Lenin talked of
finance capital, which originated at the end of the 19th Century and flourished
in the 20th century. Monopoly capitalists now came to control market and
industries. The high rising demand for capital for massive investment was to be
met from the banking arrangement. Banks assumed the role of gathering capital
and monopolists invested that capital in their industries. Industrialists made
sure that banks could supply the necessary capital for investment, and so on the
board of directors of banks industrialists assumed necessary controlling powers.
Out of the capital of the banks, industrialists kept in their control necessary
amount of shares. And with the investment of banking capital in industries banks
also do have a control. This marriage between banking capital and industrial
capital or in other words finance capital, controlled the capitalist economy for
more that one hundred years. However, it should be added that for the
accumulation of capital not only banks, there emerged insurance companies;
pension funds, etc. In course of time, their role has enhanced. With the merger
of several banks, insurance companies, etc., the amount of finance capital has
grown enormously. With the wave of globalisation in such circumstances and
buying shares or exercise in speculation in a situation fraught with risks has
increased enormously. During the 1920s and 1930s, this speculative element was
not so much as compared to the post World War II situation. The traditional way
of capital accumulation by banks and then investment, particularly direct
investment has tangibly changed. Though direct investment by multinational or
transnational corporations plays a major role, the quest for profitable
investment has pushed them beyond productive organisations for capital
investment. Now banking laws have undergone many changes, making room for risks
investments like in share markets in all forms. Such portfolio investment or
indirect investment in the speculative field is the growing trend in the world
economy. Some writers rooted in traditional mores fail to discern the increasing
role of speculative markets in a country like India bogged in the abyss of
blocked productive investments. One writer says that stock markets are very poor
pointers to real economic performance, their indices are mostly not related to
the current profitability of productive enterprises, etc. [Jayati Ghosh in
Frontline, June 4, 2004]. Another writer’s opinion basically premised on the
same ground bemoans that it would be like ‘authoritarian "mandate" of a
miniscule minority of speculative minority of speculative wealth-holders to
overturn the democratic mandate of the majority." [C.P.Chandrasekhar,
Frontline, ibid]. Though the view at least concedes the fact of
mandate-exercising power of small speculators it fails to refer to the growing
role of speculative markets. Such writers also fail to study as to why a
backward country like India frequently faces the onslaught of big speculators
with growing stock markets while industrial units shrink, suffer closures,
millions driven out of jobs, and newer units hardly come up in India. The
Agricultural sector is providing only a dismal picure under a semi-feudal,
lumpen capitalist penetration and it perpetually stands in the way of
consumption of goods from the industrial sector in India.
It should be
remembered that now about 40 percent income of the leading banks in America or
England emanate from speculative business. In other capitalist countries too the
major share of income of the banks come from this speculative business. Just
before the entry into the 21st century, the market for speculative capital had
grown by leaps and bounds. The market capitalization investment in the world
wide share market was to the tune of $ 9,398,29.1 crore in 1990. By the year
1999 it was recorded at $ 36,030,80.8 crore, marking an increased rate of 283
percent. What is noteworthy is that much of such speculative capital was not
related to goods or welfare. Globalization has removed many of the restrictions
on the free flow of capital. By 1988 all the west European countries revoked the
restrictive laws in respect of free movement of finance capital. With this
complete convertibility of currency it was ensured as a necessary step towards
that free movement as prevailing in many countries and new countries have been
coming to this end. Yet it is notable that in the age of such globalisation with
the unrestricted flow of finance capital, instead of expected boom in the
capital market, there is a visible trend towards a downward growth rate of
national income in the capitalist countries. Between 1979 and 1989 the average
rate of per capita product of the seven most developed capitalist countries
(Group of Seven) was recorded at 2.1 percent which scaled down to 1.5 percent in
the next 10 years. The actual situation has belied the prospect of attaining the
solution to the problem of scarcity of demand. The Keynesian medicine claiming
supply as a means will itself create demand has been found ineffective. Keynes
also prescribed ‘socialisation of investment’ in the crisis ridden situation to
save capitalism. Such queer "socialization" or limited state intervention to
overcome crisis has now been dismissed for some years now for the frenzied and
unrestricted financial markets. The reduced scope for expansion versus increased
ability to expand in the current monopoly stage is the irresolvable
contradiction.
