned, the budget is simply
a first step. The Singh government will inevitably come under
mounting pressure to slash government spending and subsidies,
sell state assets and amend labour legislation to allow companies
to hire and fire at will.
Significantly the Left Front has raised no major objections
to the budget. A statement issued by the CPI-M Political Bureau
criticised the decision to allow greater foreign investment in
the telecom, insurance and airline sectors. Their criticism, however,
was not on the basis that the decision would effect workers but
rather that it would impact on Indian companies.
The CPI-M leaders have been at pains to reassure big business.
Political Bureau member Sitaram Yechury declared that the party
had no plans to oppose or amend the budget in parliament. When
in power at the state level in Kerala and West Bengal, the CPI-M
and its left allies have openly touted for investment
and imposed their own economic restructuring plans.
As Congress proceeds to implement its budget agenda, it will,
like the previous BJP-led administration, encounter growing hostility.
The lack of any principled opposition to the budget from the CPI-M
is a signal to the Singh government and business leaders that
they can count on the Left Front to help defuse and suppress the
opposition that will inevitably emerge to its socially regressive
measures.
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