The Black Economy and the Nation’s Ills: Would Churchill feel Justified?
Arun Kumar
CESP, SSS, JNU
Mainstream, Vol. XLVIII No. 36.
August 28, 2010.
Another Independence day has come and gone with the
usual reflections on the nations achievements and its ills. With the shadow of
another round of ferocious protest/violence in Kashmir ,
the continuing Maoist movement (`the biggest internal security threat’
according to the PM) and inflation troubling the common man and leading to a
united opposition onslaught in Parliament, the mood of the nation and the
rulers was somber. These are the biggest worries but the smaller ones are no
less troublesome – Manipur, Telengana, Bellary , Aligarh and so on. The
difficulties in the nation’s path of development seem to be growing and it
appears to be tottering from crisis to crisis. The euphoria of the UPA II
coming to power last summer and the promise of stability with the Congress (I)
gaining seats in Parliament has dissipated quickly. The PM seems to be in a
limbo, perhaps as he has hinted he is waiting for the prince to ascend the
throne. Would future generations say that `Man twiddled while Delhi burnt’?
Major scams routinely grab the nation’s attention.
Minor scams hardly draw public attention even though they affect the citizens
daily, like, exam paper leak, food grain rotting, police recruitment and so on.
The major recent scams are, Commonwealth Games, illegal mining at Bellary,
Satyam, Madhu Koda, charges against a former Chief Justice of India, ongoing
impeachment proceedings against two High Court judges, the PF scam
investigations against HC judges in UP, a Governor resigning due to charges of
inappropriate sexual behaviour in Raj Bhavan, Medical Council of India fraud,
Deemed Universities imbroglio, IPL manipulations, Sukna Land scam involving
some of the senior most Army officers and the allotment of 2G spectrum. The
list is endless. Bofors and the Quattrochi affair are on the verge of being
closed for obvious reasons and will make big headlines some time soon. Amit
Shah case in Gujarat and the Madani case in
Karnataka and Kerala are festering and can blow up any time. The cases against
Lalu, Mulayam, Mayawati and other former Chief Ministers and Ministers are on
the back burner leading to charges of political misuse of the CBI. There is
hardly an agency of the government that retains its credibility in the public
eye.
Reports that papers pertaining to the Emergency are
not traceable, the Home Minister’s admission that the Bhopal papers in the
Anderson fiasco are missing, the severe indictment of Vedanta by the NC Saxena
committee report investigating the illegal mining in the Niyamagiri hills all
point to a system that has been so manipulated by the politicians and the
conniving crooked businessmen that it is collapsing under its own weight.
Bhopal is a classic case of malicious (not benign) neglect of the suffering of
the lakhs affected by the poisonous gas more than 25 years back and now the
parliamentarians admit that they have been (criminally) remiss and must do
something. The PM set up a GOM that is acting in haste to show the government
is finally serious – for how long, till the next big issue blows up.
The sustainability of the path that the nation is on
is increasingly in doubt. The corporate sector has increased its share in
national income so rapidly that less than 0.1% of the population now earns more
than the 50% who depend on agriculture. India boasts of the largest number
of the poor and also some of the richest people in the world. Such growing
disparities between the rich and the poor are promoted by the system which has
put in place `growth at any cost’. This is also leading to large scale
displacement of the poor due to the mega projects being set up indiscriminately
– roads, airports, mines, steel factories, SEZs and so on. People’s experience
is that when they are displaced the vast majority of them only get menial jobs
in these projects or migrate to the slums of the nearby cities to live in
miserable conditions.
Some lucky ones near big cities who get large
compensation for their land mostly blow it up and lose the only security they
had known. The result is increasing social tensions like, in Aligarh and POSCO area. Rapid environmental
degradation is another cost of the `growth at any cost’. This is resulting in
rising health costs neutralizing any increase in incomes of the poor people.
Take the example of the train daily running from Bhatinda to the cancer
hospitals 200 km away and called by the locals the cancer special. Promises to
the people remain unkept because of growing policy failure and poor governance.
Bihar seems to be suddenly in the news because
of its rapid growth but the opposition doubts the statistics which clever
governments are able to manipulate. The growing black economy has a lot to do
with all this.
Problems in J&K, North East, tribal areas and
rural India
are linked to growing corruption. In the case of J&K and the North East,
the common impression amongst the citizens is that the local leadership has
been coopted through corruption and promise of power. The massive resources
poured into some of these states are siphoned out leading to huge inequity
while development remains weak and there is disenchantment with government. In
the case of the Maoist affected rural and tribal areas, development has been
seen to fail while the local businessmen, the politicians and executive has
been seen to fatten (Madhu Koda is the latest example of this). The Centre is
seen to be insincere over long periods of time and has failed the local people
repeatedly so that the issue has transcended from the economic to the political
and the social. In J&K, the various lulls in protest are not utilized to
improve matters because the leadership is incapable of a different vision. By the
time the administration has caught its breath, the next round of strife starts,
triggered by the next perceived attack on the dignity of the people and this is
not difficult because so many things go wrong all the time. The idea of India is
dented, 8% rate of growth not withstanding.
In India ,
everything that can go wrong does so and the leadership only fire fights.
