Three mutually reinforcing and interrelated
contradictions of the 'Nehruvian strategy' need to be noted. First,
the State within the old economic policy regime had to simultaneously
fulfil two different roles which were incompatible in the long-run.
On the one hand it had to maintain growing expenditures, in particular
investment expenditure, in order to keep the domestic market expanding.
The absence of any radical land redistribution had meant that the domestic
market, especially for industrial goods, had remained socially narrowly-based;
it had also meant that the growth of agricultural output, though far
greater than in the colonial period, remained well below potential,
and even such growth as occurred was largely confined, taking the country
as a whole, to a narrow stratum of landlords-turned-capitalists and
sections of rich peasants who had improved their economic status. Under
these circumstances, a continuous growth in State spending was essential
for the growth of the market; it was the key element in whatever overall
dynamics the system displayed. At the same time however the State exchequer
was the medium through which large-scale transfers were made to the
capitalist and proto-capitalist groups; the State in other words was
an instrument for the "primary accumulation of capital". Through
the non-payment of taxes (which the State generally turned a blind eye
upon), through a variety of subsidies and transfers, through lucrative
State-contracts, private fortunes got built up at the expense of the
State exchequer.
The contradiction between these two different
roles of the State manifested itself, despite increasing resort to indirect
taxation and administered price-hikes, through a growth in the fiscal
deficit, i.e., the excess of total government expenditures, both revenue
and capital, over government revenues. A persistent and growing fiscal
deficit, under all circumstances, necessarily and inevitably undermines
the State capitalist sector and strengthens demands for a rolling back
of intervention. A fiscal deficit has to be financed through borrowing,
i.e., through the private holding of additional claims directly or indirectly
(mediated through the banking system) upon the State. If the borrowing
is from abroad, then the building up of pressure for a change in the
policy regime is obvious. If the borrowing is domestic then private
wealth-holders may be willing to hold claims upon the State only after
they have increased their holdings of other assets, such as urban property
or consumer durables or commodity stocks, in which case the fiscal deficit
has an immediate inflationary impact owing to this, and to keep inflation
under check the State would have to cut back its expenditure which slows
down the economy and eventually arouses capitalists' demands for an
alternative policy regime. Even if private wealth- holders are willing
temporarily to hold government debt without there being any inflationary
pressures immediately, this only accentuates the inflation-proneness
of the economy in the long- run with identical results. And finally
at some point, both at home and abroad, the demand is raised that in
lieu of claims upon the State, the private wealth-holders should be
allowed to hold State property directly, i.e. for the privatization
of State- owned units. This is the sort of demand that we are witnessing
in India, namely that the State should cut down its fiscal deficit and
its influence naturally was in the direction of adopting the Fund-Bank
policy regime by "privatizing" several public sector units.
The second contradiction lay in the inability
of the State to impose a minimum measure of "discipline" and
"respect for law" among the capitalists, without which no
capitalist system anywhere can be tenable. Disregard for the laws of
the land, especially tax-laws, was an important component of the primary
accumulation of capital. The same disregard, the same absence of a collective
discipline which a capitalist class imposes upon itself in any established
capitalist country also meant that a successful transition could not
be made from a Nehruvian interventionist regime to an alternative viable
capitalist regime with State intervention, but of a different kind.
After all the State is strongly interventionist even in a country like
Japan, but it is interventionism based on close collaboration between
the State and capital which simultaneously promotes rigorous discipline
among the capitalists. Indeed many advocates of a retreat from Nehruvian
dirigisme had talked explicitly of the Japanese "model" and
had hoped for a new consolidation of Indian capitalism much in the way
that Japanese capitalism had consolidated itself. They were of course
being unhistorical; an important aspect of their unhistoricity was their
refusal to recognise the inability of the Indian State to impose a measure
of "discipline" on Indian capital.
