Volume 4, No. 4-5, April-May 2003

 

Budget 2003-04: More of the same Poison

— Arvind

 

Ever since the 1990s all the budgets -whether by Manmohan Singh of the Congress(I) or Chidumbrum of the UF or Yeshwant Sinha/Jaswant Singh of the BJP/NDA - they have all had a common direction. The direction is that of economic reforms as dictated by the imperialists and their multilateral institutions. The basic framework of the policies have already been set by the WTO/IMF/World Bank agenda, and with close monitoring by their representatives, their agents in India have been faithfully carrying out the neo-colonial policies, no matter which party is in power. The focus of this policy can be summed up in a single sentence: rob the poor and middle-classes that comprise 90% of the population; fatten the TNC/Comprador big-business combine; and pamper the elite.

So through this budget, on the one hand, the price of Scotch whiskey is reduced by Rs.1,200 per bottle; car prices from Rs.10,000 to Rs.75,000 on a single car; roughly Rs.2,000 on air conditioners, refrigerators and high-end colour TVs; on the other, the price of edible oil has been raised by 8%, kerosene by Rs.1 per litre, LPG by Rs.25 per cylinder and fertilizers by Rs.12 per bag (50kg). But this is only the tip of the FM’s budgetary iceberg; we shall now look below the surface by interviewing a cross-section of the people.

I first met a slum-dweller, Kishore, earning Rs.3,500 to 4,000 per month in a semi-permanent job at a factory.

Arvind : Kishore, tell me, are you pleased with this budget?

Kishore : Firstly, I must inform you journalists that it is not the Central budget that effects the poor like us most but those of the state government and the municipality. Over the last two years the house tax (even in slums, where no facilities are provided) has been raised; electricity and water charges increased; cost of my children’s education has increased, my ration card is worthless as the open price is nearly the same, and the grains through the ration shop are sub-standard; bus/train fares have increased; and even medical charges which were previously free have gone up like anything. This is on the one hand. On the other, though my employer is making big profits, he is refusing to raise our wages. In fact when we demanded for a small increase, he threatened to throw us all out, saying there is no shortage of labour. So you well understand how our conditions have worsened in these few years.

Arvind : But do you not have a union?

Kishore: Yes we are all members of the CITU. Every month the leader comes and collects the membership dues from us. Sometimes, he comes and takes extra amounts, saying it for some of their causes, like elections in one state or another. But they have done nothing for us. The leader has very good relations with the ‘malik’. Since he lives a good life, many workers say he is in their pay. We have thought of changing the union, but they are all the same.

Arvind: But coming back to this budget; what impact will it have on you and your family?

Kishore: If at all it has an impact, it is negative. The price of our main cooking fuel, kerosene, has been raised yet again due to the reduction in subsidy. This rise has been going on every year, and the present Rs.1 hike amounts to over 10% increase. Then, our main cooking medium, oil, will rise by a minimum of 8%, most likely much more. The 8% is merely the increased tax put on edible oil, but the 25% drop in production this year will probably push prices much higher. Then, instead of reducing the cost of public health service, they have, in this budget reduced the expenditure on public health, and instead introduced a fake insurance scheme and given big concessions to private hospitals- in other words institutionalizing the privatization of health. That means we can expect a big increase in costs health care in the future. Also, the rise in the cost of diesel by as much as Rs.1.50 per litre, means that transport costs are likely to go up. These were just raised a year back. Now again it will be raised. Part of this is for the so-called ‘Calamity’ fund. For all the big government doles to the IT sector and big business, it comes from the normal funds; then for those stricken by calamity, what is the need for a separate tax, that too on an essential commodity?

Arvind: But is there no benefit to you at all through this budget? After all, in his budget speech the FM said that his main orientation was towards the poor.

Kishore: That is a hoax always played by each FM. Even though an election is due, they cannot displease their bosses sitting abroad. So, besides some window dressing, likes sops to senior citizens, there is nothing really for us. On the contrary we have been left even poorer. This has been the process each year. Besides, there is nothing for employment generation. With the lakhs of jobs being lost each year, our children are going to face a horrendous future. It is difficult to even imagine how they will survive. For dalits like us, it will be even worse with the present Hidutva/Brahminical wave.

After that, I moved to the rural area and first spoke to an agricultural labourer. Here conditions are even more horrifying. Inspite of one of the worst droughts in the last three decades and a huge stock-pile of foodgrains the government did not reduce the rationed price by even a paisa. Most of the schemes announced were only on paper, and the bulk of this huge population was living on barely one meal a day. Their plight was ten times worse than even that of Kishore. I then went on to speak to a small farmer. Atul has 4 acres, which supports the families of two sons and the parents.

