Even to those initiated in the intricacies of the ideology of
privatisation, the proposal sounded peculiar. Clearly what was being
privatised at the end of this process was not the NHPC but a segment of
the NTPC. If that be the case, the government could have chosen to offload
a part of its shareholding in the latter corporation to directly obtain
the Rs. 4,500 crore, so that a truncated NTPC is not left burdened with
NHPC's less profitable assets.
This suggests that the government is seeking to achieve two
objectives at one go. The first, to use the words of Finance Minister
Yashwant Sinha, is to treat the NTPC as a "big ticket item", which could
immediately yield large revenues from equity sale to solve the problem of
this year's burgeoning fiscal deficit. The second is to transfer that
money to the government through the devious route of NHPC acquisition so
that the returns on the assets remaining with the NTPC could cover the
deficit in the NHPC's accounts and reduce the government's future
budgetary burden.
Needless to say this amounts to a strategy of virtually killing one
of the "Navratnas" in the public sector, to meet the immediate "revenue"
needs of a cash-strapped government. It is virtually forcing one of the
better performers in the public sector to resort to a strategic sale of
some of its best assets in order buy up poorly performing public sector
units. This would only render the public sector even more of a burden on
the exchequer.
In fact, it has been reported that as a quid pro quo for the NHPC
buy-out deal, the government has promised to cap dividend payments by the
NTPC as well as leave the Navratna status of the corporation untouched
even if it contracts debts that have to be guaranteed by the government,
such as multilateral loans. That debt is seen as an important way of
keeping the NTPC afloat is reflected in Kumaramangalam's statement that
the buy-out of NHPC by increasing the asset base of the corporation would
increase its leverage in the financial market. Put simply, the strategy
appears to be one of reducing the fiscal deficit in the central budget by
substituting government debt with public sector debt.
Secondly, given the cash-crunch the devious buy-back and equity
cross-holding schemes are to continue. According to reports, the
government is expecting to garner Rs. 500 crore from a buy-back of
government equity by the Rural Electrification Corporation and the Power
Finance Corporation. This would imply that in the long run, the returns
which the government gets in the form of dividends from profitable public
enterprises would fall, while its commitment to cover the losses of
loss-making public enterprises would remain, worsening thereby the fiscal
situation.
Finally, the distress sale of equity in leading PSUs like MTNL,
VSNL and IPCL cannot be ruled out. If the divestment of large chunks of
equity is to be persisted with, the prices of these otherwise valuable
assets are bound to fall. And all indications are that the government is
firmly set to move in this direction. The final loss may be borne not only
by the citizens who ultimately finance the government's budget through
their direct and indirect tax payments, but also by consumers who may have
to deal with private monopolies in critical areas of domestic economic
activity.
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