In the global capital
system, the MNCs seek the expansion of capital into the third-world countries in
a big way and this "would be totally impossible without the massive and
unremitting application of power of their states, either individually or
collectively (including through such agencies as the International Monetary Fund
and the World Bank), to the shaping and maintenance of an institutional setting
and what is known as an "investment climate" favorable to the functioning of
profit-making capitalist enterprises" wrote Paul Sweezy.
Speculative Markets in the World
Monthly average in 2000 |
Exchange |
Turneover |
Market
capitalization |
Turnover
/ Mkt cap ratio (in %) |
NASDAQ |
1649900 |
59845906 |
33.49 |
India (Rs.
million) |
2251670 |
7965080 |
28.81 |
Taiwan |
82189 |
4360223 |
21.81 |
London |
379889 |
32176086 |
14.14 |
Deutsche Borse |
176677 |
16640942 |
12.64 |
NYSE |
921671 |
134764673 |
8.22 |
Euronext Paris |
88739 |
17647535 |
6.05 |
Hong Kong |
31389 |
7350790 |
5.11 |
Tokyo |
192958 |
46604834 |
4.90 |
Singapore |
7929 |
1946834 |
4.88 |
Australia |
18874 |
4653303 |
4.85 |
Thailand |
1760 |
448824 |
4.55 |
Johannesburg |
6454 |
2594431 |
2.98 |
Luala Lumpur |
4406 |
1750951 |
2.80 |
Mexico |
3814 |
1701427 |
2.67 |
All Figures (expect India) are in US$ million
Source: Business Standard, April 5, 2001
[Cited in "Tax Financial Speculation, The Case for a Securities Transaction
Tax in India", Kavaljit Singh, Asia-Europe Dialogue Project, Public Interest
research Centre, New Delhi, 2001, p. 8]
The demand-supply
relation is constantly under stress and strain. With the increasing investment
in the speculative market modern monopoly capitalist invest crores of dollars in
market research and advertisement to expand market potentials. But the
underlying contradiction lying in the development of capitalism alongside
shrinkage of employment facility makes it impossible for the solution of the
problem of capital investment and stagnation ("excess of capital" and "excess of
population" = idle plant and unemployment workers) remaining inherent in
capitalism. Such stagnation is visible as a constant feature in the present
monopoly stage. In the present stage speculative market is one big avenue to
overcoming investment problem of moribund capitalism. Bond, rate of interest,
convertibility of currency, etc. have now come under the purview of the
speculative market. The traditional sale and purchase of shares have been
surpassed by newer elements in the more pronounced speculative world of
capitalism. Such derivative, or in other words, risky market of sale and
purchase has received insurance facility in many countries. When investment
towards merger and take over of certain industrial units takes place, this is
not productive as such, yet finance capital finds an avenue for investment. The
bourgeois economist Keynes in his General Theory Of Employment accepted
without valid explanation that in capitalism inducement to invest by capitalists
remains weak and insurmountable leading to stagnation and unemployment. He also
clearly stated that the increasing importance of the speculative market makes
the capitalist economy survive like bubbles. The third world countries bear the
burnt of capitalist exploitation and crisis. With the unstable economies
dependent on foreign ‘aid’, complete convertibility of their currencies face
further problems with the inflow of speculative capital and other indirect
investments through the so-called reforms measures. The impact of the share
market in other countries do have a cumulative impact on the Indian and other
economies. Thus in the speculative capital market, in which foreign investment
plays a pivotal role, can send tumultuous reactions in the Indian market.
Government policies find diktats from the speculators in Dalal street, etc. The
recent sensex**(See Footnote) crash or caveats to the Manmohan government is to
be understood in the light of this development. This does not, however mean, the
current situation precludes other powerful factors in the determination of
government policies in India. What follows is taking a look at the play of
speculative market in the recent ripples caused by stock markets in India.
Indian Speculative
Market
Though a backward
third world country, Indian financial markets are among the most speculative in
the world. Even in comparison with many leading international financial markets,
the sheer volume of speculative trading in Indian financial markets is extremely
high, acutely displaying the frailties of the Indian financial sector. What is
revealing in the recent media reports is that the Indian financial markets are
second only to NASDAQ (National Association of Securities Dealers Automated
Quotation System, US-based financial market) in speculation in terms of market
capitalization. Some of the leading financial markets like that of the London
Stock Exchange (LSE), and such markets in Germany, France, Hong Kong, Singapore
and Japan showed much lower degree of speculation
The following table
shows that monthly average turnover and market capitalization leading financial
markets of the world as in the year 2000. The monthly turnover/market
capitalization ratio of Indian financial markets was almost double than most of
the developed and so-called emerging markets.
