Finally, the experience in 1998-99 when the government exceeded its
disinvestment target by a wide margin, was in substantial part the result
of the decision to get cash-rich PSUs to "cross-hold" shares in related
PSUs by buying the same off the government. Of the Rs. 9,000 crore
garnered in 1998/99, only Rs. 1195.25 crore were raised through market
disinvestment in Concor (Rs. 225 crores), GAIL (Rs. 184 crore) and VSNL
(Rs. 786.25 crore). Much of the rest came from cross-holding investments
by the oil PSUs, ONGC, GAIL and IOC. Cash rich public sector corporations
were forced to buy-back the government's holding of their equity or the
equity of other public sector enterprises. This amounted to forcing PSUs,
that need resources to allow for restructuring in order to face up to the
more liberal and competitive environment, instead to hand over their
investible surpluses to finance the fiscal deficit of the government. As
Chart 2 shows, in all three years in which disinvestment proceeds have
been significant, they helped finance around 8 per cent of the fiscal
deficit that would have shown up in the budget but for privatisation.
The 1999-2000 budget had provided for these sale proceeds to
finance as much as 10 per cent of the projected deficit without
privatisation. With just 3 months to go, the government has managed to
raise just about Rs. 1,500 crore of the budgeted Rs. 10,000 crore, much of
which has been garnered by the distress sale of GAIL shares. While factors
like the elections did tie the government's hands a bit, the main reason
for this year's failure on the disinvestment front is the unwillingness of
private buyers to offer the government a reasonable price for its shares.
The government had, in fact, to defer the launch of its plan to sell an
additional 19 million shares, which was expected to yield $100 million
because of the low prices that were on offer in the market.
Faced with this situation the government appears to be resorting to
two options, First, to use a revised version of the cross-holding route.
Power Minister Rangarajan Kumaramangalam recently created a stir by
announcing the government's 'decision' to transfer its shareholding in the
National Hydroelectric Power Corporation (NHPC), which reportedly survives
on a budgetary handout of Rs. 450 crore every financial year, to the
National Thermal Power Corporation (NTPC), for a princely sum of Rs. 4,500
crore.
Among the reasons
for the transaction, the Minister clearly declared, was the effort to
garner the resources needed to meet the target of Rs. 10,000 crore from
privatisation set in the budget. Virtually pre-empting the question as to
where the NTPC itself was to find the money to pay the government,
Kumaramangalam's statement described a structured process in which the
NTPC would hive off a few of its units into a new subsidiary.
Subsequently, 51 per cent of NTPC's holding in the subsidiary would be
offloaded to the private sector. That strategic sale was expected to yield
the resources to pay the government Rs. 2,500 crore this financial year
and Rs. 2,000 crore in the next financial year.
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