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Indian budget: a balancing act that cannot long be sustained
By Deepal Jayasekera
23 March 2005
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The budget that Indias Congress-led coalition government
presented February 28 shrouded neo-liberal measures in populist
rhetoric and gestures.
Finance Minister Palaniappan Chidambaram claimed the budgetthe
second he has delivered since the United Progressive Alliance
(UPA) coalition came to office last Mayconstitutes an assault
on poverty and unemployment. But the UPAs much-trumpeted
emphasis on alleviating hunger and economic distress was belied
by the budgets meagre social spending increases and its
pursuit of the Indian bourgeoisies export-led growth strategy,
which aims to make India a cheap labour haven for international
capital.
Indian big business applauded the budget, with the Bombay Stock
Exchanges benchmark index reaching a record high on budget
day. B. Muthuraman, managing director of Tata Steel, declared
it a good budget with a long-range focus which is likely
to stimulate demand as well as investment. Tarun Das of
the Confederation of Indian Industry said the budget meant economic
reforms are on track. There are so many positives that it
is difficult to find negatives.
The reaction of foreign money managers was more circumspect,
with several warning that the flow of foreign direct investment
(FDI) into India could slow if the government doesnt both
increase spending on transport, telecommunications and energy
infrastructure and aggressively reduce the budget deficit.
Key budget measures included:
* An almost 15 percent reduction in corporate taxes. Henceforth,
the tax rate on corporate profits will be 30 rather than 35 percent.
* A reduction in personal income tax rates for the more privileged
sections of the middle class.
* Removal of many financial sector regulations so as to enable
private banks to attract more capital. Complained Chidambaram,
There are many banks in India but none among the top twenty
in the world.
* Lifting of a ban on foreign investment in the mining industry
and private pension plans.
* Significant cuts in customs duties on a large range of goods,
including capital goods and parts in the textiles, leather and
footwear, pharmaceutical, and biotechnology industries. I
intend, said Chidambaram in his budget speech, to
advance the Governments declared policy of making the customs
duty structure closer to that of our East Asian neighbors.
* The scrapping of regulations that gave the small-scale (largely
artisanal) sector a monopoly over the production of 108 items.
* Increased reliance on consumption taxesthe Value Added
Tax will now be imposed at the state as well as the Union levelrather
than seeking to raise revenue by taxing the incomes of the rich,
including forcing compliance with existing personal income tax
laws. (Last year, only 80,000 Indians declared an assessable income
in excess of Rs. 1 million or $23,000.)
* A further substantial increase in military spending. The
budget raises the defence budget by 7.8 percent to Rs. 830 billion
($19.1 billion). This is on top of the 17.92 percent increase
that Chidambaram announced in last summers budget, meaning
that in the space of little more than seven months India has increased
its military expenditure by more than a quarter.
While Indias elite claims to be pursuing a peace dialogue
with Pakistan, it is also pressing ahead with plans to make India
one of the worlds principal military powers. More than 40
percent of the military budget is allocated to the purchase of
new weapons and weapon-systems. This will enable us to go
ahead with some vital hi-tech weapons systems, boasted Defence
Minister Pranab Mukherjee.
A mounting social crisis
To its own surprise, the UPA was propelled into office last
May on a wave of popular anger over the increased poverty, economic
insecurity, and social inequality that have resulted from the
dismantling of Indias nationally regulated economy. During
last years election campaign, the Congress, the traditional
ruling party of the Indian bourgeoisie, boasted that it had initiated
Indias 1991 turn to export-led growth. At the same time,
the Congress made a carefully calibrated appeal to popular discontent,
claiming that it would pursue economic reforms with a human
face.
Having formed the government with the parliamentary support
of the Stalinist-led Left Front, the Congress-led UPA has pressed
forward with neo-liberal reforms, while posturing as a government
concerned with doing the greatest good for the greatest
number.
The budget did raise social spending, but many of the increases
were token, and overall they constitute a band-aid under conditions
in which much of India is haemorrhaging.
According to the World Bank, 35 percent of Indians live on
less than $1 a day. Forty-seven percent of Indian children who
are three or under are undernourished, and 51 percent suffer from
severe to moderate anaemia. Indias mortality rate for children
five and under is amongst the highest in the world. Adult literacy
is generously said to be 57 percent.
During last springs election campaign, the Congress promised
to address the unemployment crisis that stalks rural India and
the urban slums by guaranteeing at least 100 days paid employment
per year on public works projects for at least one member of every
needy family. This promise was subsequently included in the Common
Minimum Programme that is supposed to constitute the UPAs
governmental agenda. But even this minimal guarantee has been
abandoned, with the government limiting the program to only the
countrys 150 most impoverished districts and giving itself
the right to cancel it at any time and to pay wages below the
minimum wage.
The budget allocated just Rs. 110 billion or about $2.5 billion
for the employment guarantee and the current food-for-work programme,
much of it taken from other poverty relief programs.