What is notable is
that the daily turnover in the Indian financial markets has increased many fold.
Since the mid 1990s, such increase was about Rs. 5500 million to Rs. 15000
million on March 31, 1995, the total turnover reported by all the 23 stock
exchanges in the country touched a phenomenal amount of Rs. 33133 billion on
March 31, 2001. However, as is the nature of such speculation everywhere, the
revealing aspect is that actual deliveries are only a small portion of the
turnovers. In the period April-December 2000, a mere 13 percent of trades was
settled by actual delivery in the Bombay stock Exchange (BSE) and as low as 6.3
percent in the National Stock Exchange (NSE). The rest was purely speculative
trading. The table below is a pointer.
According to Kavaljit
Singh, much of the trading is concentrated in a handful of stocks with the top
10 stocks accounting for over 80 percent of the turnover of the Indian financial
markets. The top 100 stocks account for almost 99 percent of the turnover. The
notable aspect is that there are several thousand stocks listed in the market
that are not traded at all, exposing the sordid state of affairs in the Indian
markets. Secondly, despite the high volume of secondary market trading,
financial markets are no longer performing the function of capital raising.
Alongside this, the new capital raised through primary markets too has witnessed
a sharp decline over years. Compared to Rs. 2,28,740 million raised in the year
1995-96, only Rs. 78,170 million was raised in the 1999-2000. Paradoxically, in
spite of the spurt in the overall numbers of new issues (particularly in the
InfoTech sector) in the year 2000, the total amount of capital raised has
tangibly declined. Beside that the high degree of volatility, even greater than
most developed capitalist economies, is another feature of Indian Stock markets.
The rocking of the stock markets a la Harshad Mehta scam in 1992 and Ketan
Parekh scam in March 2001 are grim reminders of extreme fraility and massive
corruption inherent in the Indian economy basing too much on stock market,
particularly in the period of unbridled reforms measures in the forms of
globalization and liberalization initiated during the finance ministership of
Manmohan Singh in 1992. ‘The New Economic Policy’ under the Congress(I) P.M.
Narsimha Rao dictated by the IMF, World Bank and soon after the GATT treaty and
then the WTO have not only increasingly tied the Indian economy to the
imperialist masters and MNCs, all this has further accelerated the speculative
markets which has little role in the actual production of goods and providing
services to the people .
Mercurial Sensex –
UFA and ‘Left’’s Strong Avowal of Reforms
No sooner had the NDA
government been ousted from power than the stock markets sent out their jittery
messages with the sensex spiralling downward for some days. It was like a
tornado that kicked up huge waves in the speculative markets, giving the new
government a taste of power that they have assumed in recent years. The rhetoric
of ‘Reforms with a human face’, the CPI(M) ‘Chief Minister Buddhadeb
Bhattacharyee’s baseless talk of holding the central government a hostage to the
‘Left’ (However, soon after the volatile Mr. Bhattacharyee contradicted it as if
wrongly quoted), the initial confusion created by the distribution and immediate
redistribution of ministerial portfolios, etc. disturbed the stock markets. The
adverse reaction was tremendous. The volatile financial markets had made a
deafening roar. Foreign institutional investors who come for portfolio
investment and powerful brokers had shown how they could mould market sentiments
with a telling decisiveness. Even P. Chidambaran, the finance minister, had
himself to drive down to Mumbai to meet FIIs and stock-brokers to appease them
with all positive signals conducive to speculative markets. Economic reforms,
hard or so-called soft, in terms of World Bank, IMF understanding, are basically
related to privatisation of public sector units, changes in labour laws, removal
of import restrictions and most of all openly responsive to the ups and downs of
the world capitalist market. The Indian electorate in general is unaware of the
actual writings in any election manifesto of any political party. What appeared
perilous to the general electorate before the election was the reforms-related
chilling implications in the daily life under the BJP dispensation? One must be
surely aware of the fact that all parliamentary political parties garner votes
dishing out a platter of good pro-common people policies and promised
performances for the future towards the betterment of the general masses.
