But private acquirers of Indian Airlines and Air India need not rely
just on improvements in productivity in existing routes to improve
profitability. They can exploit the opportunity to eat into the "social
routes" when either there is not enough fat to trim or when they
are new unable to cut the existing fat in the state-owned airlines. That is privatisation may just be a process of transforming what
where social gains or benefits into private profits. The latter
may be inevitable given the high returns which are expected by private
investors based on hypothetical calculations of profits foregone by
choosing this rather then some other lucrative area of investment.
It should be obvious that any effort by the government to use the
its own residual shareholding and the shareholders agreement with
the likely private investors as a means of preventing the transformation
of social benefits into private profits would be subverted. Given
the logic of private calculations of the opportunity costs of investing
in the airlines sector, any attempt at restricting profit maximising
tendencies would make the exercise of privatising airlines one more
instance of the failed experiments with privatisation in recent years.
It is this aspect of the privatisation process that makes the motivation
behind the choice of the "strategic sale" route suspect.
The remarkable feature of this method of privatisation is that management
control is handed over to a private investor in return for acquisition
of a minority stake. In the case of the airlines sector, by handing
over management control in return for purchases varying between 26
and 40 per cent of equity, the government is allowing one or a combination
of two or more minority private shareholders to transform the objectives
of the company. The implied willingness to trade social gains for
private profits could be traced to a desire to achieve either one
or a combination of two objectives. That of wanting to make the privatisation
offer unusually attractive, or that of wanting to use private management
as the hatchet with which to close "unprofitable" routes
and slash cross-subsidisation to improve profitability in return for
a share in those profits. That is, privatisation becomes a means of
cutting social expenditures, which are given a bad name by treating
them as "implicit subsidies" that in government parlance
has come to mean populist "give aways".
But even this is not easily achieved. The current performance of the
airlines sector is not merely the result of the adverse impact of
cross-subsidisation on financial profitability but of the beneficial
impact of offering a captive client to the operator in the form of
the many arms of government. Once social objectives are dropped and
competition and market principles made the rule, there is no logic
to the provision of such a captive market. If the government pursues
logic and allows full freedom to official travellers to choose their
airline on all routes, the expected gains from privatisation may remain
unrealised, especially since ownership change per se does not necessarily
improve profitability. If it does the value of the 50 per cent equity,
which the government has chosen to continue to hold in order to facilitate
privatisation, would collapse, making the whole exercise a financially
disastrous one.
It is not surprising therefore that the decision to privatise the
airline industry has been mired in controversy not just outside but
also within the government. According to reports, Civil Aviation Minister
Sharad Yadav has been a staunch opponent of the disinvestment move,
and it has taken some persuasion by Mr Jaitley and intervention by
the Prime Minister for the decision to go through the Cabinet Committee
on Disinvestment. This rather stubborn insistence on going ahead with
"strategic sales" in an area where there still remain strong
arguments for control by the state stems from many sources. Primarily
it comes from the ideological and political moorings of the BJP. First,
the BJP and the Jana Sangh out of which it evolved is the most economically
conservative and pro-business political formation in the country,
which has recently given up even the nationalist rhetoric that made
it appear as favouring domestic rather than international capital.
Second, in keeping with this transformation, the BJP under Prime Minister
Vajpayee has decided to virtually steal the "reform" agenda
from the Congress and make it its own, necessitating an acceleration
and intensification of the liberalisation process. Third, the BJP
has clearly decided to use this liberalisation process and the "modernity"
it is claimed to symbolise to divert attention from its deeply conservative,
retrogade and divisive social and cultural ideology.
These fundamental influences driving the BJP¹s reform agenda in general
and the privatisation plank in particular have been supported by more
immediate factors. One of these is the need to appease the G-7 in
general and the US in particular, by offering "big-ticket"
liberalisation as a sop for not overreacting to the BJP¹s "nuclear
natioinalism". The other is the need to deal with the contradiction
involved in placating domestic business with low tax rates, while
satisfying the demands from the IMF and the international financial
interests it represents, to rein in the fiscal deficit. The resources
garnered from privatisation help at least temporarily resolve this
conflict and provide the government with some additional resources
to go about its routine activities, even if at the expense of substantial
future revenues.
The fact that such a range of motives govern the process of privatisation
through strategic sale does, however, send out a damaging signal.
The desperation to sell potentially lucrative assets to the private
sector gives the "strategic buyer" a negotiating advantage.
A host of reasons can be found to undervalue assets and sell them
cheap. In the event, in the event of failure to ensure that the opposition
wins, reason prevails and indiscriminate privatisation halted, the
least that should be secured is transparency in the valuation process.
If not, a group of private investors are bound to take over the market
for airborne traffic at bargain prices, even though the process involves
considerable social cost.