Planning in a Modern Economy: Is its Role Over in India ?
Arun Kumar
Sukhamoy Chakravarty Chair Professor
CESP, SSS, JNU, N Delhi
110067.
Published in Mainstream,
Vol. LII No. 37. Sept 6, 2014.
The Independence
Day speech of the PM announced that the Planning Commission set up in 1950
would be closed. Given that this institution has played a central role in the
way government functioned in India ,
does this announcement presage a major institutional change in governance in? A
new body/think tank is supposed to replace this institution. Would this proposed
institution essentially do what the Planning Commission did but under a
different name and rubric? One may also ask whether in spite of the many
perceived failures of the Planning Commission in India , planning is still needed?
Big companies in their annual reports announce
plans whether to increase their market share, introduce new products, etc.
Individuals plan to save to build their homes or give their children good
education, etc. Political parties plan to come to power by polarising the
voters, etc. Mr. Modi planned for the last many years to become India ’s
PM. So, we are all planners.
However,
these are all examples of individual or firm level planning while what the
Planning Commission was supposedly doing was economy wide planning. What is the
difference? Those with faith in capitalist ideology oppose system-wide planning
while favouring planning by individuals and firms in a given milieu. After
1991, when the India
embarked on the path of marketization, Planning was downgraded and since then
the role of the Planning Commission has been increasingly questioned. However,
none of the governments since then have eliminated it because they found uses
for it. The Modi government may also need it but is making a political point by
announcing a break from the Nehruvian path of development.
All
economies face the problem of change over time. Time is divided between the
past, present and the future. We are always in the present. The past is already
gone and is a parameter of the system. The real complication is that the future
is ahead and unknown. So, there will always be uncertainty associated with it. What
is planned may not be achieved so that there is failure of expectations and
consequent problems. If we look at the future just ahead, it is a continuation
of the past so not too uncertain. But if we look further ahead, the uncertainty
is larger and the possibility of failure greater.
If
all economic agents act in an atomistic fashion, without any coordination, they
face very large uncertainty. If the aggregate economic system has some
coordination, it gives all the economic agents some guidance to plan their actions
and that reduces the uncertainty for them. But, the aggregate system itself
faces uncertainty which cannot be eliminated. However, it may be moderated by
government actions.
Left to its own
device, a capitalist economy was found to go through business cycles with booms
and busts which is costly, especially for the poor. It is only with increased
government intervention the world over since the mid-1930s that the major
cycles have been moderated and replaced by political business cycles. So, for
individuals and firms in a capitalist economy macro coordination is important. The
global economic downturn starting 2007 did not turn into a depression because
of massive government interventions in the major world economies.
Many successful
economies of today have not had central planning and done well while India
in spite of planning has lagged far behind? So, it is legitimate to ask whether
systemic planning is at all needed? In 1947, India was extremely poor and
backward. The savings rate was 8.6 per cent. Yet, the ambition of the ruling
elite was to copy western modernity and become like a European country. That
required massive investment in infrastructure, like, education, health,
transportation, energy, basic goods and so on. The imperative was that there be
full utilization of scarce resources and elimination of waste through
coordination of economic activity. So, planning was needed as an optimizing
exercise - how best to utilize resources to achieve rapid growth?
The Bombay Plan was
drafted in 1944 by several of the Indian big businessmen associated with the
Congress party. It suggested the need for a large public sector to create the
necessary infrastructure for the economy to modernize since the private sector
was short of capital. The need for optimal use of resources followed from it. The
USSR
had used planning to grow rapidly and was a readymade example to follow. Nehru
and Bose were impressed with the Soviet model and were ready to emulate it.
Modern day
economies face many situations of market failure. In such situations,
neo-classical paradigm suggests the need for government intervention to help
achieve optimality. What the markets cannot achieve has to be obtained via government
intervention. In 1870, governments of OECD countries spent 9% of GDP. By 1990
they were spending 43% of GDP. As economies grew and more and more situations
of market failure came to the fore, government intervention increased. So, it
is not just in the poor countries that government intervention is needed. Markets
are known to work on the basis of `dollar vote’. If one has more purchasing
power one can influence the market more. Markets `marginalize the marginal’.
Thus, they are not able to cater to the basic needs of the poor. The
implication is that the poorer countries need larger government intervention than
the rich countries.
With competing
demands optimization is needed. The Modi government wishes to start 100 mega
cities, eliminate filth and dirt everywhere, start bullet trains and so on; all
commendable ideas. But the government would not spend only on these projects. The
existing schemes would continue. The new projects would have to be initiated
while continuing with most of the existing priorities. How can this be done
without a new prioritization and sequencing which requires planning?