However, when it comes to wooing the capitalists or rural landlords such parties
in their close interface with those classes let out the open secrets contained
in election manifestos regarding vitally important matters related to them. The
Indian electorate generally identified the NDA as the wrong doers pushing common
people’s lives to the brink. Thus the electorate acted, unseating the NDA. The
anti-NDA parties with the Congress(I) atop are now only crying hoarse after
receiving the favorable electoral verdict that the wheels of reforms shall be
moving unchecked. The Manmohan government, at least for now, will try to
reconcile the powerful interests of the top most layer of Indian society, the
powerful market makers of Dalal Street and most of all the World Bank, IMF
dikats to the minimum election-related anti-NDA aspirations of the electorate.
One liberal writer argued recently that if a programme creates attractive
investment climate for real, as opposed to purely speculative, investments
reconciling the above two sets of interests and demands it can keep both the
opposing forces in good humour. He writes:
"If this programme
implies that hedge funds desert Dalal Street, so be it. If this implies that
privatisation of profitable PSUs is scrapped, so be it. If this implies stalling
labour-market reforms without a proper socials safety net in position, so be it.
It is unlikely that the Fund-Bank would be terribly upset….." [Anup Sinha, A
Verdict from below, The Telegraph, 20 May 2004].
Turnover and Delivery pattern
(April – December, 2000)
Item |
BSE |
NSE |
a) Total Turnover |
7385840 |
11085700 |
b) Total Delivery |
974370 |
703880 |
% of (b) to (a) |
13.19 |
6.35 |
Amount in Rs million
Source: Securities
and Exchange Board of India
[Cited in "Tax Financial Speculation,
The Case for a Securities Transaction Tax in India", Kavaljit Singh, Asia-Europe
Dialogue Project, Public Interest research Centre, New Delhi, 2001, p.9]
These are only ifs
and buts, a fond expectation to keep both the common people and imperialist
agencies in cheers. This does not reflect the crucial fact of laws of
development under the world-wide imperialist system of exploitation. This sounds
like spinning endless yarns of sophistry as done by the likes of CPI(M) Polit
Bureau members Sitaram Yechury, Buddhadeb Bhattacharyee ,etc. to peddle reforms
appeasing all alike. It is like building castles in the air. The stinging
reaction of Dalal Street against the unsteady, jittery political affairs and the
CPI(M)’s blowing hot and cold only to later appear like a tame domesticated
political formation has actually carried the real warning signal for how to
carry forward the NDA reforms, be it in the name of reforms with a human face or
in an other suitable name.
Despite the furor
over the stock market crash, it must be asserted that from 17 to 19 May, 2004,
even just before Manmohan’s assumption of power, "the overall turnover of FIIs,
which is a sum of gross purchases and gross sales, surged almost 100% rising to
around Rs. 2,500-2,800 crore over the past three days. At the beginning of May
2004, it hovered around Rs. 1000-1200 crore writes the Economic Times, Kolkata,
on 20 May 2004.
The second biggest
crash of more than 14% in one single day on 17 May, according to economic
analysts, must have been caused by the sale of equities by large corporate
houses or brokers themselves. It was found that on that day a couple of large
corporate houses and several big brokers did sell early in the morning of 17th
May. It is notable that not only big brokers, FIIs, Mutual Funds, corporate
houses, domestic institutions such as LIC, GIC and banks are prominently present
in the buying and selling of equities in the stock market. This only points to
the rising role of corporate houses and financial houses in the speculation
market, unproductive in substance. This also shows the increasingly limited area
of productive investment.
It is notable that
with the sharpest fall in India Stock market indices, the Congress-led alliance
had to move quickly to form a government and clear the air on some reform
issues. While international factors like the investment prospect in the US,
rising oil prices and the prospect of interest rate hikes in the West are
impacting markets all over the world, there is no doubt the sell-off on the
so-called Black Monday was precipitated by basically Indian stockbrokers and big
business. [On that ‘fateful’ day FIIs and FIs did not sell significantly]
In the first two
weeks of May 2004 there had been a secular fall of over 15% in all the big stock
markets in the Asian region. China, Hong Kong, South Korea, Taiwan and India
have all fallen dramatically. But Indian markets have fallen much more – about
23% in ten days. [Economic Times, Kolkata, 18 May 2004]. It is possible that big
market operators in India are cleverly attributing the huge loss in market
capitalization almost entirely to the prospect of a Congress – Left alliance at
the Centre so as to increase their bargaining power with the new regime, writes
a commentator [Ibid].
