This is Article is a rejoinder to Mr. S. Gurumurthy's article in the
Indian Express "A decade of economic Destruction" by Mr. R. Nandha
kumar.
- R. NANDHAKUMAR
- R. NANDHAKUMAR
The
article “A Decade of Economic Destruction”, written by S.Gurumurthy is more
about politics than economics. He identified something as causes of the crisis
and suggested entirely different things as remedies. For instance, he laments
UPA’s tax-waivers to the corporate sector as ‘criminal mismanagement of the
economy’ as it adds to the huge fiscal deficit of the country. His observation
is right this far. But while suggesting remedies to rejuvenate economy, he does
not utter a single word against tax-waivers. Instead he calls for postponing
the much awaited Food Security Bill. [Though it is only a diluted version of
the original draft bill, it will protect millions from hunger. And postponing
the implementation is nothing short of shelving the bill.
According
to the statistics he has given tax waivers have accumulated to Rs.30 lakh crore
in the nine years of UPA rule. He points out that the waivers averaged Rs.2.6
lakh crore a year before the stimulus measures undertaken in 2008. And after
that it almost doubled to a staggering Rs. 5 lakh crore per year. In his own
words the implementation of Food Security Bill would cost the government only
Rs. 2 lakh crore a year. So the rationale should be revoking the former; not
the latter. Even the partial withdrawal of tax-waivers would pump an additional
Rs.2.5 lakh crore to the economy. It will be more than enough for the proper
implementation of food security bill.
The
author’s intention is clear in the first paragraph itself. Its sub-title,
“Messing up a robust Economy”, reminds one the BJP’s hilarious “India Shining”
campaign. He says, under the NDA regime, India had a substantial Current Account
Surplus of $ 22 billion and accuses the UPA for draining it all. Now the CAS
has become CAD, which is $ 89 billion.
It is obvious that the more widening CAD is a major cause for the
current crisis. But is it right to say an economy is healthy – or robust – just
because it is having surplus in its current account? Nothing other than the CAS
is mentioned in the article to support the claim of ‘robust economy’.
The
author is right in pointing out the fact that voluminous import of capital
goods had suppressed the domestic production. But he fails miserably while
attributing India’s loss to China’s gain. In the globalised world, India’s loss
could be anybody’s gain. Indeed there are several occupants in the Indian
market space and everybody gain. Japanese gain in exporting electronic goods,
machinery and software; Koreans in electronic gadgets; Russians in arms and
nuclear reactors; Americans in software, nuclear reactors, processed food, cinema and many other fields; Saudi Arabians
in petroleum products; Israelis in modern weapons. It is not because of India’s
unpreparedness that China grabs Indian market. In fact it grabs US market as
well in the same magnitude. What does this mean? It is simply an efficient
performer in global markets. So painting a big picture of China eating India is
far from reality.
Though
the article speaks a lot about stimulus packages, it does not spell out clearly
who got benefit from those packages. It is only corporate giants; not small
industries. To improve domestic production small and medium scale industries
should be given priority. Stimulus packages in one form or the other should be
available to them. Unless we improve our small scale domestic industries we
could not compete with foreign players more effectively.
Fiscal
and budget deficits, current account deficit and rupee’s continuous fall are
the talking points of the economists now. Where had they gone when these
figures are high? What did NDA do with current account surplus? What did UPA do
when the country achieved double digit GDP growth? Absolutely nothing had been
done for the welfare of the people. This does not mean that we can neglect this
crisis altogether. Something must be done to save the economy. It is high time
to think over the policies undertaken during the last 3 decades – not a decade
as the author is arguing- and change them effectively if we really want
progress.
(Note:
In assessing the health of an economy, GDP is insisted upon. If it is high, the
corresponding economy is considered to be vibrant and vice-versa. But GDP, as
an indicator of the economy, lost its charisma long before. Now the
policy-makers across the globe think of social indicators like health,
education and nutritional status as effective indicators of a country’s
economy. Many countries have already incorporated these into their policies
-Bhutan’s National Happiness Index is an example -and are working towards
improving them. But our government and
opposition are so obsessed with the GDP that they cannot see beyond that. This
is implicit in this article too.)