Inflation
that had been officially declared as being on the wane is back and
raging. Focused on food articles, it is eroding the real incomes
of the already poor and, therefore, the popular support which brought
UPA II to power. Particularly damaging is the fact that high inflation
has been the norm for a year now, with its incidence shifting across
commodities, but most often falling on one or other set of food
articles. The government seems to be helpless and just wishing that
the problem would go away. Almost a year ago, when addressing a
Chief Minister's conference on food prices early in February 2010,
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh declared: "The worst is over
as far as food inflation is concerned. I am confident that we will
soon be able to stabilise food prices." Three months later,
on more than one occasion, government spokespersons, like Chief
Economic Advisor Kaushik Basu, had declared that inflation had ''peaked
out'' and was on a downward trend. Such statements are not surprising
since in the current dispensation government representatives at
the highest level are expected to talk down prices and talk up markets.
It is not what you say but the confidence with which you say it
that matters.
But there is reason to believe that the government did actually
believe that inflation would follow some sort of a cycle, and more
likely moderate quickly than rise significanty. One or two predictions
of an impending price decline are understandable. But, over the
last year, almost every month or even week, one official spokesperson
or the other (be it the Finance Minister, the Finance Secretary,
the Deputy Chairman of the Planning Commission or the ubiquitous
head of the PM's Economic Advisory Council) declared that inflation
is bound to moderate, in a voice tinged with surprise that it has
not done so earlier.
This expectation came from a particular reading of the situation.
Whenever prices did rise rapidly, it was attributed either to supply
side factors such as a poor crop or to unavoidable factors like
the ''base effect''. Thus when the PM spoke in February last year
he looked forward to a good monsoon and a better crop. And, if prices
had been unusually low a year earlier, even a return to ''normalcy''
would reflect a high rate of inflation that must be discounted.
Occasionally, of course, there was talk of hoarding and speculation,
but only on the part of unscrupulous traders, who were exploiting
temporary demand-supply imbalances.
Experience has shown that these ''beliefs'' were patently false.
Despite the fact that the monsoon has been much better in recent
seasons, the annual point-to-point inflation in the Wholesale Price
Index for Food Articles stood at 18.32 per cent and 16.91 per cent
during the weeks ending December 25, 2010 and January 1, 2011. The
figures for the corresponding weeks of the previous year were 19.9
per cent and 19.6 per cent. Not much has changed even though the
commodities involved are slightly different. Moreover, the month-on-month
inflation rate as reflected even by the Wholesale Price Index for
All Commodities, which stood at a disconcertingly high level in
the first half of 2008, and then declined consistently between July
2008 and July 2009, accelerated subsequently and has remained at
high levels throughout 2010. The month-on-month rate of inflation
stood at 9.7 per cent in November and 8.5 per cent in December.
And if weekly WPI movements are an indication, this is likely to
be true in January 2011 as well. The consumer price indices for
agricultural labourers and industrial workers, which reflect the
movements in the basket of goods consumed by these sections (which
includes housing that dampens the increase) also rose by 7.1 per
cent and 8.3 per cent respectively in November relative to the corresponding
month of the previous year.
This persistence of the inflationary trend is substantially because
the government, while occasionally expressing concern over the high
level of inflation, has done little to combat it, given its belief
that inflation will necessarily moderate when supply conditions
improve or the base effect wears out. This has sent out the message
that economic governance under a government populated with economists
of repute has broken down. That impression has only been bolstered
by the open spats between segments of the government over who is
responsible for the persisting inflation.
To understand the factors that could be driving the price rise,
we need to turn to a number of noteworthy features of the current
inflation scenario. The first is that, while it is not restricted
to food alone, it has been substantially driven by food articles,
which are more prone to speculative influences. In the case of these
commodities, even when demand-supply imbalances are minor or absent,
speculation can push up prices. The second is that within food articles,
inflation has at different points in time affected different commodities,
such as cereals, pulses, vegetables, eggs, meat and milk. Not all
of these commodities are equally weather dependent and the prices
of some are influenced by how administered prices are set. To attribute
the trends in their prices solely to demand-supply imbalances or
imported inflation is to avoid the conundrum. Third, when inflation
does occur in some food items, be they onions, vegetables or even
cereals, the rate of inflation tends to be extremely high, pointing
to the role of speculation in driving prices in the short run. Finally,
even when such influences are not at work, there seem to be factors
operative that keep the ''all commodities'' inflation rate high.
Even though it is still early to say, the trend over the last one-and-a-half
years suggest that there are structural factors at work that are
setting a higher floor to the inflation rate. They may be neutralised
in the future. But even if they are, they could as well return to
play a role subsequently. The government has recognised this structural,
inflationary tendency in a peculiar, in fact patently absurd, way.
It attributes the inflation to the demand-side effects of high growth.