The truth is that
there has been a substantial speculative build up in the form of hot money
pumped in by foreign hedge funds into all the big Asian markets. This money has
contributed to the unprecedented growth in the forex reserves in all these
economies. Now some of these funds are going back to the US markets because of
the expected signs of a good prospect over there. Whatever may be, the relevant
question is the increasing role of mainly foreign, followed by native
speculators in the Indian economy in the period of reforms.
Pursuit of Reforms: Outcome of UPA–‘Left’
Marriage
The BJP-led NDA has
been voted out from the Centre and some states with the Congress party and its
allies [the CPI(M), CPI included) scripting a victory with 219 seats. If
elections, the recent 14th General election, is any indicator it reflects the
protests and aspirations of the electorate. The Congress is now the largest
single party, polling a smaller share of the votes than in 1999: 26.21 percent
against 28.3 percent. While the BJP received a negative swing of 2.27 percent
from 1999 statistics. In Bihar Laloo Yadav cut across caste and community with
his tricky alliance with Ram Vilas Paswan and his own despicable record of
corruption. In Andhra Pradesh, the dangerously anti-people butcher Telugu Desham
with Chandrababu at its head and an ally of the NDA was routed. In UP BJP shows
its poor performance with a mere 10 seats. In general the verdict was against
the communalist and avowed pursuer of World Bank and WTO dictated reforms by the
NDA led by notorious BJP. Basically following piggy back politics and open,
unequivocal support to the time tested ruling classes party the Congress(I) and
the erstwhile NDA partner DMK, etc. the CPI(M) and CPI have together registered
the highest tally so far with 59 seats.
It is practically of
little significance who formed the government and with whose support because
both the NDA and the DPA led by the Congress and supported by the parliamentary
left have already shelved minor differences on the fundamental question of
economic policies. Communalism on which the BJP is premised was no doubt an
important issue, particularly in riot-torn Gujarat. Despite the option of
lending support to Hindutva or rejecting it outright was a major issue in
India and despite the choice of courting or dismissing fascist TDP killing the
best sons and daughters of Andhra Pradesh, or the anti-democratic policies of
many state governments, what crucially and generally emerged from the recent
elections was people’s voice against the economic onslaught in all forms on the
toiling people, particularly women, dalits and tribal people of India. It is
obviously a vote against reforms. One might contest such a view citing some
vote-catching phrases from the election manifestos of the BJP or the Congress.
The BJP Vision Document made extensive references to agriculture and social
programmes. It argued how the BJP aims to bring about the second green
revolution, expand employment, solve the water problem and bring health care and
education to all. However, it emphatically stated that reforms would be carried
on with the assumption of power. In the same vein the Congress(I) manifesto with
such pious platitudes for the farmers and tall task on growth for employment
generation minced no words to announce its support for economic reforms. The
manifesto stated: " The Congress will broaden and deepen economic reforms.
The overriding objective will be to attain and sustain year after year a 8-10
percent rate of growth over all sectors, particularly agriculture and industry…"
Clearly and frankly
both the parties were for pro-market, pro-reforms measures. It was the same
Manmohan Singh who first introduced reforms i.e. the policy of liberalisation
and privatisation under the auspices of the World Bank, WTO etc. The votaries of
reforms tries to project a rosy picture emanating from such a policy. One
instance is Arvind Panagariya who has written such a supportive article in EPW
22 May 04 issue arguing that serious scholars agree to the fact that while the
"era of autarky and licence raj failed to produce any reduction in the long term
poverty, the advent of liberalisation, first on piecemeal basis under Rajiv
Gandhi during the first half of the 1990s and later, on a more systematic and
comprehensive basis under Manmohan Singh and his successors in the 1990s and
2000s have cut the proportion of the population living below the poverty by a
significant amount, perhaps as much as half." First of all it must be clearly
stated that both the BJP view and the Congress view on reforms are never
contradictory in substance. Secondly such a cock and bull story eulogising
reforms is manufactured in India and abroad by economists on the payroll of the
World Bank, WTO and such international interests sucking people’s blood while
unemployment, chilling poverty and grinding problems continuously engulfing the
vast number of Indian masses. From an analysis by absolutely pro-reforms The
Japan Times after the stunning defeat of the NDA. We find the following:
"Prime Minister
Vajpayee had been in power for six years. During that time he oversaw reforms
that yielded impressive economic results. They have propelled India into the
ranks of the world’s fastest growing economies, notching up 10% growth in the
first quarter of this year and creating 1 million jobs annually…."
