People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXIII
No.
28 July 12, 2009 |
Economic Survey Proposals
Inimical To
People�s Interests
The
Polit Bureau of the Communist Party of
THE
Economic Survey tabled by the finance minister in parliament today
suggests a
policy direction, which is inimical to the national interest.
The
survey brings out the adverse impact of the global economic crisis. It
admits
that the overall growth rate has fallen to 6.7 per cent in 2008-2009.
In
particular, the fall in agricultural growth rate by 3.3 per cent and
that of
manufacturing by 5.8 per cent is alarming. It also admits that per
capita
consumption has seen a sharp decline in growth from 6.9 per cent in
2007-2008
to 1.4 per cent in 2008-2009, reflecting a big squeeze in the
purchasing power
of the people.
But
what are the prescriptions? At a time when the world is reverting back
to
various forms of regulation of the financial sector, the Economic
Survey
suggests opening up of crucial sectors of the economy to FDI and
deregulation
of the financial sector in the name of �revisiting economic reforms�.
This
includes FDI in insurance, banking, defence and even in the sensitive
retail
trade sector, which will directly hit the livelihood of crores of
families. It
also proposes to mobilise as much as Rs 25,000 crores per year from
sale of PSU
shares. In contrast the Economic Survey fails to make any assessment,
leave
alone suggest measures to address, the human dimensions of the economic
slowdown such as huge job losses, growing unemployment and declining
incomes.
Clearly the economic policy establishment has failed to draw any
lessons form
the global financial meltdown.
This
becomes even more apparent when the survey discusses such an important
issue as
rising prices of essential commodities and food security. It actually
proposes
a reduction in food subsidy for PDS outlets and introduce the failed
system of
food coupons. It also suggests further cuts in subsidies for gas
cylinders,
suggesting that it should be limited to only six to eight cylinders per
family per
year.
On
the other hand, the survey is generous in its suggestions to give
further tax
concessions to the corporates by doing away with several taxes such as
FBT,
STT, CTT etc. Thus it wants to shift the focus of revenue mobilisation
away
from tax mobilisation to selling off public sector assets. At a time
when
countries across the world are moving away from fiscal fundamentalism,
a
completely irrational proposal to introduce a new version of the FRBM
Act with
a zero fiscal deficit target is also contained in the survey.
Many
of the proposals made in the survey, which are inimical to the
interests of the
people and the country were part of the UPA reform agenda for the last
five
years, which could be to a certain extent prevented by the
interventions of the
Left parties. Any attempt by the UPA government to revive the
discredited neo-liberal
agenda of subsidy cuts, financial liberalisation, disinvestments and
privatisation
would be met with stiff resistance.