If people are richer because of an 8-9 per cent growth rate, they
are bound to demand more. Since supply does not adjust, prices are
bound to rise.
There are many assumptions here. That when GDP grows, those who
need to buy and consume more cereals, pulses and vegetables garner
a reasonable share of the benefits of that growth. Or that when
GDP grows, such growth cannot occur in large measure in the commodity
producing sectors, resulting in a widening gap between the demand
for and supply of certain goods. That even though the ''high growth''
era began in 2004, it is only now that it has generated demand-supply
imbalances. And, that if there is indeed a supply-demand imbalance
the government is unable, for whatever reason, to redress it by
resorting to imports. Making such assumptions is not just wishful
thinking, but avoiding the conundrum.
It is not that there are no demand-supply imbalances. India's growth
has indeed been lopsided. As has been argued by perceptive analysts,
India's high GDP growth was recorded in a period when the agricultural
sector and a range of petty producers were experiencing a crisis,
an aspect of which was the non-viability of crop production and
therefore an extremely slow growth of agricultural output and GDP.
At some point, that long-term crisis was likely to result in an
unsustainable demand-supply imbalance.
But there are two other factors that are structurally embedded in
the economic environment generated by the government's neoliberal
reform agenda adopted for two decades now. The first is a tendency
where corporate consolidation in production and trade, decontrol
that permits profiteering, a reduced role for public agencies and
public sector firms and the withdrawal or curtailments of subsidies
on a range of inputs, has pushed up costs and prices (including
administered prices) substantially. As some have argued, India is
increasingly a high input price and high output price economy, with
a rising floor for many prices. The second is the role that speculation
has to come to play, with liberalised trade, with the presence of
large corporate players in the wholesale and retail trade and with
the growing role of futures and derivatives trading in a host of
commodities. Add the influence of these two factors to the underlying
crisis in some commodity producing sectors and the long-term, structural
inflation is more than partly explained.
The government of course does not consider these angles worth pursuing.
The reason is partly ideological. It cannot bear questioning the
outcome of reform. It cannot bear suggesting that corporate entry
can lead to profiteering in a context of decontrol. It does not
believe that speculation in futures markets can push up spot prices,
and has banned some of these markets only because of public pressure.
It cannot contemplate a larger role for the state and no role for
corporate (domestic and foreign) players in the both wholesale and
retail trade. In the event, all that the Prime Minister's emergency
meetings on the inflation issue could throw up is an inter-Ministerial
group mandated to monitor short-term fire-fighting measures and
promote actions that the government has claimed to be promoting
for many years now.
To top it all, precisely at a time when it can come in handy, the
government is threatening to renege on the UPA's promise to deliver
universal access to a minimum quota of food through the public distribution
system. Riding on the argument that not enough foodgrain is available,
even though production has been good, stocks with the government
are comfortable and foreign exchange that can be used to import
even more is being handed over to the rich to be transferred to
accounts abroad, it has used the Prime Minister's Economic Advisory
Council to stall even a diluted proposal from the Sonia Gandhi-led
National Advisory Council to expand the public distribution system.
No guesses are needed to identify where the push for this effort
to kill the proposal comes from. And here too the ultimate source
is the neoliberal ideology that wants to cut expenditures and reduce
a fiscal deficit even as tax concessions are being handed out to
the well-to-do.
The government is not alone in all this. There is an influential
body of opinion, including in the mainstream media that the inflation
problem is the result of poor supply management that cannot, at
low cost, mobilise and reach supplies from wherever it is available
to wherever it is needed. This creates unnecessary shortages that
push up prices as well as encourages speculation that aggravates
the price increase. The solution therefore is corporate retailing
services, including that which would be offered by large transnational
retail firms. According to reports (The Hindu, January 19. 2011),
using inflation as the excuse, the cabinet is about to consider
a controversial proposal to permit 51 per cent foreign equity in
multi-brand retailing. This argument too borders on the absurd.
It ignores the fact that, though India has till quite recently had
no such retail trade structure, there have been long periods when
prices and inflation have been kept in control. It also ignores
the evidence from other contexts which shows that where such retail
chains are active, the margin between prices paid to producers and
charged to consumers tends to be high, buoyant and downward sticky.
Neoliberal thinking not only leads to policy paralysis and absurd
reasoning. It also results in policy responses that are contrary
to what is needed. Thus, in the midst of the current inflationary
mess, on the basis of the liberalised pricing mechanism, the oil
companies have been allowed to hike the prices of petrol a second
time in quick succession. Given the role of public sector firms
here, nobody would believe that a nod from the government was not
obtained before the hike. If balance has to be maintained a diesel
hike must follow. This government may go in for that as well. Doing
this to the prices of what are universal intermediates in the midst
of an inflation emergency might be seen by some as madness. If the
belief that the people can be called upon to sacrifice real incomes
because reform cannot be held back or reversed is a sign of madness,
then possibly it is.