People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXVIII
No. 08 February 23, 2014 |
On the Interim Budget The Polit Bureau of the
Communist Party of THE finance
minister’s
speech presenting the interim budget for 2014-15 was more
of a political
statement aimed at the forthcoming elections rather than
an effort to overcome
the current challenges faced by the Indian economy. On the
contrary the manner
in which the economy has been managed suggests the
worsening of our economic
fundamentals. This will mean imposing further burdens on
the people who are
already groaning under severe hardships, through continued
price rise and
contraction of employment opportunities. The GDP growth rate
has been estimated at 4.8 % and could grow up to 4.9 %.
Agricultural growth is
estimated at 4.6%. This means that the non-agricultural
economy has stagnated
at best. The claim that
there has
been a fiscal consolidation with the fiscal deficit pegged
at 4.6% of the GDP
below the estimated 4.8% is untenable. This has been
achieved by a gross
reduction in budgeted expenditures, particularly in social
sectors. The
revised estimates show the total central
plan outlay is Rs 66,000 crores less than the budgetary
estimates. The
budgetary support for the central plan was Rs 63,575
crores less. Likewise the
central assistance for plan expenditure for states and
union territories was Rs
17,215 crores less. Thus, the fiscal deficit has been
contained through a
severe squeeze in expenditures, in other words, through a
budgetary contraction
of the economy. The
announced nominal
increase in major subsidies is actually less in real terms
if the inflation
rate is taken into account. It is at the same proportion
of 12% as in 2013-14
budget. All these means that over 2013-14, job
opportunities have shrunk significantly
with no increased financial support to the beleaguered
people. This fall in
employment combined with the rise in prices of essential
commodities will
impose further severe burdens on the people. The consumer
price index for food items
continues to hover around double digits. The cut in excise
duties in order to give a boost to the manufacturing
sector, particularly, the
automobile sector can only be very transient unless the
domestic demand rises
significantly. On the contrary, the efforts of fiscal
consolidation have led to
sharp contraction of domestic demand. The announcement of
further reduction of
tariff protection will affect the domestic manufacturing
sector adversely. The emphasis on
containing
the current account deficit (CAD) through attracting
greater foreign investments
and not through restricting unnecessary luxury imports is
bound to make the
Indian economy further vulnerable to international
speculative capital flows.
In fact the marginal success in containing the burgeoning
CAD has been mainly
through hike in the import duties on gold. Overall,
instead of expanding public
investment thus expanding employment generation, leading
to a growth in
domestic demand, which in turn, would provide the required
impetus to revive
the manufacturing sector and propel industry growth, this
interim budget only
compounds the crisis by contracting the economy and
imposing greater burdens on
the people. In the global
situation of continued economic crisis, the anticipation
of further foreign capital
inflows is not merely unrealistic but would mean a slew of
measures for
attracting foreign capital, undermining domestic
manufacturing and further
mortgaging In fact, the crisis
in
the Indian economy which is destined to further compound,
is not due to any
policy paralysis. It is precisely due to the policy of
appeasing international
finance capital at the expense of undermining