Economic Survey 2000-01:
Bizarre Logic

Mar 3rd 2001, C.P. Chandrasekhar

The Economic Survey, the annual pre-budget, state-of-the-economy report issued by the Finance Ministry is meant to be an exercise in stocktaking that provides the background for initiatives to be launched in the Budget. But in recent times, as the neo-liberal agenda and the obsession with the fiscal deficit it entails has constrained the maneuverability of the government, the budgetary exercise has had little to do with the actual state of the economy.
 
To start with, additional revenues are virtually impossible to mobilize within the neoliberal policy framework. Additional direct taxes cannot be mobilized as that would adversely affect private initiative, customs duties have to be reduced as part of trade liberalization, and excise duties have to be cut in the hope they would generate additional demand for industrial goods from the upper-‘middle’ class. As a result, tax revenues as a percentage of GDP fell from 10.1 per cent in 1990-91 to 8.2 percent in 1998-99, and though provisional figures for 1999-2000 point to a marginal recovery, the evidence of decline is clear.
 
With the tax base shrinking, and revenue expenditures burdened with irreversible outlays on interest payments, capital and social expenditures have to be cut to keep the fiscal deficit in control. Within the neo-liberal framework there is only one alternative available in this context to sustain capital and social expenditures: that of divesting equity in profitable public sector undertakings to garner resources that can be frittered away to keep the government’s expenditure figures rising. Despite the irrational, short-run nature of any such initiative, the government has been desperate to adopt such as policy, targeting sums of up to Rs. 10,000 crore as “revenues” from privatization. Unfortunately, the logic of the market is such that any such desperate effort to divest equity to garner resources could succeed only if public assets are undervalued massively, as has been sought to be done in many recent instances of regular and strategic disinvestments of large public undertakings to bargain-hunting domestic and foreign capitalists. Since, there are limits to which this can be pushed ahead within a democratic framework, the privatization effort has, fortunately, been a complete failure.
 
This essentially means that the State can no more serve as the stimulus to growth. Nor has the much promised boom in private investment led by exports materialized despite ten years of liberalization of trade and foreign investment rules. As a result fiscal paralysis results in an underlying tendency in the system for growth to slacken. It is not surprising therefore the fundamental message delivered by the statistics incorporated in the Survey is that of an overall slowdown in growth and a slump in the commodity producing sectors, viz., agriculture and industry. GDP growth has fallen from 6.6 per cent in 1998-99 to 6.4 percent in 1999-2000 to an estimated 6 per cent in 2000-01. In three of the last four years, the index of agricultural production has registered a decline varying between 0.7 per cent and 6.1 per cent, making the 7.7 per cent growth in the good monsoon year 1998-99 inadequate to ensure a positive trend growth rate. And industrial production growth during those years has fluctuated between 4.1 and 6.7 per cent, which is well below the 8 per cent average growth rate registered during the 1980s.
 
It is not just growth that has been the casualty. Movements in social indicators and the incidence of poverty reflect clearly that progress on the human development and poverty alleviation fronts have substantially slowed and in certain instances have even been reversed in recent years. The Survey skirts this issue in many areas, but in others such as the poverty reduction front it resorts to an obvious sleight of hand. Evidence of consumer expenditure surveys from the NSS have revealed that till 1998 the incidence of poverty has at most stagnated or perhaps even increased during the 1990s, as compared with the significant reductions recorded in the 1970s and 1980s. To counter this, the Economic Survey cites the completely non-comparable estimates yielded by the contaminated 30-day recall figures in the 1999-2000 consumer expenditure survey by the National Sample Survey Organization, to suggest that poverty may have declined significantly during the 1990s. Realizing that this judgment is unacceptable given the change in methodology in the 1999-2000, 55th Round NSS Survey, the Survey itself notes that the 1999-2000 poverty figures are not “strictly comparable” with earlier estimates. This half-hearted honesty has however a deeper motive. It helps divert attention from the available figures, which suggest that progress on the poverty alleviation front during the so-called reform years has been disastrous. But clearly, those who seek to divert attention from a set of facts, are obviously cognizant of those facts.
 
Faced with these circumstances, the message which should have been derived from the survey’s figures is that there is need to reconsider the tax and spending strategy underlying the neoliberal reform policy, and a new beginning that reverses such reform should be made in this budget itself. But clearly the dominance over policy-making under the NDA government of interests, especially international financial interests, which back neo-liberal reform is so overwhelming that this option cannot be countenanced.

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