Arvind: As you take out two crops, you must have enough food for the year?

Atul: It is only March, and already our entire stock of foodgrain is exhausted. Though we had a better crop than most people in this region, because of the drought, everyday we have to look for work, or else there is nothing to eat. Though we have had the worst possible drought, the concessions announced to the rural sector in this budget are a mockery. This year foodgrain production has fallen by a massive 13.6% over the previous year - the sharpest decline in over a decade, amounting to 3.1% of the GDP. Production has dropped from 212 million tones (mt) last year to an estimated 183 mt this year. Edible oil production has dropped by an unbelievable 25% from last years 20.5 mt to barely 15 mt in the current year. The production of pulses too has dropped drastically. Crores more have, this year, been pushed to a subsistence level of existence. All this has resulted in the food import bill rising drastically from $1.8 billion in 2000-01 to $2.3 billion in the current year - a rise of nearly 30%, mostly of oil and pulses. So, the Indian farmer is hit twice - first it was the massive crash in the price of nearly all agricultural commodities (see earlier issues of PM….Editor), now, over and above this, we are hit by the drought and a massive drop in production. The agriculturist in the country, except for the very big farmers and landlords, are being pushed to rack and ruin by government policy that seems only interested in hi-tech and multinationals. This budget faithfully follows the WTO prescription of not increasing import duty on agricultural produce. So, the flood of cheap imports will continue, and the prices will continue to be low leading to more suicides of cotton growers, sugarcane growers, etc. There is also total silence on the thousands of crores due to the agriculturists by the sugar mills.

Arvind: How do you say this, the FM began his budget speech saying this year’s budget is agriculture oriented. Those too were the headlines in many newspapers.

Atul: It is laughable. It is all a mirage, trying to dupe the public for votes. Let us look at the facts. First, with much fanfare he announces an expansion of the Antyodya Anna Yojna "to cover another 50 lakh ‘poorest of the poor’ with concessional foodgrain", granting a pittance of Rs.507 crores. (This amounts to a few rupees per family per month. Compare this to the huge amounts given to various sections of big business, seen in a later part of the interview. Ambani alone in just one reduction of duty, on, for example PFY, has been gifted Rs.510 crores…… Arvind). Everyone knows that barely 10% of such funds finally reach the people. But even assuming that they do, this amount given has been balanced by cutting by one-third the allocation of rural employment under the Sampoorna Grameen Rozgar Yojna. In the newspaper headlines you will of course only see the former reported, while the latter will be hidden in the fine print. Then he raised the price of fertilizers by about Rs.12 a bag, taking a good Rs.700 crores out of the farmer’s pockets. (Since removed due to pressure from the farm lobby, in view of the elections, but sure to be re-introduced after the elections.) He has raised the price of diesel taking yet another Rs.600 to 800 crores from our pockets (Total extracted from the duty hike in petrol and diesel is Rs.2,600 crores ……. Arvind) Next, he has reduced the subsidy on kerosene, which means prices will probably rise by about Rs.1 per litre. Then the price of edible oil has been hiked by 8%. On the other hand there has been no reduction whatsoever on the BPL or above BPL price of foodgrains, in spite of the huge stocks. So, what has the budget given us - nothing, in fact through the above measures it has extracted roughly Rs.1,300 crores from us (after removal of the increased charge on fertilizers), that too in a year of drought and famine. This is similar to what the British did when they ruled the country.

Arvind: You mean there were no sops at all for agriculture?

Atul: Firstly, in real terms, the outlay for ‘agriculture and allied activities’ has dropped compared to the previous year. The increase of Rs.133 crores to Rs.3,866 crores will be less than the inflation for the year. But, like the last year even this amount will not be actually spent - last year over Rs.500 crores lay unspent; i.e. a good 14% of the budgeted figure lay unspent. This is the type of ‘emphasis’ given to agriculture by the government. Just compare this amount to the Rs.2,345 crores allocated to write off the bad debts (i.e. frauds) of just two major banks - the IDBI & IFCI. Besides, the actual ‘sops’ announced in agriculture is more geared towards big business, finance and exports. The beneficiaries from these will only be the big landlords and big farmers. Those announced are: encouragement to private banks to open branches in rural areas; Rs.50 crore technological inputs to promote hi-tech horticulture and precision farming; and Rs.50 crores to rehabilitate traditional pastures in Rajasthan (probably in the FM’s constituency to help him win the elections, which he lost the previous time). So, you tell me what is there for the rural populace in this budget, except more misery! Do you know that food availability has been dropping sharply, and is now less than 142kg per head per year - the lowest since the 1960s.