Eighty children die in a school building fire in Nungambakkam in Tamil Nadu and
there is little to reform so children die in Delhi and then elsewhere. Women parade naked
in Manipur in front of the Raj Bhavan to protest atrocities against them and we
forget it. So, in a court in Maharashtra women
get together and kill their tormentor not believing that they would get
justice. Correctives are not put into place because we refuse to learn from our
mistakes – there is resignation, so everything is `chalta hai’ and a `jugaad’.
Innovation is defined in terms of how many rules can be bent, short cuts taken
and the system manipulated. With many fires burning simultaneously, the state
is in a state of siege. It does not know whether to take care of J&K or
corruption in CWG or inflation or Manipur or Amit Shah case or the oil spill
off Mumbai and now the NC Saxena report which would put a spoke in the `growth
at any cost’ strategy. Without a long term view it reacts only when the issue
threatens to go out of hand.
The black economy is now about 50% of GDP or roughly
Rs.30 lakh crores annually. 3% of Indians, the elites, get most of it and the
rest are its victims either paying directly or indirectly for the greed of the
rulers. While having to pay bribe for work or not receiving (or rotten) grains
in PDS maybe counted as direct costs, the indirect costs are due to policy
failure. Schools and dispensaries not functioning as they should, projects
poorly executed and delayed lead to indirect costs through slower development.
The black economy leads to both shortage of resources for development and
ineffectiveness of the expenditures.
The black economy leads to waste. Many activities are
like `digging holes and filling them’, that is, `activity without
productivity’. Roads are repeatedly repaired because funds are siphoned out and
quality of construction is poor so that money for new roads is inadequate. As a
result of unproductive investments and the impact on the nation’s meager
savings that are wasted, the country has been losing 5% rate of growth since
the seventies. It could have grown at 8% in the seventies, 10% in the eighties
and 13% now if the black economy had not been so big. Thus, India could have been at more than
$ 6,000 per capita instead of the current $ 1000 and would have been a middle
income country and not one of the poorest. We would not have had 77% of the
Indians (according to the 2003-04 NSS round) spending less than Rs.20 per
person per day – an abysmal figure.
People in India face some of the most
uncivilized conditions of living anywhere in the world. Lack of drainage, filth
all around their houses and colonies, polluted drinking water even in taps,
lack of toilets and routine power breakdowns are common. This is not due to
shortage of resources. Resources are siphoned out on a huge scale by the elite
rulers and businessmen through flight of capital to tax havens (77 of them) of
which Switzerland
is the best known. No firm estimates exist for how much capital has been lost
in the last sixty years but it could be several trillion dollars including the
interest it would have earned – more than ten times the nation’s foreign debt.
A nation that is supposedly short of capital exports it on a large scale. Not
unlike what has happened in Latin America and Africa .
The massive scale of the black economy is feasible
only if laws are systematically violated. We have got used to violating every
single law - traffic lights, industrial regulation, environmental protection or
forest acts. The black economy is the joint product of the public and the
private sectors, involving a `Triad’ consisting of the businessmen, politicians
and the executive (the bureaucrats the police and the judiciary). Criminals
have entered the Triad as either the businessman or the politician, resulting
in growing criminalization in society. Legislatures are increasingly being
filled by people with criminal cases against them. Our legislators now flaunt
their ill gotten wealth with designer clothes, fancy cars, expensive watches
and so on. They seem to compete to outdo each other. There are exceptions but
these are getting difficult to find because party tickets are not going to the
honest but to those who can manipulate – the fixers are all over the corridors
of power and no party is an exception.
The policy makers who should control the black
economy are not interested since they and their parties are its beneficiaries.
Those in power who are personally financially honest have to look the other way
to survive. Their honesty is only relative and in a systemic sense they too are
dishonest. For a time, they lend credibility to a dishonest system. However,
this does not last and the public becomes disenchanted and cynical over time.
Their appeal to cleanse the system falls on deaf ears and people who are
suffering stop responding to their calls believing them to be insincere.
The German government bought a disc containing the
names of people holding illegal bank accounts in Liechtenstein in 2007. They offered
to share the disc for free with all the governments whose nationals’ names were
in the disc. The governments of US, UK , France immediately took the
data and started prosecution but the Indian government refused to accept it for
two years – perhaps to enable the corrupt to escape. The US government managed to force UBS,
the biggest Swiss bank to pay a fine of $750 million and reveal the names of
about 5000 individuals having accounts with it. The French government bought a
disc containing names of its nationals in another foreign bank and has
initiated prosecution.
In India ,
more than forty committees and commissions have gone into the different aspects
of the black economy and made thousands of recommendations. Hundreds of them
have been implemented over time but the black economy continues its march.
Controls like, FERA, MRTP, small scale reservations and licensing have been
diluted or eliminated. Direct Tax rates have been reduced drastically.
Voluntary disclosure schemes tried repeatedly. But there is little dent on the
black economy. The reason is that the black economy involves illegality and
incomes from such activities cannot be declared however low the tax rates. It
takes several years to set up the systems to make black incomes and once they
are in place with the connivance of the Triad then there is little threat so
making the extra buck becomes easy and there is no reason to dismantle it. The
black economy becomes systematic and systemic and drives the nation towards
ungovernability and dents the idea of India . Colonialists like, Churchill
said India
cannot govern itself; our elite is bent on proving them correct.
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