Controversy dogs the NDA government's effort to settle into disinvestment
overdrive. With the strategic sale of public sector giants like VSNL, Air
India and Indian Airlines imminent, the Congress, led by former Finance
Minister Manmohan Singh, has decided to join the opposition. Mr. Singh
reportedly told the press at Bangalore that "The BJP is trying to sell Air
India for a song". There were two grounds that he provided in defence of
that judgement. First, the government's decision to suspend the managing
director of the airline, Michael Mascarenhas, at this crucial juncture,
based on charges of providing its general sales agent in London unusually
lucrative terms. Second, the fact that in the run up to disinvestment, the
government had chosen to "hawk" bilateral landing rights to other foreign
airlines which, while improving the airlines' bottom line temporarily,
undermines the value of its stock.
The first
of these arguments is of more substance than appears true at first sight,
since Air India is not the only instance where the government has forced a
change of guard on the eve of disinvestment. Recently, Amitabh Kumar, who
headed VSNL has also been shown the door on charges of corruption on the
eve of privatisation. To make the charge is not to dismiss the allegations
of irregularities against these two high-profile, senior executives, but
to question the timing of the decision to press charges and force their
exit.
Consider
the charges against Mascarenhas. Two of them have been highlighted. The
first that during his tenure Welcome Travels, the airline's general sales
agent in the UK, was shown undue favour and provided with irregular
performance-linked incentives (PLIs) that cost Air India a substantial
sum. A recent report by the Comptroller and Auditor General, analyzing
such incentive payments during 1987-2000 has held them to be irregular and
noted that while a commercial organisation may adopt dynamic and flexible
modules of decision-making in order to further its commercial interests,
the organisation ends up a loser if these modules are adopted for
showering "selective favours" on a particular party. A subsequent
investigation by the Chief Vigilance Officer of the airline had
corroborated the findings and ostensible pinpointed responsibilities.
These findings have provided the basis for the suspension of Mascarenhas
and another senior executive of Air India.
However, the fact of the matter is that these ‘irregular' PLIs have allegedly been
made over an extended period, starting 1992-93. Can Mascarenhas, who has
been the Chief Executive of the airline for a small part of this period,
be held responsible for all of these irregularities or was he carrying
forward a practice that had been established earlier? The argument being
used by the Ministry is that several officers, including Mr Mascarenhas
and Mr P.K. Sinha, were at crucial posts both in 1992-93 and 1997-98 when
changes in the PLI for the London GSA were decided upon.
This,
however, leaves unanswered the question as to why such charges were not
investigated earlier. More crucially, the suspension orders were served on
Mascarenhas only on May 23 this year, even though the report of the CVO
had been received in October 2000.
Reportedly, the ministry formally wrote to the CBI to launch a probe into
the alleged irregularities only on May 22.
What is more, precisely at the time when action was possibly being
contemplated, another case of irregularity against Mascarenhas had been
raked up. This relates to a decision to wet lease aircraft, or contract to
lease on terms which involved use of
and payment to crew too, from Caribjet.
Ostensibly such an arrangement is far less commercially acceptable than a
dry lease. Initially, Air-India had
taken two Airbus A310 aircraft on wetlease from Caribjet for a year in
1994. Subsequently, Air-India also wet-leased two L1011 aircraft and a
A310 for a period of two years. The agreement, however, had to be
terminated since it was found to be commercially unviable. However, since
there was no exit clause in the agreement, Air-India had to pay
compensation to Caribjet to the extent of Rs 107.52 crore.
The
Caribjet case was first referred to the CBI on February 11 last year, and
is currently under investigation, but the CBI has not reported its
findings to the ministry yet. But the fact that it has been the focus of
media attention at this juncture fuels suspicion that Mascarenhas is being
specially targeted now. Overall, given this history, it is not out of
place for Dr. Manmohan Singh to make an issue of the sudden decision to
nail Mascarenhas at this crucial juncture. If he had not been proceeded
against earlier, holding out till the disinvestment process had been
completed would have helped the government avoid the allegation that it is
sullying the corporation's image on the eve of disinvestment.
A
similar allegation can be made in the case of VSNL where its high-profile,
Director (Operations), Amitabh Kumar, who also acted as Managing Director
during a crucial phase of VSNL's history has been forced to put in his
papers. Kumar was served a chargesheet at the end of May, on the basis of
recommendations from the Central Vigilance Commissioner. Kumar was quick
to respond with a statement that:
"The allegations are baseless and appear to have been
motivated''. He said they were on account of ``internal rivalry within VSNL as well as external pressure from vested interests who want to bring
down the value of the company during the critical period in the run up to
the company's disinvestment.''