Surprising though the
result is, it is easily explainable: the Indian country side, home to more than
two-thirds of the country’s population, has not benefited from the BJP’s
reforms. "India Shining" is largely an urban phenomenon. The BJP has supposedly
created 1 million jobs a year, but 9 million people enter the workforce
annually. Some 300 million Indians live on more or less than a dollar a day, and
the most basic infrastructure, such as electricity and running water is
lacking…."
The Japan Times
analysis [Quoted in The Economic Times, Kolkata, 19 May 2004] ends with an
optimistic note that " Congress points out that economic reforms began during
its previous administration. Similarly, there is no sign that Congress would
abandon the peace initiatives begun by Mr. Vajpayee." Let alone the question of
Vajpayee’s peace initiative, which was dismissed by the U.S. administration
claiming its own behind-the-scene pivotal role. It is a mistaken theory that the
reforms pursued by the NDA led by the BJP could deliver the goods in the urban
areas but failed in rural India. A bit of truism, however, lies in the tangible
fact that a very small percentage of the upper middle class and rich section in
cities benefited by the reforms.
After twelve years of
globalization since the Narsimha Rao government’s period, particularly after
five years of the BJP led NDA rule, 2003 Human Development Report confirms that
India’s position has gone down to 127th, down by 3 position in respect of the
previous year. According to the UNDP, by the year 2001 the per capita gross
domestic product stood at $ 460 while the comparable average per capita
production value taking the whole world was $ 5133. There have been lots of
studies in the recent period blasting the jugglery of statistics to show an 8%
growth rate in India in 2003-04 tactfully considering 2002-03 as base year when
the growth in agricultural sector was negative i.e. –5.2%. In fact there is no
factual datum to prove that during this period of reforms Indian agriculture
showed signs of rapid growth. According to Utsa Patnaik between 1990 –91 and
2002-03, as per government records are found, the supply of per capita food
crops actually declined. The industrial growth also has come down. It is
actually linked to an enormous destruction of productive forces as a result of
privatisation and closures. The euphoria over the IT sector has already taken a
beating. Whatever industrial growth was found in the recent past, it was in the
years from 1984-85 to 1990- 91 recording 8.5% per year. Though it was obviously
not a boom and it slipped downwards soon after. One study shows how baseless is
the current claims of industrial growth by presenting an important indicator:
The scales of diesel, furnace oil and lubricants – all they had fallen in the
period April-December 2003 (by 0.8, 3.7 and 3.7 percent respectively ) and only
slightly rose in January 2004. It is a paradox: positive industrial growth is
claimed by the followers of reforms when consumption of fuel palpably fell. The
‘World Bank Evaluation Department’ in its report in 2000 had focused light on 28
such countries practicing reforms as dictated by the World Bank, IMF since the
1980s. The result of such reforms is dismally uninspiring. The per capita income
of the 40% of those countries has shown no increase, but rather a decline. Among
the countries which recorded a rise in such income, 85% of them in the second
decade of reforms showed signs of declaration of growth sliding down to 1% or
even less. All these are the fruits of reforms dictated and sponsored by the
World Bank and IMF pushing millions to poverty and unemployment. According to
India government’s own calculations, employment growth has plummeted from 2.7% a
year in the pre-‘liberalisation’ period to just over one percent in the
‘liberalisation’ period. The number of new jobs fell from 7.6 million per year
in the earlier period to 3.5million in the later period [Aspects of India’s
Economy, Research Unit For Political Economy, 36 & 37. p.57]. So far as the
percentage of the Indian population below the poverty line, figures are
deliberately fudged to show the decline in the number. Yet if the more reliable
government sample survey covering both weekly and monthly expenses of such poor
families are taken into account the 1999-2000 figure shows that 34 crore and 42
lakh people of India live below subsistence level. With further decay in the
following years under the reforms process the figure must have risen further. It
is all a grim reminder of the consequences of the reforms under the wheels of
the globalization juggernaut.
