Economic agenda Global crisis calls for fresh thinking
by
Arun Kumar
CESP,SSS,JNU
CESP,SSS,JNU
The Tribune May 25, 2009
The Congress as the
dominant partner of the UPA is back in the saddle in New Delhi . It is being argued that there is a
mandate for the new government to carry out some of what it wanted to do in its
previous term but could not — privatisation or labour or insurance reforms. Has
the public endorsed the UPA’s dominant economic agenda? Economic issues hardly
came up in the election campaign because the Opposition lacked clarity on their
importance.
The only
economic issue that stirred the pot was the more than a trillion dollars of
black wealth stashed abroad in tax havens by corrupt Indians — politicians,
businessmen and others. As such, claiming endorsement is an overstatement. The
mandate for the UPA is made up of victories in different states for different
reasons. In West Bengal , it was the
anti-people attitude of the ruling Left Front on the SEZ issue (like in
Nandigram), the anti-farmer attitude in Singur and, more recently, in Lalgarh.
In Kerala, it was the internal divisions in the CPM that helped.
In Tamil
Nadu, it was the Sri Lankan situation that tilted the balance. In Andhra
Pradesh and UP, the multi-cornered contests helped and in Maharashtra
the undermining of the Shiv Sena by the MNS and so on. This is not to argue
that there was not a 2 per cent swing of votes in favour of the Congress and
that this is important in multi-cornered contests, but that this is not a
massive swing as is being made out and used to push for pro-business policies.
The
business lobbies are reading in the victory a chance of getting more
concessions. However, if anything, the swing in the rural areas is due to the
implementation of NREGA and loan waiver schemes in the last phase of the UPA
regime. It may be recalled that these schemes were launched under pressure from
the liberal and left opinion in the country and were opposed by the corporate
lobbies in the UPA. So, the mandate is for the pro-poor and not pro-business
policies.
The
mandate is being misinterpreted deliberately but worse, the policies being
pushed for by the vested interests are a prescription for aggravating the
economic crisis which has deepened globally. We cannot escape it because we are
far more integrated with the world today than earlier. The government has
managed to keep under wraps the actual economic situation by repeatedly harping
on the rate of growth being above 6.1 per cent and that things would improve in
six months — keep the lollypop dangling.
Currently,
large parts of the economy are experiencing negative growth — the industrial
sector, exports, agriculture and major segments of the services sector like
transportation, retail trade, real estate, finance and tourism. Thus, the
current (and not the average) rate of growth will be close to zero, if not
negative. If any projections are to be made, these need to be made from the
current trends and not the average of the past year.
Recent
reports indicate that the US ,
Japan
and the Euro zone are going deeper into recession, and the IMF in its last
report suggested that currently we are at the beginning of the crisis. So,
things are likely to get worse in the coming year(s). Chances of a recovery
seem to be slim, in spite of the massive fiscal deficits created the world
over. The recent sharp rise in the stock markets does not necessarily reflect a
turn-around because they have not proved to be good indicators of the health of
the economy. They have risen several times during the last one and a half years
only to fall steeply.
The work
of the new government is now cut out — to stop the economic slide and the
steeply declining employment. While inflation rates are low, food prices are
still rising. This is bad when wages are under pressure due to rising unemployment.
The retrenchments started with the ad hoc and temporary workers which do not
show up in the statistics. After the Jet Air fiasco of mass retrenchments, now
companies are retrenching permanent staff members piecemeal.
Today the
fiscal deficit is over 12 per cent of GDP and likely to climb as the tax
revenue collection falls short. According to the RBI data, the corporate
sector’s post-tax profits fell by 17 per cent in April-December 2008-09 while
they rose by 28.6 per cent in the comparable period of the previous year.
Worse, in the third quarter of 2008-09 they fell by 53.4 per cent, indicating a
deepening slowdown. A few sectors may be doing well, but one swallow does not
make a spring.
Due to the
slowdown, corporate tax collection, the largest source of taxes now, is likely
to fall short of the targets. It would also mean less excise duty collection
(in addition to the decline due to the duty cut announced). Further, due to the
rapidly declining imports, customs duty collection would also fall short. For
the states there would be less sales tax collection, etc. Due to the decline in
the real estate activity, transfer changes will also show a drop. Therefore,
there would be little scope for the government to offer more concessions to
businesses without worsening the fiscal deficit further.
It is also
known that concessions (including in taxes) may not increase the demand but a
rise in government expenditure certainly does so and especially in labour-
intensive sectors. For this, taxes need to be increased, otherwise deficit
would rise further. This strategy would also mitigate the difficulties faced by
workers. As argued in these columns last year, preventing unemployment from
worsening is important to control social and political problems because once
they take hold in a society, economic policies become ineffective.
Indira
Gandhi in 1971 got 352 seats and Rajiv Gandhi in 1984 got 414 seats but both
lost the mandate within three years. Today, the Congress has only 200-odd seats
and if problems grow the UPA allies have shown that they can quickly act pricey
and/or switch sides, aggravating the situation.
The
deepening global crisis requires new thinking. US President Barack Obama has
already argued for creating jobs in Buffalo
rather than in Bangalore .
There is a rising tide of protectionism and this is not going to end soon.
There is also talk of reform of the IMF and the World Bank, and
re-architecturing of the global financial system. We have to work out our stand
on all this. There is no time to make mistakes and learn from them because of
the speed of the evolving global crisis.
Alan
Greenspan, who was considered “God” by the financial markets and who was the
Fed chief from the late eighties onward, has admitted that he was wrong and
that financial markets are not self-correcting. So, the free market ideology is
in for a major overhaul.
Further,
in the US
and elsewhere, assets are getting socialised with the government buying into
major companies both from the financial and real world. This can only rise as
bankruptcies increase. So, if we do not have policy makers whose mindset is
different from that which has been in evidence in the last 18 years, we quickly
race towards a deeper social crisis.
arunkumar1000@hotmail.com