The third contradiction had its roots in the
cultural ambience of an ex-colonial society like ours. The market for
industrial goods was from its very inception, as we have seen, a socially
narrowly-based one. Capitalism in its metropolitan centres however is
characterised by continuous product innovation, the phenomenon of newer
and ever newer goods being thrown on to the market, resulting in alterations
of life-styles. In an ex- colonial economy like ours, the comparatively
narrow social segment to whose hands additional purchasing power accrues
in a large measure and whose growing consumption therefore provides
the main source of the growth in demand for industrial consumer goods
is also anxious to emulate the life-styles prevailing in the metropolitan
centres. It is not satisfied with having more and more of the same goods
which are domestically-produced, nor is it content merely with expending
its additional purchasing power upon such new goods as the domestic
economy, on its own, is capable of innovating. Its demand is for the
new goods which are being produced and consumed in the metropolitan
centres, and which, given the constraints upon the innovative capacity
of the domestic economy, are incapable of being locally-produced purely
on the basis of indigenous resources and indigenous technology. An imbalance
therefore inevitably arises in economies like ours between what the
economy is capable of locally producing purely on its own steam, and
what the relatively affluent sections of society who account for much
of the growth of potential demand for consumer goods would like to consume.
This imbalance may be kept in check by import controls. But the more
the imbalance between what is produced and what is sought to be consumed
is kept in check through controls, the more it grows because of further
innovations in the metropolitan economies. The result is a powerful
build-up of pressure among the more affluent groups in society for a
dismantling of controls which would result in substantial sections of
domestic producers going under, i.e., in a de-industrialization in the
domestic economy, together with an accentuation of the already precarious
balance of payments situation, which does not come in the way of such
pressures being built up.
It is in this light that the new policy regime
being instituted by the government has to be assessed. That regime has
two components. First, it involves a set of measures aimed at "stabilisation"
or bringing the rate of inflation and the current account deficit on
the balance of payments to acceptable levels. At the centre of that
stabilisation strategy is a reduction of the fiscal deficit on the government's
budget through a cut in expenditures (principally subsidies) and enhanced
resource mobilisation, and a devaluation of the rupee aimed at raising
the rate of growth of exports and curbing imports. Second, it involves
a strategy of "structural adjustment" that, by liberalising
imports and subjecting domestic industry to the cutting edge of international
competition, permitting the free inflow of foreign direct and portfolio
investment, dismantling regulation of domestic and foreign private capital
and privatising the public sector, aims to "get prices right".
This, it is argued, would improve the efficiency of domestic economic
activity, reallocate resources to areas where India has a comparative
advantage relative to its international trading partners, improve its
export competitiveness, and raise the medium term rate of growth on
the basis of a stimulus provided by the international market. Export
surpluses are now to take the place of State expenditure as the principal
stimulus to growth.
From the point of view of international finance
capital, this a strategy which seeks to bring developing country external
deficits down to reasonable levels without adversely affecting
the operation of transnational investment in their markets. It should
be clear that this new regime is not so much an effort to overcome the
constraints faced by the Nehruvian strategy, but aims to shift out of
that strategy altogether. No more is metropolitan capital to be held
at bay, but rather domestic capital would have to either compete with
international capital or collaborate with it to obtain a foothold in
either the domestic or the international market. Given the strength
of the transnational monopolies that developed country governments nurture,
protect and strengthen, there are limits to the ability of as-yet-underdeveloped
economies to compete. This implies subordination as part of a strategy
of growth. One cost of such subordination is of course the fact that
growth depends on the willingness of transnational corporations to use
India as a location for world-market oriented production. The less that
inclination in a world where all countries compete to attract foreign
investment, the greater the extent of deindustrialisation, the lower
is the rate of growth of the system and the greater the burden heaped
on the poor and the working people.
It is the belief that the extent of deindustrialisation
would far outweigh any gains from tethering a nation to the world economy
that underlay the dirigiste regime which India opted for at independence.
That regime was dictated by the perception that given the extreme external
vulnerability characterising the open economic regime that India was
subject to under colonial rule, a degree of isolationism that curtailed
the inflow of imports and displaced metropolitan capital in the domestic
market was inevitable. If that strategy had not been adopted there is
no reason to expect that India would have seen any departure from the
economic stagnation that characterised the first half of the century.