The Leftists, who
were once the most vocal crities of the model of economies that he (Singh)
pioneered in decision-making, is today his chief supporters. Dr. Singh paid a
visit to CPM general secretary Harkishan Singh Surjeet after Ms. Gandhi had a
meeting with him to get his nod for the new prime ministerial candidate." [The
Economic Times, Kolkata, 20 May, 2004]. To take a look at new the PM’s earlier
record, development of overvalued currencies has always been standard IMF
prescription and Dr. Singh accomplished that with Narsimha Rao’s consent. The
top personal income tax rate was lowered from 50% to 40%.Foreign institutional
investors (FII) were allowed unrestricted convertibility on the capital account.
Private sector investment in oil sector etc. was initiated. Private investment
in power, telecom and roads was started. Corporate tax rate was lowered. Stock
markets began to play a powerful role. The Harshad Mehta scam unfolded in
1993-94. Manmohan decided to set up the National Stock Exchange in 1993-94 in
1995-96; excise top duty rates were cut from 110% to 50%. The living mascot for
economic reforms on the lines of Reagan of Thatcher, Mr. Manmohan had received
the 1993 recipient of Euro money’s ‘Finance Minister of the year for Asia’
awards for 1993 and 1994.
Now with this grim
reality of the devastating impact on the Indian economy and its majority of the
population through the World Bank, IMF dictated reforms one can imagine the
impending doom lying in store in the unfolding days. Soon after the assumption
of power at the centre Manmohan Singh declared that there would be no halt to
the ongoing reforms. On 17th May Manmohan sent a sharp message to the Indian
investment community ruling out " any differences with Left parties on economic
issues." He made no mistake to add, "The Left is firmly committed to the success
of this government." [The Economic Times, 18 May 2004].
The Bush
administration is happy with the UPA government in power. "US and Indian
bilateral relationship is at its best in many decades. And the US administration
is exploring the scope of widening relations with India from just being largely
a strategic one to one that is comprehensive. I don’t think there will be any
shift in Indo-US equation now that the NDA government will be any shift in
Indo-US equations now that the NDA government has been replaced by a
Congress-led one." David Kennedy, US press attaché in India, told the Economic
Times." [Economic Times, Kolkata, 20 May, 2004] Again the ET added "An Indo-US
interface in "missile guidance" could also unfold "down the road". A 100 of the
senior most US scientists are arriving in Bangalore in June to mark 40 years of
co-operation in space technology between India and US." Mr. Kenneddy underlined.
About the ‘Left’
supported UPA government Teresita Schaffer, former US deputy assistant secretary
of state for south Asia made sure that bringing Manmohan Singh, the virtual
author of the economic reforms programme in 1991, to the post of P.M. would be
well received worldwide, including the U.S. [Economic Times, Kolkata, 20 May
2004]
It is not without
reason that the Bengal parliamentary Marxists figured liberally in the right
wing journals like Economist, the New York Times, The wall
Street Journal, etc. with the CPI(M) led ‘Left’s increased tally in the
elections. The economist expressed solace saying "A bastion of Indian
communism rebrands itself". New York Times gleefully stated "Indian
Communists seek capitalist help." Far Eastern Economic Review poured
forth its jubilation that the state government is "still communist, but no
longer hostile to business." [All cited in The Telegraph, 27 May, 2004] The
Western and conservative media have rightly recognized the toothless and
capitalist friendly parliamentary Marxists immersed in dirty power polities.
