People's Democracy
(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India
(Marxist)
|
Vol. XXXIV
No.
09
February
28, 2010
|
EDITORIAL
President�s Address: Rhetoric
Bereft of Tangible Relief
THE
president of India�s
customary annual address to the joint session of parliament on the
first day
that it meets in any calendar year is designed to contain a balance
sheet of
the government�s performance in the past year as well as a declaration
of
intent for the future year. It hence covers the work of all ministries
and
their programmes for the coming year. While these shall be the subject
matter
of scrutiny in the days to come, the essence of this government�s
objective are
outlined by the president as the following: �Since assuming office in
May 2009
my government has worked single-mindedly to build on the achievements
of its
earlier term to deliver the promise of faster and more inclusive
growth. The
aam admi was and is at the core of this promise; the aam admi had to be
protected against the ravages of the worst ever global economic crisis
since
the great depression and against the failure of the monsoon in large
parts of
the country in mid-2009.�
Further,
the address states, �there has been an unhappy pressure on the prices
of
foodgrains and food products�. While seeking to cover up the utter
failure of
the government in containing this runaway rise in the prices of all
essential commodities,
the president of India
reflected the government�s callous cynicism by stating that �higher
prices were
inevitable given the shortfall in domestic production and prevailing
high
prices of rice, cereals and edible oils globally.� In other words we
are being
told that the government had no options before it to provide relief to
the
people on this front. Therefore while suggesting that the people
�inevitably�
had to suffer this price rise, the president ironically suggests that
the price
rise is due to the, �payment of higher procurement prices to our
farmers and
the impact of higher public spending on programmes of rural development
which
have successfully raised the incomes in rural areas�. The people are
therefore
to be blamed for this price rise because they are consuming more!
Sounds
uncomfortably similar to George Bush�s assertion over a year ago that
global
food prices are on the rise because people in India
and China
are eating more!
Naturally
therefore, the president does not state the obvious truth that this
price rise
is in the main due to the refusal of the government to undertake the
obvious
measures that are needed. For one, much of this price rise is due to
speculative commodity trading. Trading corporates have reported annual
profits ranging
from 150 to 300 per cent while foodgrain prices have been rising at an
annual
rate of nearly 20 per cent. Further, the extremely injudicious
decisions taken
by the government, eg exporting sugar instead of creating a buffer
stock when
all indicators showed that the production would be much less than the
consumption demand has led to sugar selling at more than Rs 50 a kilo.
One
sure way of containing prices would have been through strengthening the
public
distribution system and selling all essential commodities at controlled
prices.
Acting quite to the contrary, the government decided to reduce the
allocation
of foodgrains to the states for the above poverty line category, its
quantity to
the tune of nearly 70 per cent. For instance, Kerala which was
receiving 1.13
lakh tones at Rs 8.90 a kilo under this category was reduced to mere
17,000
tonnes. Now the president of India
talks of the government releasing �30 lakh tonnes of wheat and rice in
the open
market over the next two months�. This
ironically is being done by offering the states to procure rice at Rs
17 a kilo
instead of Rs 8.90 earlier. Far from reducing the prices, this will
only
compound the problem further.
Thus
by all indications the president�s address does not provide any
confidence that
the main problem facing the Indian people will be solved by the
government. On
the contrary, there seems to be advance explanations for greater
burdens that
will be imposed on this front in the coming days.
Coming
to the president�s assurance that the aam admi was protected against
the global
recession �by strong policies of administering a domestic stimulus to
the
economy which has yielded handsome results��.. At a time when
industrial
countries have experienced limited growth India has continued to grow
at an
impressive rate.� Naturally, there is no reference to the fact that
over a
crore of people lost their jobs and the people�s misery has been
compounded by
this dual assault of job loss due to global recession and the price
rise in
essential commodities.
There
is however no indication whether these stimulus packages will be
continued or
not. The Rs 2.18 lakh crore stimulus in various packages released last
year was
seen by the RBI as having increased the money supply in the economy
providing
grist to the inflation mill. The RBI therefore has set out monetary
policy
measures aimed at reigning in Rs 36,000 crores. While this would dampen
the
impact of the stimulus packages, these packages themselves may either
be
withdrawn or shrunk given the concerns of international finance capital
and the
Indian ruling classes over the burgeoning fiscal deficit.
In
any case, the gains from such stimulus packages have accrued more to
the
corporate sector and the ruling classes while people�s misery has only
compounded.
Thus in the tackling of the impact of the global recession on India, the government has further
widened the
hiatus between the shining and suffering Indias.
Genuine
concern for the aam admi can only come about if the neo-liberal
trajectory that
widens the gap between the two Indias
is reversed. Experience of the last two decades shows that
notwithstanding all
talk of inclusive growth, the gap between the rich and poor in India
has
widened dramatically. When Manmohan Singh as the finance minister
ushered in
the new liberal regime in 1991 with the budget that year, it was
officially
estimated that 34.5 crores of Indians were below the poverty line � or
nearly
41 per cent at that time. In 2009, according to the latest Planning
Commission
sponsored Suresh Tendulkar Report, 37.2
per cent of India
or 43.8 crores are below the poverty line today. While percentages may
serve
academic analysis, the real world sees absolute numbers. These two
decades of
neo-liberal economic reform have seen nearly 10 crore more Indians
sliding into
poverty. The World Bank however, estimates that India
is home to 1/3rd
of the world's poor, with nearly 46 crore people or 42 per cent under
the
global definition of poverty. 46 per cent of the world's malnourished
children
are Indian. In 1991 India
ranked 121 out of 160 countries in the Human Development Index, two
decades
later, we are at 134, amongst 182 countries. Therefore the findings of
prime
minister appointed National Commission
for Enterprises in the Unorganised sector, which showed that 77 per
cent of
Indians survive on less than Rs 20 a day, are no surprise to the
ordinary
Indian.
The
big question for India
before this budget is whether it will change the trajectory of the last
twenty
years and more meaningfully towards an inconclusive growth path. While
the
images of an 'emerging' India
rubbing shoulders with the G-20 at the high table dominate media
attention and
raise aspirations of people of a super-power status, a vast majority of
our
people continue to aspire to just get the next meal. The take over of
public
utilities and till-recently state-supported social sectors like
education and
health by the market forces have added to the woes of the people. The
latest
date of the NSSO shows that at least an additional 4 crores of people
have been
pushed into poverty due to expenditure on health alone. Will this
budget
attempt to reverse these trends? The president of India's address to the
joint
session of the parliament, thus, is a mere rhetoric of flagship
programmes of
Bharat Nirmaan and concern for the aam aadmi which will not provide any
tangible relief to the people.
(February
24, 2010)