This gap points in a number of directions. First,
that the government would have been more successful in curbing the fiscal
deficit if it had not done away with the practice of monetisation of
part of the overall deficit. Second, if deficits had been maintained
at actual levels along with monetisation, the expansionary effect of
recent budgets would have been quite significant, with positive results
on the growth and poverty alleviation fronts. And, finally, that if
the Government had not merely stuck with monetisation but also dropped
its obsession with the fiscal deficit, especially in recent times when
food and foreign reserves have been aplenty, the 1990s would have in
all probability been a decade of developmental advance.
Budget 2000 reflects the fact that the BJP-led
Government has consciously chosen to forgo this opportunity by making
"second generation" reforms its principal thrust. Central to that strategy
is a further push to financial liberalisation. In hypocritical fashion,
the Budget speaks of formalising the autonomy of the RBI, even while
it ties the central bank's hands by liberalising the conditions for
foreign capital inflows. Financial flows on the capital account into
the country have been further liberalised by offering tax concessions
to venture capital funds, raising the ceiling on equity holding by foreign
institutional investors (FIIs) investing in firms in secondary markets
to 40 per cent and promising to sell public equity in banks up to 67
per cent of the total, some of which would be picked up by foreign investors.
So long as India remains the flavour of the time with foreign investors,
this would only enhance the quantum of foreign capital inflows. In order
to neutralise partly the impact this would have on the central bank's
operations, the Government has chosen to ease the domestic capitalists'
access to foreign exchange to undertake investments abroad.
The other route through which foreign exchange
reserves would be run down is through the indiscriminate import that
is likely to result from accelerated import liberalisation. Even while
the BJP's capitulation to pressure from the United States to advance
the dates for doing away with quantitative restrictions on the import
of 1,429 items (714 to April 1, 2000 and another 715 to April 1, 2001)
threatens to de-industrialise India and affect the livelihood of primary
producers, the maximum rate of duty on agricultural products has been
reduced fro m 40 per cent to 35 per cent. Allowing indiscriminate access
to foreign exchange without imposing any conditions which tie such use
to the earning of foreign exchange to meet future commitments is a sure
way of paving the way for financial crises of the South-East Asian kind.
The attack on domestic producers, namely, the import-competition route,
occurs in a context where developmental expenditures are being squeezed.
While the Budget claims to increase Plan outlays by 13 per cent over
last year's budget estimates and 22 per cent over the actual spending
in 1999-2000, Plan outlays in many crucial sectors, such as agriculture,
rural development and irrigation, have been lowered. In addition, the
actual spending on these important areas may turn out to be even lower.
Thus, in both the previous fiscal years, the Central Government spent
much less than it had budgeted for in almost all the crucial sectors
of Plan outlay, such as agriculture, rural development, irrigation,
energy, industry and minerals, thus depriving the economy of important
sources of growth.
There have also been shortfalls in expenditure
on social services. So, these critical areas of spending continue to
be shortchanged. The slated 13 per cent increase in capital expenditure
in this Budget at first appears to reverse this tendency. However, defence
alone accounts for 80 per cent of the increase in total capital expenditure.
One consequence of this "new militarism" characterising the BJP's tenure
is that, in an effort to dampen U.S. criticism of this tendency, the
Government is willing to make huge concessions on the economic front
with regard to trade and foreign capital flows. The other consequence
is that non-defence capital expenditure is budgeted to remain stagnant
or decline in real terms. Further, in his effort to prove that despite
this hike in defence outlays, overall expenditures and the fiscal deficit
are to be controlled, the Finance Minister has chosen to attack food
and fertilizer subsidies, besides capital expenditures unrelated to
defence.
The orchestrated outcry on the unsustainable
level of food and fertilizer subsidies appears to be almost a conspiracy.
In fact, even if we consider only revenue expenditures other than interest
payments, the share of food subsidies in expenditures has been more
or less constant in recent years and the combined share of food and
fertilizer subsidies has in fact been falling. Yet, the most striking
"achievement" of this year's Budget is that at a time when the evidence
points to a decade-long stagnation or even increase in the incidence
of rural poverty, the prices of food distributed through the public
distribution system (PDS) are to be hiked to realise a 12 per cent reduction
in food subsidies. In order to sanitise this effort, Yashwant Sinha
has presented the subsidy reduction as an effort to target subsidies
at the needy, namely the population below the poverty line. That population,
he argues, would now be eligible for double the quota available earlier.
What he left virtually unstated was the fact
that this larger quota would be available at a much higher per unit
price. Households below the poverty line would now have to bear with
68 per cent increases in the issue prices of wheat and rice. Even people
above the poverty line, many of whom are also poor by a wider definition,
would have to pay 23 per cent more for wheat and 30 per cent more for
rice because they will now be charged the full economic cost. Not only
does this mean that most pe ople who use the PDS will end up paying
much more, but it also penalises the State governments that have been
running a more broad-based and efficient PDS. This is because this price
relates to the rate at which the Central government releases foodgrains
to individual State governments, some of whom have been supplying it
at a lower rate to consumers through the PDS.
The irony is that, while this measure will clearly
hit ordinary people very hard, it may not lead to a decline in the food
subsidy bill at all. This is because as prices rise, offtake from fair
price shops tends to decline, and so the Food Corporation of India (FCI)
is left holding even more stocks, with high carrying costs which add
to its losses. This is indeed one reason why the level of stock-holding
of foodgrains is already so high. As mentioned earlier, the availability
of large foodstocks with the government calls for an effort to use the
surplus foodstocks to part "finance" employment programmes that help
strengthen the rural infrastructure. This would have helped improve
agricultural growth performance as well as increase rural incomes and
reduce poverty. The Finance Minister has, however, chosen to ignore
this opportunity and persist with a strategy of reform that goes to
the contrary. The financial component of such reform requires curbing
borrowing from the RBI and cutting a range of expenditures as part of
the effort to appease international finance, even if the consequence
is a combination of policies which squeeze the poor and underm ine growth
prospects. These are further indicators of the fact that under the BJP
the overall interests of international finance have come to dominate
economic policy-making in India. And it is that dominance which has
put the Government in a state of pa ralysis with respect to triggering
growth and reducing poverty. The interests the BJP-led Government seeks
to serve and those it wishes to penalise are therefore clear.