Then I returned to the town and met up with a middle-class employee working in a public sector bank.

Arvind: So Kalyan, how is the budget?

Kalyan: A total sell-out. It will mean more VRS for us, in order to hand over the banks to some TNC. At least part of our VRS (up to Rs.5 lakhs) will now be tax-free. In this budget not only have they raised the FDI limit of private banks in public sector banks from 49% to 74%, they have allowed the complete transfer of management into their hands by removing the 10% limit on voting rights of the investor. Now the investor will have voting rights equal to their share capital. Inevitably the foreign banks will make a grab for our banks once the staff is reduced. So, the bulk of us will be kicked out, in preparation for this transfer.

Arvind: Besides this change in policy, how does the general budget affect you?

Kalyan: Negatively, all around. The government can no longer squeeze the poor much more for funds, as they have nothing left to extract from them, so they have now turned their attention to the middle classes. Of course they have not even spared the poor by raising the price of kerosene, fertilizers, diesel, etc. While there was much show of concessions to senior citizens, handicapped, etc., it was nothing but a gimmick. What they have done is extract thousands from the middle-classes and then give back a few hundreds. Surprisingly even the CPM leader, Somnath Chatterjee, was fooled by the FM’s gimmicks when he intervened twice during the budget speech to praise Jaswant Singh (was he really ‘fooled’ or is he just part of the gang supporting economic reforms…. Arvind). Once SC said "a very well written speech". Later he complimented the FM "in making the budget sensitive to the needs of the physically challenged". The biggest hit though, has been the further reduction on interest rates on small savings by a full 1%; now a mere 8%. That means, defacto, no earnings for the old-aged pensioner, on the provident fund, on fixed deposits of the retired, etc, as the interest rate is now roughly equal to the inflation rate on consumer prices. Over just a few years the government has dropped this rate from 12% to 8%, taking crores out of the savings of the middle-classes. Even these savings today are at risk with the numerous frauds in the banks and even the mutual trusts like the UTI. By reduction of interest rates the Government will save about Rs.20,000 crores in one year on the huge interest on its public debt, big-business will get funds cheaper, but the middle class is being ruined. Then the budget has once again pushed up the prices of petrol and diesel by as much as Rs.1.50 per litre, which will result in another major burden on the middle-class. Then, with a hike in tax on the service sector, cable TV will cost roughly Rs.300 per month. They have once again hit the small scale sector by de-reserving another 75 items from the SSI list - none will be able to survive in the face of competition from big business and the TNCs. Finally, even the so-called concessions on income tax only benefit those in the higher bracket. Those earning up to Rs.12,000 a month get hardly any reduction in tax payment. But as one goes up the income ladder the concessions increase - earnings of Rs.16,000 per month will get a yearly reduction of Rs.2,000, while a yearly income of Rs.10 lakhs will get a reduction of Rs.14,000. So, it is clearly a budget for the rich. Besides, inflation rates are rising, and with the huge planned fiscal deficit of 5.6% of GDP, the result is bound to be inflationary. Inflation hits the middle classes and working people the most, as they have fixed incomes.

Then, finally I met a businessman, Mr. Ram Joshi:

Arvind: So, how do you feel about Jaswant Singh’s maiden budget?

Ram: Have you not read all the business papers; it’s absolutely great. The CII chief, Atul Soota, explained it all, saying that it went even beyond their own recommendations. Just look at the huge concessions we business people have got. In excise duty cuts: the motor companies (mostly TNCs) have been gifted Rs.800 crores; the tyre companies, Rs.550 crores; a Rs.510 crore saving on PFY (polyester filament yarn), mostly going to Ambani. Besides this, excise duty has been reduced from 32% to 24% on soft drinks, airconditioneers, etc. Wont the increased profits to Pepsi and Coke encourage greater investment in our country, like they are doing in tea/coffee vending machines, which will wipe out thousands of ‘unhygienic’ chaiwallas. Oh, it is a brilliant step forward. Then by the reduction of the peak customs duty from 30% to 25%, business gains another Rs.2,100 crores. With this, imagine we will get good foreign products so cheap that this will help streamline all those lakhs of inefficient, incompetent businesses in the small-scale sector. Then one must really congratulate JS for his concern with the health of our country. After reducing the subsidy on health care and pushing medical expenditure out of the reach of the poor, in this budget he has given huge concessions to promote the private health care and hi-tech super specialty hospitals. Instead of free health care, he has introduced an insurance scheme which makes sure that all medical facilities will be paid for; what a bonanza to the health care and pharmaceutical industry. No wonder Pratap Reddy of the Apollo Hospital Group was ecstatic over this budget, praising the FM for copying an insurance scheme he had introduced a few years back. He also sees his hospitals promoting tourism in the country. Not only that, customs duties on hi-tech hospital equipment has been reduced from 25% to 5%; income tax on pharma and biotech companies have been put on par with the IT sector; customs duty on a variety of drugs, appliances and ophthalmic apparatus have either been slashed or removed; excise duty on medicines and toilet preparations containing alcohol slashed from 50% to 16%; and sops have been announced on interest payments on new investments by private hospitals.