UPA leaders made much of the fact that the government increased
funding for health caretogether, all levels of the Indian
government currently spend less than 1 percent of GDP per annum
on health careto Rs. 71.56 billion ($1.6 billion) and for
primary education to Rs. 102.8 billion ($2.35 billion). Under
Indias constitution, the states have much of the responsibility
for funding health care and education, but given that the most
important fiscal levers are in the hand of the Union government,
these figures are nothing short of appalling. The Union governments
combined expenditure on health care and primary education totals
little more than a fifth of what it spends on the military.
The Left Front, which is led by the Communist Party of India
(Marxist) or CPM, has justified its support for the Congress-led
UPA government on the grounds that it is the only means of keeping
the Hindu-supremacist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), which dominates
the rival National Democratic Alliance (NDA), from office and
that the UPA can be pressured into tempering its neo-liberal agenda.
In the run-up to the budget, the Left Front repeatedly issued
appeals to the Congress to pursue pro-people policies and not
take its parliamentary support for granted. The resolution the
CPM leadership has prepared for its coming 18th Congress even
concedes that the UPA government is pursuing the same policies
of liberalisation and privatisation that the BJP-led NDA
regime did.
Yet predictably, the CPM Politbureau hailed the budget as a
welcome shift towards emphasising employment generation, development
of infrastructure especially in rural areas and investment in
social sectors, before going on to complain that the the
actual expenditures visualised...fall far short of our expectations.
The CPM statement goes on to raise concerns that the UPA government
has made unwarrantedly optimistic revenue projections and that
the failure to raise the budgeted funds could well result in the
scaling back of social spending.
Foreign investors press for quicker implementation
of neo-liberal reforms
The truth is the UPA budget is a precarious balancing act that
cant long be maintained under conditions of a mounting social
crisis in India, an increasingly unstable global economy, and
the fiscal constraints under which the Indian government is operating.
The budgets revenue projections are predicated on India
continuing to experience annual growth of at least 7 percent.
Such a growth rate is in turn dependent on large foreign investment
inflows and continued double-digit export growth.
Both are potentially at risk. The annual economic survey the
finance minister tabled as a prelude to his budget warned that
if India does not significantly increase its FDI from the $5 billion
recorded in 2004, the current growth rate is likely unsustainable.
A worldwide economic slowdown or a crisis in the world monetary
system provoked by the gargantuan US trade, budget and current
accounts deficits would severely affect foreign investment and
Indias exports.
These threats aside, foreign investors are demanding that the
UPA accelerate the pace of the economic reform programme. In particular,
they want the government to curb expenses, channel more state
expenditure into the development of economically productive
infrastructure, and gut labour laws that raise the cost of laying
off and firing workers. Such changes will adversely affect hundreds
of millions of Indians, including the poorest.
In presenting his budget, Chidambaram was at pains to explain
that while the government had violated an NDA law that calls for
the budget deficit to be cut by at least 0.3 percent in GDP terms
per year, this would not happen again. I was left,
said Chidambaram with no option [but] to press the pause
button vis-à-vis the [deficit] reduction act. I may add
that we are perilously close to the limits of fiscal prudence
and there is no more room for spending beyond our means.
Representatives of international capital have expressed their
displeasure over Chidambarams failure to comply with the
fiscal responsibility law. Standard & Poors
credit analyst Ping Chew, complained The 2005/2006 budget
does not provide for any significant reduction in the fiscal deficit,
following a rather modest reduction in the previous year.
For his part, Stephen Roach, chief economist at Morgan Stanley,
said that the budget had not done enough to boost infrastructure
and FDI. If these trends turn out to be harbingers of more
backtracking ahead, Roach warned, all bets could be
off on the Indian growth miracle.
Chidambaram and the UPA government are well aware of the demands
of foreign capital and Indian big business. The anti-poverty rhetoric
and Stalinist parliamentary support serve as a cover behind which
the Congress-led UPA is pushing forward with neo-liberal reforms,
including preparing the terrain for major cuts to subsidies and
labour law reform.
In his budget speech, Chidambaram vowed to take up the
task of restructuring the subsidy regime and said a working
group has been constituted to consider a new pricing scheme
for fertiliseri.e. cutting the fertiliser subsidy.
The Finance Ministrys Economic Survey delivered
a far blunter message, tying the dismantling of subsidies to a
push to build a productive and internationally competitive
agriculture structure. The Survey advocates cutting
subsidies that support higher crop prices and lower the cost of
fertiliser, irrigation and power for farmers.
In the industrial sector, the Economic Survey demanded
relaxing rules on the closing down of units and linked the far
greater FDI attracted by China to its much more business-friendly
labour regime.
See Also:
Congress-led government
offers band-aid to haemorrhaging rural India
[16 December 2004]
Indian Stalinists
alliance with the Congress-led UPA: a trap for the working class
[7 October 2004]
Political earthquake
in India: Hindu supremacist BJP falls from power
[15 May 2004]
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