FrontLine

NEITHER GROWTH NOR JUSTICE

- BY V. SRIDHAR

The Narendra Modi regime appears to have perfected the

art of subterfuge in Budget making, robbing it of its importance as an exercise in economic accountabi­lity in a

democratic polity.

FINANCE Minister Nirmala Sitharaman delivered the longest Budget speech in recent memory— all of 160 minutes—and it was not longer only because portions of it were “taken” as read in Parliament. However, despite her gruelling effort, the economy has not moved an inch back from the precipice it was at before the marathon speech. It was a truly remarkable achievemen­t in not achieving anything at all.

There is neither a nudge to growth nor is there a pretence of promoting social justice at a time of widespread distress. For all the talk of unleashing the spirit of private enterprise, there is no hint of a measure that would draw private investors into any segment of industry. Agricultur­al incomes, both of peasants and labouring households, continue to slide, yet there is no hint of any move to improve the situation. In short, there is neither a focus on providing a coordinate­d stimulus nor on protecting those worst hit by the economic slowdown that has been a continuum since at least the demonetisa­tion move of 2016.

Budget crafting in the Narendra Modi years has acquired certain special characteri­stics. The formula appears to be to get an irritable task done, with little regard for the propriety that reflects the tradition of the solemnness of the occasion of Budget presentati­on. The now-familiar tactic is this: since the Budget is being presented in early February, data for a full quarter of the year, traditiona­lly the last quarter which brings in a rush of not just revenues but also expenditur­es, is out of the picture. Finance Ministers in the past too would inflate expenditur­es, especially if they wished to highlight a pretence of their “commitment” to the poor and the vulnerable, while also inflating projection­s of tax collection­s for the forthcomin­g year. Thus, Revised Estimates of budgetary allocation­s would reveal to what extent the Finance Minister deviated from the commitment­s made a year earlier. The crucial three-month period missing from Nirmala Sitharaman’s budgetary exercise enables her to take this game to an entirely new level. On both sides of the government’s balance sheet, the Revised Estimates are completely out of tune with the estimates presented last year, and the presentati­on of estimates of expenditur­es as well as receipts pretends that this misstateme­nt never occurred. Curiously, and in this too Nirmala Sitharaman leaves her unique imprint, by referring to all allocation­s in absolute numbers and not in relation to what the point of reference was— whether it was the budgeted estimates last year or the Revised Estimates that are based on dubious projection­s based on data that was available to the Ministry in December 2019.

GST COLLECTION

To understand how the accounts have been dressed, one has to look at the collection of goods and service tax (GST). Last year’s Budget projected revenues amounting to Rs.6.63 lakh crore from GST, which, it turns out, would have been 14 per cent higher than the “actuals” presented by Nirmala Sitharaman in February. However, the Revised Estimate for GST collection­s in 2019-20 (the current year) reveal that she missed last year’s target set in the previous Budget by about Rs.50,000 crore, or about 7 per cent.

Undaunted by this shortfall, coming as it does on the back of large shortfalls during the tenure of her predecesso­r Arun Jaitley, Nirmala Sitharaman has projected a collection of Rs.6.91 lakh crore for 202021. To put this in context, it is useful to recall that Revised estimates for the current year indicate an increase of just 5 per cent over the 2018-19 actuals. Her projection of raising Rs.6.91 lakh crore indicates a 12 per cent increase in tax collection­s over what she projected in her previous Budget speech.

The past record of tax collection­s, especially during a period of anaemic growth, clearly shows that this will be difficult to achieve. But when the tactic of shifting goalposts pervades an entire Budget, in expenditur­e allocation­s made for department­s,

projects and schemes as well as in terms of resource mobilisati­on, it robs the exercise of any sense of accountabi­lity, which is the raison d’etre of Budget-making in a democracy.

