It must be noted here that
the phenomenon of ‘pent-up’ demand was not restricted to those who had the
wherewithal to realize it as soon as supply-side constraints to their
realization were removed. The tendency existed among other sections as
well. As mentioned earlier, financial liberalisation had as its corollary
the entry of new financial players into the market and the diversification
of banks and non-bank financial companies into new areas of lending that
promised higher returns. One such area was lending for consumption
purposes, which substantially increased the number of people who could
access significantly large sums as credit to make lumpy purchases.
Further, the ‘windfall gains’ registered by a significant number of
central and state government employees as a result of the payment of
arrears following of the implementation of the Fifth Pay Commission’s
recommendations, also contributed to n increase in the number having the
wherewithal to contribute to such demand. It is indeed true that while
industrial firms and rich agriculturalists contributed to such pent-up
demand as well, the bulk of such purchases would be of consumer durables
by households. This explains the more consistent performance of the
consumer durables sector. And given the overflow of the consumer durables
into the capital goods category, it possibly explains the longer boom in
the capital goods sector. Put together this could shore up industrial
growth in particular years, as for example in 1999-2000, despite the small
share of consumer druables in total industrial production. It follows that
when such demand is satiated and cannot be sustained any further, the
overall tendency is towards slower industrial growth on average if other
stimuli such as state expenditure do not substitute for the once-for-all
stimulus, as was true by the end of the decade.
The above argument needs to
be clarified. Our intention is not to suggest that slow growth is an
inevitable consequence of a ‘positive’ aspect of the reform, which is what
fiscal deficit reduction is taken to be. Rather, the stress is on three
features. First, that the expectation that reforms would trigger the
“animal spirits” of private investors, spur private investment and ensure
the efficiency of such investment, has been belied. Second, that the
belief that liberalisation of import and foreign investment rules would
lead to a large inflow of foreign direct investment, which would use India
as a base for world market production, has been proven to be misplaced. If
such foreign investment had indeed come in large measure in the wake of
the reform, India would have recorded a much-needed expansion in
manufactured exports, which would have provided the stimulus for
industrial and overall economic growth. In practice, even that additional
foreign investment that did come has not been into greenfield projects and
has been targeted at the domestic market rather than at export production.
The third feature is that, even though the above expectations have
remained unrealised and though conditions have turned conducive for
increasing state expenditure and triggering growth, the neoliberal
obsession of the government with curbing the fiscal deficit has only
worsened the problem of decelerating industrial growth. At present, not
only is industry saddled with substantial excess capacity and inflation
running at historic lows, but the government has at its disposal large
stocks of foodgrains and a comfortable level of foreign exchange reserves.
Expanding expenditure, even if deficit-financed, would help expand
employment and output and in part contribute to an increase in the tax
revenues of the government. Many have argued that using the foodstocks for
a massive food-for-work programme geared to strengthening rural and urban
infrastructure is a major growth opportunity available to the government.
But its failure to respond positively to such advice has meant that the
industrial downturn threatens to transform itself into deep recession.
The failure to use the
above opportunity is, however, not just the result of an ideological
obsession with fiscal deficit reduction. It is in large part explained by
the government’s fear that the threat held out by international finance
that it would react adversely to any return to an era of high deficits is
real. The years of liberalisation have seen a substantial increase in the
presence of international financial players in India markets, through the
provision of credit, through investments in the stock markets and through
financial investments of other kinds. Any sudden decision on the part of
these players to withdraw their capital would not only result in a slump
in stockmarkets, but could also threaten the viability of many firms and
financial entities as well as precipitate a balance of payments and
currency crisis. This situation resulting from the increase in dependence
on purely financial flows generated by the reform in large part explains
the paralysis of the government in the face of what appears to be a sharp
slide into recession in India’s industrial sector.
What is worse, desperate to
find a way out, the government is resorting to all manner of means such as
bleeding public sector corporations of their surpluses, privatising them
at rock bottom prices and using unwarranted and economically indefensible
off-budget measures to generate additional funds. Unfortunately, while
these measures are proving inadequate at resolving the fiscal impasse,
they are undermining the long run growth and revenue generating potential
of the system. But as has been true in Russia, Turkey and Argentina,
international finance, led by the World Bank and the IMF, has been
unwilling to criticise such moves and push for enhanced tax and deficit
financed expenditures in their place. This is a sure means of inviting a
crisis, even when the opportunity to forestall is obvious.
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