Indian budget sharply increases military spending
By Keith Jones
4 June 1998
India's BJP-led government has sharply hiked military spending
in its first budget. Tabled June 1, the budget increases military
expenditure by 14 percent, to $12.4 billion--about 19 percent
of the Union government's total spending. Meanwhile, the budgets
of two military-related departments, the Atomic Energy Commission,
which is in charge of India's civilian and military nuclear programs,
and the Department of Space, which supervises India's missile
program, were raised by 68 and 62 percent respectively.
Finance Minister Yashwant Sinha said he would return to Parliament
to seek authorization for further increases in military spending
should the government decide to take its nuclear program a step
further and arm Indian missiles with nuclear warheads. Last month
Defence Minister George Fernandes said "weaponization"
was "necessary" and "inevitable."
Sinha and other BJP spokesmen tried to take the edge off criticism
of the government's priorities by pointing to significant percentage
increases in spending on education, health and anti-poverty programs.
But the total expenditure on education, health and social programs,
about $2.6 billion, is only marginally higher than the amount
to be spent on new tanks and other weapons. According to the government's
own figures, barely 50 percent of India's adult population is
literate, almost 200 million lack access to clean water and more
than 300 million survive on less than 50 cents per day.
As expected, the budget outlined plans for large-scale privatizations
and the opening up of the insurance sector to foreign investment.
The previous United Front government announced similar plans,
but was unable to proceed because of popular opposition to the
massive job cuts they entail.
To the surprise of most observers, the budget made no provision
for the impact of the sanctions imposed by the US, Japan and several
other Western powers in protest against the Indian government's
detonation of five nuclear devices last month. Many are predicting
that a supplementary budget will be necessary.
The BJP government's nuclear tests and threats against Pakistan
over Kashmir have been largely aimed at consolidating power in
New Delhi, both by projecting itself as the defender of the "nation"
and diverting attention from wrangling amongst its coalition partners.
In the immediate aftermath of the nuclear tests, the government
did benefit from a groundswell of popular support, with virtually
the entire political opposition joining in the accolades. But
in recent days the government has again staggered. First, its
razor-thin parliamentary majority was placed in question when
a regional ally in West Bengal, the Trinumal Congress, announced
it was suspending support for the government. It did so in order
to press its demand for the Union government to invoke emergency
constitutional provisions and sack the Communist Party of India-led
state government. Subsequently, the finance minister caved into
public pressure and slashed the nearly 4 rupee hike in petrol
prices announced in his budget to 1 rupee.
In Pakistan, meanwhile, the finance minister has vowed to slash
all "non-development" spending, so as to increase spending
on the military which already, along with debt payments, consumes
the lion's share of the national budget.
The prospect of a fourth Indo-Pak war and a nuclear arms race
in Asia has prompted a flurry of diplomatic activity by the major
capitalist powers. However, at every point their efforts to contain
the crisis have been hobbled by their attempts to use it to bolster
their own claims for influence in South Asia. France has called
for a meeting of all seven acknowledged nuclear powers. Japan
has offered to sponsor talks on the Kashmir question. The US,
meanwhile, is putting stock on a meeting of representatives of
the five permanent members of the UN Security Council.
See Also:
Pakistan explodes nuclear
device
Gathering war clouds in South Asia
[30 May 1998]
Stalinism and the rise of the
Hindu-chauvinist BJP
[26 May 1998]
Mounting regional tensions,
domestic political crisis
Behind India's nuclear bomb testing
[16 May 1998]
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