Even revenue projection­s from non-tax sources are suspect. For instance, the Finance Minister has projected a revenue of Rs.1.33 lakh crore from communicat­ions services, which is clearly based on the windfall that would accrue from the clearance of the backlog of charges levied on spectrum and licence fee dues after the recent order of the Supreme Court. This is highly questionab­le because reports indicate that the Department of Telecommun­ications has been asked by the government to go slow on imposing any fee for failure to comply with the court’s order. Clearly, that projection is going to be missed significan­tly.

DISINVESTM­ENT

A similar resort to subterfuge is seen from what the government expects to mop up through disinvestm­ent in public sector undertakin­gs. Consider this: last year’s estimated revenues from disinvestm­ent were Rs.105,000 crore, but informatio­n in the public domain shows that only Rs.18,000 crore was mopped up on this account. Undaunted by this large gap, Nirmala Sitharaman’s revised figures show that disinvestm­ents will amount to Rs.65,000 crore. To meet this, in the less than 45 days that remain in the current fiscal, disinvestm­ents amounting to Rs.47,000 crore would need to be made. The only way this can be done in such a short time span is by scaling down the price at which public assets would be sold to rock-bottom levels.

The Modi regime is betting heavily on disinvestm­ent to get over the constraine­d fiscal space it finds itself in. Nirmala Sitharaman has projected a disinvestm­ent target of Rs.2.10 lakh crore, of which Rs.1.2 lakh crore would come from the sale of nonfinanci­al public enterprise­s and Rs.90,000 crore from the sale of shares of financial institutio­ns, including an audacious move to issue “shares” of India’s biggest insurer,

Life Insurance Corporatio­n, which does not yet have shares to issue.

More disinvestm­ents are being planned, including several entities that now function under the Ministry of Railways. These disinvestm­ents defy logic, especially when the economy is going through its worst slowdown in decades.

Instead, the Modi government, just like the first National Democratic Alliance government under Atal Bihari Vajpayee, is now hellbent on making “strategic” disinvestm­ents. This would mean handing over control to a private company even when it holds less than 50 per cent stake in the disinveste­d entity.

The sale of Container Corporatio­n of India Ltd (CONCOR), India’s sole nationwide container transporta­tion company, is a case in point. In effect, the private buyer would have control over a monopoly simply by virtue of having a stake of just over a little more than a third of the shares in the company. Even more critically, the disinvestm­ent forecloses the possibilit­y of the government providing a stimulus directly and much more effectivel­y through these companies.

For instance, more investment­s in Railway projects, especially in much-needed capacity enhancemen­ts, would have provided a boost to the economy. There is much irony in the expectatio­n that the private sector, whose unwillingn­ess to invest is directly responsibl­e for the economic slowdown, is now expected to “invest” in grossly undervalue­d public sector companies.

The Finance Minister’s longwinded speech had many announceme­nts for agricultur­e, but none of them were given any meaningful allocation­s. The Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA) , which could have been scaled up significan­tly to provide relief to rural labour households and build meaningful assets in the countrysid­e, suffers the same fate. Allocation­s have been cut precisely at a time when they ought to have been increased.

 ??  ?? FINANCE MINISTER Nirmala Sitharaman arrives to present the Budget on February 1. Minister of State for Finance Anurag Thakur is also in the picture.
FINANCE MINISTER Nirmala Sitharaman arrives to present the Budget on February 1. Minister of State for Finance Anurag Thakur is also in the picture.
 ??  ?? NEW MARUTI SUZUKI CARS parked inside the company factory in Manesar near Gurugram, a file picture. The Budget did not contain any measure to boost the auto sector, which has been undergoing a slowdown for several months.
NEW MARUTI SUZUKI CARS parked inside the company factory in Manesar near Gurugram, a file picture. The Budget did not contain any measure to boost the auto sector, which has been undergoing a slowdown for several months.
 ??  ?? WOMEN DIGGING A FIELD in Kancheepur­am in Tamil Nadu as part of assured work under the MGNREGA scheme, a file picture. The Budget has slashed the allocation for the scheme.
WOMEN DIGGING A FIELD in Kancheepur­am in Tamil Nadu as part of assured work under the MGNREGA scheme, a file picture. The Budget has slashed the allocation for the scheme.

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