In
response, the CII, whose credibility was in any case suspect, formally announced
the withdrawal of its recommendation on bank closure. Despite this, the government,
which had once again displayed its 'industry-friendliness' and endorsed the
seriousness of the CII report by formally receiving it with much fanfare,
chose to declare that there was never any question of considering the CII's
report when formulating policies aimed at restructuring India's banking system.
This
is not the first time that the CII had to go back on or even challenge policies
it had vociferously supported in the past. It first supported import liberalisation
as a must in a globalising economy. And then, it produced reports documenting
the adverse effects of excessive liberalisation and made much of the devastating
impact that liberalisation was having on India's capital goods sector. Subsequently,
it celebrated the virtues of freeing foreign investment from controls. But
soon, finding foreign investors dropping domestic collaborators as partners,
it declared that these investors had no long terms interests and were not
playing fair.
These
contortions the organisation has been through are the result of the peculiar
relationship between the State, sections of industry and industry spokespersons
during the years of liberalisation. India's liberalisers, scattered now amongst
almost every political formation, have over the years followed what is proving
to be a tiring routine. First, they virtually set up a well established domestic
target for liberalisation. Second, a set of agents are found to render that
target soft. And, finally, they make a big push to get the government to implement,
either through 'independent' proxies (like the TRAI) or through parliamentary
legislation, the means to achieve their specific goal.
Of
the many agents chosen to 'popularise' economic reform, a leading one was
the Confederation of Indian Industry (CII). For those with no lapse of short
term memory, the CII would be remembered, as it is by the older and more circumspect
industry associations like the FICCI and ASSOCHAM, as an upstart born out
of what was the Confederation of Engineering Industries, which grew into the
leading 'spokes-organisation' of Indian business during the years of liberalisation.
And, perhaps this was not unrelated to the fact that it was chosen by those
pushing for liberalisation in India. Though, like much else relating to the
nexus between the State and big business, the matter is difficult to prove,
the CII is seen by many as owing its success to the fact that it was and is
cultivated by the liberalising sections which have come to dominate economic
decision-making in India.
In
fact, spokesmen of the CII have, initially with support from the official
media and subsequently from the officially sponsored private media, been projected
(often successfully) as 'the' experts on what should be done in the realm
of economic policy making. If policies promoted initially by the IMF and the
World Bank were to be 'internalised' by this country, it was not sufficient
that persons with a track record in or on lien from these institutions held
positions of power in government. Such policies had to be owned even by representatives
of the most powerful lobby influencing political decision-making in India's
democracy, viz. big business. This was particularly necessary because domestic
business interests, which had thrived on State support and protection during
the heydays of India's post-Independence development, were seen as one of
the prime vested interests ranged against the liberalising agenda. Getting
representatives of business to support liberalisation was seen as more than
half the battle won. In the event, just as being 'red' and expert mattered
in some erstwhile centrally planned, socialist economic systems, being 'private'
and expert mattered in liberalising India.
This
process of creating pro-liberalisation experts had its pitfalls, however.
Media created experts and 'expert-organisations' have a tendency to find their
own tangents, which are not always palatable to the powers that sustained
their livelihoods, viz. business itself. Not surprisingly, the CII has routinely
had to backtrack on the 'expert' recommendations it makes. The controversy
over bank NPAs is one more such instance. More responsible business interests
would have liked to be party to a sensitive and diplomatic way of dealing
with the problem of bank NPAs. But the aggressive front men in the CII have
rushed ahead and goofed again. It is time they realised that in being forced
to ignominiously retreat, they have paid the price of cronyism.