Arvind: All this may increase profits but how does it help growth, which has fallen to the abysmally low level of 4.4% of GDP in the current year?

Ram: Such encouragement to industry will give a big boost. Look further at the huge concessions, for example he has handed out to the tourism sector, which has been languishing after 9/11. He has totally done away with entertainment tax in this sector. And LTC (leave-travel allowance) has been brought back to the employees, not out of any love for the employees, but in a bid to revive the tourist industry. But there is much more for all business, which you may not be aware about. The poor diamond merchants like Bharat Shah stand to make big gains as the duty on rough half-cut diamonds has been abolished and on polished diamonds reduced to 5%. The IT sector has yet again been given a number of concessions like: one year tax holiday for satellite telecoms; duty reduction for optic fibre cables from 25% to 15%; custom duty reduced from 25% to 15% on all capital goods used in manufacture in the IT sector; and duties on modems, routers and fixed wireless terminals reduced from 15% to 10%. Also FDI limit in the telecom sector has been further relaxed. No doubt, these reductions will particularly benefit Ambani who is investing heavily in this sector. Then in the textile sector the FM has cracked down on the unorganized sector through stringent tax regulations, this will help boost the big textile companies and kill the small-scale units. Also duty on garments has been reduced from 12% to 10% and on textile machinery from 25% to 5%. In addition, while edible oil has been taxed, excise duty on sweets, biscuits and chocolates have been halved from 16% to 8%. (It look like JS is following the principles of the Queen, Maria Antionette, who said "if they cannot afford bread ask them to eat cake"….. Arvind) I could carry on and on about the benefits given to big business, but I will end here with just one more; the 5% tax surcharge on firms has been cut to half - it is now 2.5%.

Arvind: But what about social welfare, people in this country you know are starving?

Ram: Oh, they are lazy, they don’t want to work. But, what is important is that while expenditure on health care has remained static at Rs.6,630 crore, that on HRD (Human Resource Development) has gone up significantly and is now Rs.9,625 crores. The HRD ministry is a main source for pushing Hindutva and that it gets 50% more than health care is good - after all Hindutva promotes the unity and integrity of the country. If thousands die of curable disease, what matter, the country’s unity must survive at all costs.

Finally, I met up with an MP, Shri Chamcha Lal.

Arvind: Can you spare some time to tell me your views on the budget?

Chamcha Lal: I have no time, three contractors are waiting outside. Get out. Anyway what is this budget-fudget to me; all my money is black; taxes do not affect me, go talk to the common people.

So, in this budget we see the impact on the different classes in the country, and the attitude of these towards the rulers and their budget. Besides, once again, in this budget military expenditure continues to be the biggest drain on the exchequer (except for interest charges) at Rs.65,000 crores. But an interesting change in this has been a drop in the expenses on the army, while that of the navy has doubled. This indicates a greater policing of the sea, as part of the US’s geo-political needs in the region, and the Indian rulers hegemonistic and expansionist designs. In the present US-created war scenario conflict can break out anywhere and at any time, and the Indian rulers are gearing up for this necessity.

For the people of the country such budgets continue to have a disastrous impact on their lives. It requires that the people firmly oppose such policies dictated by the imperialists to further their (and the comprador) interests in the country. Besides, the best answer to these rulers, is the advancement of the people’s war in the country and the setting up of liberated areas where the government’s loot and tax policies do not reach. In such pockets the entire wealth generated can be ploughed back for the welfare of the masses instead of being robbed by the revenue and other departments of the state. This is the only long-term solution to these budgets.

March 12, 2002

 

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