The CPI(M) led ‘left’
must soon shed its rhetoric against finance capital with the greater taste of
power at the Centre like the ‘Leftist’ Brazilian President Lula De Silva who
went a whole hog for reforms removing even the pension system. Similarly the
Congress-‘Left’ joint venture is all set to come up with Lula-type reforms. Lula
was initially criticized for his left rhetorics but assuming power in November
2002 he became instrumental in bringing about institutional restructuring to the
satisfaction of foreign and domestic investors. It is to be stressed that the
Common Minimum Programme (CMP) has clearly promised that all WTO commitments
already made will be honored. Soon after the announcement of the CMP Bengal’s
fake Marxist government is now all set to head for World Bank funds to implement
projects in various sectors. The new loan-cum-grant package of Rs. 200 crore
will now be available for the CPI(M)-led ‘Left’ government. When the reporters
asked the CITU secretary Kali Ghosh for comments the CPM T.U. leader diluted all
anti-World Bank outcry to say "there was no harm in taking loans forms the
World Bank if it did not want to dictate terms to the government" [The
Telegraph, 11 June, 2004]. What a topsy turvy and white lie that the World Bank
loan and grants would be pumped into Bengal under the auspices of the CPM led
government without any strings! It is worth a giggle.
In his first briefing
after the declaration of the CMP Chidambaran made it clear "….. Foreign
direct investment flow will be doubled, financial markets will be deepened, the
market issues to be offered by strong PSUs itself will help do this and FIIs
(Foreign Institutional Investors) will of course continue to be encouraged."
He also emphatically added, "Only those PSUs which can earn profit on a
sustained basis in the face of global competition will be retained by the
government." [The Telegraph, 29 May, 2004]. Thus the reforms based on
privatisation and unrestricted foreign investment shall go on as before with
only some doses of glossy pledges here and there. Dispelling all confusion
Buddhadeb Bahttacharyee in his dramatic best declared after meeting Chidambaran
"Communists are not fools. They are not against reforms. What we want is what
the Prime Minister has said about reforms with a human face". [The
Telegraph, 30 May, 2004].
The common people
will soon realize what is that marvelous thing like ‘reforms with a human face’,
a catchy slogan shouted by the CPI(M) and the Congress. There might be winding
up of the disinvestments ministry but the name of the ministry hardly matters as
the disinvestments process won’t be stalled and the ‘Left’ would manufacture new
stories to justify such steps in this period of honeymoon. After meeting
Buddhadeb, on 29 May, 2004, Chidambaran expressed all satisfaction to state "the
Left parties will not be a hindrance in going ahead with economic reforms".
He also added that the ‘Left’ parties’ role "will be a positive infuluence"
in implementing various economic decisions, including public sector
disinvestments …" [The Telegraph, 30 May 2004]. It is worthwhile to assert that
with the much touted reforms policy all parliamentary parties including the
so-called Left are well scttled in the same boat, minor difference
notwithstanding on this or that aspect. Jairam Ramesh, secretary, All India
Congress Committee and secretary of the Congress(I)’s economic affairs committee
has already gone on record quite candidly "I have seen the Left Parties’
manifesto and it might as well be our manifesto. There are no differences that
cannot be surmounted. Besides, in today’s world everyone has to be pragmatic and
the Left parties, in the way they run their government in West Bengal have
proved themselves to be pragmatic. ….." [Frontline, June 4, 2004]. While
maintaining a seeming difference with the new Congress(I) government and
calculating the anti-Congress sentiments in Bengal, Kerala, Tripura, the CPI(M)-led
‘Left’ parties are engaged emerging in whipping up a sense of euphoria about a
sea change in the polity in India with their important role in the formation of
the UPA government at the Centre. There is more in store for the unfolding days.
The CPI(M) like betrayers set off the process to kowtow to the ruling classes
and their principal representative the Indian National Congress soon after its
inception and now the CPI(M), CPI, etc. have turned into distinctly ruling class
parties. Garlanding the Congress(I) will only whet the appetite for more
share at the Centre. It is not the end of the journey in the hell.
Degeneration has no limits.
Note:
Sensex: The
Performance of any stock market – whether it is going up or down is reported in
an Index or Average. The Index or Average serves as an important tool for
measuring the overall health of the stock market. In most countries, there is
more than one Index.
The Index or Average
is known by different names in different countries. For instance, one of the
well known and most widely reported Index of Bombay Stock Exchange is Sensitive
Index (popularly known as Sensex).
Similarly, in other
countries, the Nikkei in Tokyo; Hong Kong; Composite in Jakarta, Mauila, Seoul
and Kurla Lampur; Dow Jones Industrial Average, Standard & Poor’s 500 Index &
Nasdaq Composite Index in U.S.
At the international
level, the World Stock Index (e.g. Dow Jones World Stock Index) measures the
performance of the stock market of major countries in the world.
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