|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: India
Indias policy on Special Economic Zones under fire
By Jake Skeers
27 October 2006
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
Only eight months ago, when the Indian governments Special
Economic Zones (SEZ) legislation commenced, it was touted as a
lever to modernise Indias infrastructure and economy for
the coming decades. Today, business and political commentators
are already branding the SEZ law a failure.
The SEZs were promoted by Commerce Minister Kamal Nath as creating
a large flow of foreign and domestic investment that would bridge
the gap between China and India in infrastructure and exports,
and create massive employment opportunities.
The Congress party-led government sought to attract companies
to the zones by exempting them from licenses and duties on imported
goods and allowing the free repatriation of profits. The commerce
ministrys web site described the SEZs as designated
duty free enclaves to be treated as foreign territory for trade
operations and duties and tariffs.
In addition, the government offered companies operating in
SEZs a tax holiday for the first five years and a 50 percent tax
reduction for the next five years. SEZ developers receive ten
years tax-free.
Although the commerce ministry continues to tout the zones,
the International Monetary Fund, Indias finance ministry
and the Reserve Bank of India have criticised the policy in recent
weeks. All have pointed to hundreds of proposed or approved SEZs
that are far too small to improve Indias performance in
the long term. These SEZs have proved to be little more than tax
loopholes for real estate speculators and developers.
The commerce ministrys Board of Approvals has authorised
181 SEZs and endorsed another 128 in principle. A
developer can set up an SEZ on as little as 10 hectares. The average
size of the approved SEZs in Indian is only 420 hectares, compared
to zones of 40,000 hectares or more in China.
On September 14, the IMF research director Raghuram Rajan described
Indias SEZ policy as a tax give-away that was
likely to shift Indian production to SEZs rather than create new
economic activity. He said the zones would be viable only if they
focused on providing superior infrastructure, business-friendly
regulations and exemptions from labour laws rather than
offering often misdirected subsidies, guarantees, and tax sops
that a stretched budget can ill-afford.
Business leaders are pushing for more pro-corporate labour
laws, regulations, land zoning and taxation across the country,
not just in the SEZs.
In many cases, the SEZs are little more than real estate ventures
rather than production zones. The rules require only that 35 percent
of a SEZ be devoted to productive activity. A developer can use
the rest of the land to build apartments, hotels and commercial
offices.
Significantly, the SEZ Act facilitates the forceful acquisition
of land for conversion to other uses, providing a massive windfall
to the developers. This measure has already provoked opposition
from farmers.
The finance ministry complained that existing or planned investment
would simply be diverted into the SEZs. According to its calculations,
the resulting loss in direct taxes, customs and excise duties
would be 900 billion rupees ($US19.5 billion) by 2009-10.
On September 21, Congress party president Sonia Gandhi also
expressed opposition. She said, prime agricultural land
should not normally be diverted to non-agricultural uses
and called for satisfactory compensation to be paid when land
was taken over. Her comments were followed by a string of similarly
empty comments by other Congress leaders designed to quell growing
discontent among farmers.
The government sought to dispel the media speculation about
the SEZ policy by presenting a united face at an October 7 meeting.
Finance Minister P Chidambaram said he and the commerce minister
had agreed on the SEZ policy. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh declared
that the policy would not change.
Despite the governments determination to proceed, the
flaws and criticisms of the SEZs are a significant blow to the
Indian corporate elite. New Delhi designed the SEZ policy to give
an impetus to the private sector to overcome Indias massive
infrastructure problems, which are widely acknowledged an impediment
to investors.
A recent Financial Times article described the situation.
While manufacturers are attracted to Indias low-cost
environment and burgeoning domestic market, they are worried about
moving their goodsbe it cars, mobile phones or textilesthrough
the countrys poor network of roads, overburdened airports
and clogged ports. Power cuts can force business to a grinding
halt.
Indian economic planners have long envied China which has devoted
large swathes of land to SEZs and provided government-financed
infrastructure to developers. Commerce Minister Nath tried to
put a positive spin on his policy, declaring: India will
have a very India specific model as we do not have large lands
available. Unlike India, Chinas nationalised land
and police state laws have facilitated the forcible acquisition
of areas for SEZs.
Indian farmers are protesting against the forced acquisition
of their lands. In the Raigad district of Maharashtra, the state
government has served acquisition notices on 20 villages with
1,200 farmers to make way for the Mumbai Special Economic Zone
(MSEZ), to be developed by the giant Reliance Group. The villagers
have stopped Reliance officials setting foot on the land.
This land is particularly valuable to the farmers because of
the promised, but not delivered, irrigation water from the 1980
Hetwane Dam project. Now the state government is forcibly buying
the land for a pittance even though its market value is expected
to jump by over 15 times when rezoned.
Thousands of farmers have attended protests addressed by the
Communist Party of India (Marxist). The CPI(M) and other Left
Front parties claim to oppose the SEZ Act, but in reality are
proposing minor modifications to the policy. The CPI(M) calls
for the allocation of 50 percent, rather than 35 percent, of land
in an SEZ to productive activity and an end to the forcible acquisition
of prime agricultural land.
The CPI(M)s opposition is particularly hollow given its
crucial support in passing the SEZ legislation in May 2005. The
party voted for the package in both the Lok Sabha (lower house)
and Rajya Sabha (upper house). The CPI(M)s role on the SEZ
law is similar to other social issuesto act as a political
safety valve for protests and popular opposition, while providing
the Congress-led government with crucial parliamentary support.
The Left Front government in West Bengal, headed by CPI(M)
chief minister Buddhadev Bhattacharjee is at the forefront of
forcefully acquiring land for SEZs. In the past year, it has acquired
land for industrial zones for Tata, Reliance and Indonesias
Salim group. Much of the land acquired in Singur for the Tata
car manufacturing complex was agricultural land, provoking determined
protests by hundreds of farmers.
See Also:
India's prime minister pledges to accelerate
neo-liberal "reform"
[21 October 2006]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |