The second instance of implicit off-loading of the fiscal deficit is with regard to the Infrastructure Development Fund, whose capital of Rs.10000 cr., which is supposed to provide ''bridge finance'' for infrastructure projects that are remunerative economically but not financially, is not provided for in the budget. Instead of borrowing directly the government in other words making an agency set up by itself do the borrowing. This borrowing, being off-budget, is not shown as part of the fiscal deficit.

The third instance is what has already been referred to above, namely the absence of any reference to the food component of the Employment Programmes in the budget documents. The 5 million tonnes which the Finance Minister has promised as the food component of the FFW and which does not figure in the budget will obviously be loaned by the FCI to the FFW programme. A part of the fiscal deficit in other words would have been shifted out of the budget. Putting it differently the actual fiscal deficit generated by the budgetary provisions is much larger than what appears in the documents.

One cannot fault this in principle. On the contrary it only confirms the point that the FRBM Act which forces the government to do such ''off-loading'' of the fiscal deficit away from the budget to other government organizations is an absurdity which even people like Mr.Chidambaram have come to realize. But in this particular case there are two concrete considerations that militate against this practice. The first is that such ''off-loading'' may, given the general neo-liberal ethos, jeopardize the future of the agencies on to whose shoulders the deficit is being off-loaded or have other harmful consequences. A reference has already been made to the possibility that off-loading the fiscal deficit onto the shoulders of the State governments could turn them into proteges of agencies like the ADB and the World Bank (which some of them are already in the process of becoming) with dangerous consequences for national integrity. Likewise if the FCI's giving loans to the FFW programme increases its deficit (which is covered through the food subsidy), then in the name of cutting the food subsidy the same government might decide one day to wind up the FCI. In other words, enlarging the fiscal deficit whether directly through the budget or through other government agencies is fine provided a consistent approach of defending the government agencies is simultaneously adopted.. But, of this there is no sign.


Secondly, while enlarging the fiscal deficit for incurring larger expenditure is fine, there is no justification whatsoever for doing so together with a reduction in corporate income taxation. The argument that some parity has to be established between personal income taxation and corporate income taxation has no basis whatsoever. Hence the argument that since the highest rate of personal income tax is 30 percent, the rate of corporate income tax must also be reduced to 30 percent from the current 35 percent lacks substance.

Indeed most of the tax concessions given in the budget lack any justification. There is no reason why the scope of the service tax should be cut down from its existing level. There is no reason why import duties should be reduced on a variety of capital goods: while it would have a scarcely noticeable effect on the overall investment, it would act to the detriment of the domestic capital goods producers, causing a degree of de-industrialization in this sector. (Such deindustrialization would also follow from the dereservation of a number of items hitherto reserved for the small-scale sector). Likewise, there is no reason for reducing the excise duties on a variety of luxury goods like air-conditioners. And the reduction in import tariffs on a range of agricultural goods is precisely the opposite of what the government should be doing if it wished to undo the damage done to this sector by neo-liberalism. Even experts like M.S.Swaminathan have been arguing that agriculture cannot be treated like any other sector in the matter of protection since the livelihood of millions of peasants and labourers who have nowhere else to go depends upon it. The budget alas pays scant heed to such sage advice.

While these tax concessions are being given, the imposition of a cess of 50 paise per litre on petrol and diesel can hardly be justified, especially as it comes on top of price-hikes decreed very recently on these commodities. Indeed whatever little relief that the people might have derived from the reductions in import and excise duties on kerosene and LPG would be offset to a significant extent by this cess. In the case of petrol the net revenue raising effect is much less than what appears at first sight since the government is a major consumer of the commodity. In the case of diesel, any price hike jacks up transport costs and has an across-the-board inflationary impact which would hurt the people.

Two suggestions thrown out in the budget are a source of disquiet. The first relates to the banking sector where the bounds on the Statutory Liquidity Ratio and the Cash Reserve Ratio are sought to be removed and the Reserve Bank is to be made free to prescribe such prudential norms as it deems fit. This entails giving greater autonomy to the RBI and making banks free in their portfolio choice which would enable them to speculate more freely. Both these, like the earlier pronouncement regarding making the management of public sector banks more autonomous, are measures of financial liberalization, which would have disastrous consequences for the economy. The fact that the Finance Minister who talks of giving more credit to agriculture in one breath, advocates financial liberalization in the next, only shows the lack of seriousness with regard the first objective. Moreover, nothing has been done in the budget either to curb FII operations on the stock market which even the RBI governor in an unguarded moment had asked for, or even to undo the anomaly caused last year by Mr.Chidambaram's rolling back of both the stock market transactions tax and the capital gains tax. And to cap it all he has even suggested that trade in derivatives is not to be treated as speculative, when almost by definition it is.

Even while doing precious little to curb financial speculation, and if anything adding to speculative tendencies in this sphere, the budget makes some ritual noises against black money: the 0.1 percent tax on cash withdrawals from banks is neither appropriate nor significant for tackling black money.

The second disquieting suggestion relates to the entry of foreign direct investment into mining and pension funds. As regards mining, the argument against FDI is obvious. Indeed, as Joan Robinson, the well-known Cambridge economist had once remarked, of all the different terrains of FDI involvement, the mining sector is the worst, since minerals are an exhaustible resource. The MNCs extract the mineral, ship the surplus back home, and leave when the mine gets exhausted. But when that happens, the country is left high and dry, with no more mineral resource left. The case of Myanmar illustrates the point. At one time its oil wealth attracted much foreign investment (Burma-Shell), and it experienced for a brief period an enormous boom, when oil extraction was going on. But today, with its oil wealth exhausted, it is one of the forty ''least developed'' countries in the world. There is absolutely no argument whatsoever for inducting MNCs into the mining sector.

In the case of pension funds, it is sometimes argued that FDI in this sector would fetch higher rates of return for the pensioners, so that any opposition to FDI in this sector is only ideological and hurts the interests of the pensioners. Even if we take this argument in itself, i.e. even if we leave aside the macro-economic implications of entrusting a part of the country's savings to a bunch of multinational corporations, it is not the case that the pensioners would be better off if their funds are managed by MNCs. The reason is simple: in India the level of political empowerment of the people is far greater than the level of their effective legal empowerment. They can agitate against the government and force the latter to listen to them, but, as the Bhopal Gas Tragedy victims' case shows, they cannot fight a successful legal battle against an MNC, certainly not within a limited period (as is necessary in the case of pensioners). Pension funds therefore are best managed by the government and must not be entrusted to MNCs. Doing so is an act of disempowerment of the pensioners, which no promise of higher returns can offset.

The fact that such patently neo-liberal measures are being contemplated by a Finance Minister who has ostensibly shown concern for the poor, only demonstrates that this budget is an attempt to please all, the MNCs, the corporate sector, the salariat and, to an extent, the poor and those who speak for them. Such a ''please-all'' budget can only be based on a degree of arithmetical jugglery and hence can only be a transitory phenomenon. Or putting it differently, this budget does not mark the ushering in of a ''growth-with-equity'' trajectory, or of ''liberalization with a human face'', as some newspapers have claimed. It is impossible to combine liberalization with a human face, because of the immanent logic of liberalization. This budget rather represents marking time, a small tactical adjustment, in the form of a pause in the march along a neo-liberal path. But just as a tactical retreat does not represent an equilibrium situation, this pause should not be confused for a new trajectory of ''liberalization with a human face''. This retreat has been necessitated by the relentless pressure of the Left. The Left has to continue exerting, and indeed intensifying, that pressure against the pursuit of the neo-liberal trajectory.

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