If bullet trains
idea is pursued, it would absorb most of the scarce resources available with
the railways so that the rest of the system would be starved of funds and begin
to breakdown. Thus, overall there may be even greater inefficiency while some
bullet trains run. Thus, a balance will have to be struck. Similarly, if 100 mega
cities are planned and that requires lakhs of crore of investment per city,
then funds for existing cities and villages which are anyway crumbling will fall
further short so that there would be enclaves of development and massive
increase in disparities. Thus, proper prioritization and sequencing is needed
to implement some of these grand schemes.
It is only when there
is overall coordination of investment that the poorer states may have a chance
to catch up. Yet, in spite of coordination through planning commission and
finance commission, disparities across states have increased. Disparities
within states have also increased. Maharashtra ,
one of the most advanced states has Vidarbha which is one of the most backward
areas with a high rate of farmers’ suicides. So, do these examples contradict the
idea that planning is better than no planning? Not really, imagine if coordination
at least at the level of the public sector was not there, how much wider the
disparities would have been. There would have been severe social and political
costs, like, far greater migration and regional conflicts.
Reduction of
disparities and inequalities require a degree of coordination. According to
neo-classical theory, markets cannot affect redistribution so government
intervention is needed. Unfortunately, modern day economies are also plagued by
policy failure. For the Indian economy, the rapid growth of the black economy (presently,
over 50% of GDP) has led to increasing policy failure and non-fulfilment of
targets. Only a fraction of the money sent by the Centre reaches the ground
leading to policy failure. According to Rajiv Gandhi in 1988, only 15 paisa
reaches the ground and according to the Supreme Court, now that figure is even
less. The existence of the black economy leads to lower tax collection so that
the economy appears to be resource short. Due to flight of capital, the
opportunity cost to the economy is more than a trillion dollars in the last 65
years. Black economy also leads to wastage of resources through activities
which are like `digging holes and filling holes’. Thus, the economy operates at
much below its potential.
Planning
has to be ex-ante and not ex-post. At the end of the year, money would have
been spent by the different parts of the economy and by each of the ministries
but it would be uncoordinated (ex-post) but without a vision or an advance plan
(ex-ante). We can list many things like the present government has done but to
implement them one needs to have coordination between various requirements.
In 1977, the
Janata government came to power and proposed a rolling plan to end Plans. But,
it was too busy squabbling and could not push for major changes. However, it
did down grade the public sector and its R&D effort was set back with long
term consequences. For instance, the collaboration between BHEL and the Soviets
was replaced by that with KDW of Siemens which refused to part with technology.
The Fertilizer Corporation (FCI) was split up so that technology for upgrading of
the 900 tons per day plants was lost. The 1350 tons per day plants were
imported.
In 1980, India went to the IMF due to the BOP problems following
severe drought and the Iran
and Afghanistan
problems. That is when the consumerist phase of the economy started and imports
grew sharply. India ’s
foreign debt rose during the decade of 1980s from $10 billion to $93 billion.
This along with the Iraq war
of late 1980s led to a huge BOP crisis and this time there was no Soviet Union
to help bail India
out – it had collapsed. IMF and the World Bank forced marketization of the
economy and planning was further downgraded. Formulating the Plan itself became
difficult and each plan document got ready only a few years into the Plan. Joan
Robinson had perceptively observed that planning cannot succeed with a large
private sector. The poor have been left to their own devices so that
disparities have widened significantly – consequently, India has one of the largest number
of billionaires and the largest number of poor.
The UPA saw the
revival of the importance of the Planning Commission because the Deputy
Chairperson was close to the Prime Minister. But that did not lead to the restoration
of planning because both of them believed in promoting markets. Plan size was
arbitrarily cut year after year to meet fiscal deficit targets. `Growth at any
cost’ strategy was adopted with little attention to the cost imposed on the environment,
rural areas and the poor; little coordination was attempted.
In brief, the
failure of planning in India
is due to the black economy, the top down approach adopted by the ruling elite
and its being downgraded over the last many decades. Then, is it not legitimate
to close the Planning commission and end planning which is anyway formal only.
But then, which agency will perform the many essential functions listed above? This
needs to be understood rather than throwing the baby with the bath water. Can
the Ministry of Finance replace the Planning Commission? Not really. It is
largely for accounting - to collect revenue and allocate them keeping the
deficit under check. So, its task is to cut expenditures of Ministries and not
to do overall coordination or give a vision. In the rush to break with the
Nehruvian path, is the Planning Commission being closed little realising that
it may reappear in another form?
Based on sections from the author’s book, `Indian
Economy since Independence :
Persisting Colonial Disruption’. N Delhi :
Vision Books.
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