Here again
the issue relates not to the merits of the case, which the investigation
must decide. Rather, it relates to the timing. Kumar was given unusual
powers during a time when VSNL had been restructuring its operations in
keeping with decisions being implemented as part of the government's
ever-changing telecom policy. Even after the appointment of a new Managing
Director to the corporation that had remained formally headless for a long
period of time, Kumar's presence and influence was obvious. The fact that
the government gave him the importance it did, and then decided to force
his exit at a critical juncture is bound to raise questions.
All this
matters because the crucial question is how the government is likely to
value these corporations when assessing the bids made by those seeking a
"strategic stake", or full control in lieu of a small share in equity, in
them. Further, it is not just how that stake is valued that is at issue,
but the way in the shareholders' agreement, which would define the powers
of the strategic investor, is drafted.
It is not
clear how these would be affected by the recent actions against
Mascarenhas, Kumar and others. Rumour has it that V.N. Verma, who was
displaced by Mascarenhas from his position as commercial director Air
India, and has been reinstated in the wake of the latter's suspension, had
views that were "anti-disinvestment" and in keeping with those held by
Civil Aviation minister Sharad Yadav. But Mascarenhas himself claims that
the government's decision to sign a number of bilateral deals granting
reciprocal landing rights and hawking Air India's unutilised rights to
earn revenues, rather than leasing aircraft to use those rights, was a way
of undermining Air India's share value.
The
decision to enter into
codeshare, block space and pool
arrangements and other commercial agreements have reportedly yielded Air
India Rs. 257 crore in 2000-01. But this temporary gain in revenues is
also a reflection of the failure of the airline to exploit rights which
others find lucrative enough to buy in exchange for a significant sum of
money. This gain or loss, depending on how one looks at it, is accompanied
by the growing presence of other airlines in what was substantially Air
India's territory. Thus, the policy, which serves as a soft option in lieu
of investments that would enhance the airline's profitable assets, does
adversely affect the long run earnings profile of the organisation. The
net impact on the corporation's value may indeed be negative, as Dr. Singh
suggests.
Similar suspicions with regard to how government actions affect share
valuation prevail in the case of VSNL as well, where the issue is even
more complex. The premature termination of VSNL's international telephony
monopoly next year is expected to adversely affect the corporations value,
even though it is to be compensated in cash as well as concessions
regarding payment of entry fee and provision of bank guarantee for entry
into long distance telephony. The decision on what should be done with the
Rs. 4000-odd crore cash surplus that the company has accumulated because
it has not invested fast enough, would definitely make a difference. And
the mess surrounding Amitabh Kumar's forced and ill-timed exit may also,
in myriad ways, have its effect.
There are three ways in which the issue of valuation is approached by the
government. In instances like VSNL, the prevailing price of previously
disinvested shares provides some benchmark. The incomes being earned by
the company, which are extrapolated and discounted provides a second
yardstick, as happened in the case of BALCO. And finally, an independent
valuation of the worth of the tangible and intangible assets of the
company ostensibly provides a third indicator.
The
problem is that the shallow and volatile nature of the stock market makes
the first a completely useless guide. The second has been undermined by
the government's refusal to allow these firms to exploit the opportunities
they had of earning long run profits, partly because of bureaucratisation
and disputes over turf, and partly on the grounds that they were
candidates for disinvestment. The likely value yielded by the third has
been undermined in various ways, as the current controversy, and that
surrounding BALCO earlier, suggests.
There are many factours favouring Dr. Manmohan Singh in the current
controversy. He has an image of a person who, besides being ‘clean'
himself , would not publicly defend the corrupt. He is no opponent of
liberalisation and disinvestment, having launched India's accelerated
‘reform' programme of the 1990s. He has the training and experience to
judge issues of the kind that are under debate. Hence his opposition to
the manner in which disinvestment is being pursued is likely to carry much
weight. Further, since it signals the decision of Congress to oppose, at
least in part, the irrational disinvestment drive launched by the NDA, it
is likely to be effective.
Yet,
what is good can be made better. How much better it would be if he
combined this opposition with a campaign to restructure these potentially
lucrative corporations, retain them in the public sector and make them
yield much-needed non-tax revenues for the State. Just stalling the pace
of disinvestment or merely influencing the price at which it occurs would
hardly win the battle.
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