People's Democracy

(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist)


Vol. XXVIII

No. 24

June 13, 2004

TUs Meet FM For Consultation

CITU Inputs For UPA Govt’s First Budget

 

The union finance minister, P Chidambaram, made a departure from the NDA regime, by convening the pre-budget consultation meetings and invited the representatives of the central trade union organisations for consultation on June 5.

 

The CITU was represented by its general secretary, Chittabrata Majumdar, and secretary W R Varada Rajan. The other central trade unions which participated in the consultation meeting were AITUC, HMS, UTUC-LS, INTUC, BMS and INFTU.

 

The finance minister made a careful note of all the points made and assured that they would be given appropriate consideration. He also assured that he would meet the trade unions for a post-budget discussion as well.

 

The CITU presented a separate memorandum to the finance minister detailing its views on the budget, full text of which is given below:

 

WE welcome re-initiation of pre budget consultation process by the Ministry of Finance, which was discontinued last year by the previous NDA regime. The present finance minister, in his earlier tenure, had also a post budget discussion with the central trade union organisations (CTUOs). We sincerely hope the same practice would be resumed again.

 

The Common Minimum Programme (CMP) of the present United Progressive Alliance (UPA) government perceives a change in the earlier direction of jobless corporate-centric growth by setting a basic principle of governance as “to ensure that the economy grows at least 7-8 per cent  per year in a sustained manner over a decade and more and in a manner that generates employment so that each family is assured of a safe and viable livelihood.”

 

The first budget of the UPA government should, therefore, try to tentatively quantify job growth potential for all investments both in rural and industrial sector.

 

We desire that the budget proposals should comprise a time-frame for enactment of National Employment Guarantee Act, as promised in the CMP and include, in the interim, the food for work programme on a massive scale.

 

Successive economic surveys since 1998-99 to 2002-04 show severe demand compression on all fronts involving common man viz. per capita food grain consumption, urea consumption, diesel consumption, power consumption etc. Nothing tangible had been done in successive budgets to increase the purchasing power of vast rural and urban poor and lower middle class. The budgetary exercise continued to tinker with the supply side of the economy resulting in gains for the privileged few, without commensurate increase in earning level of workers or farmers.

 

Concrete steps need to be initiated for augmenting demand in the economy through generation of employment and improving incomes of workers and farmers.

 RESOURCES MOBILISATION

 

In a joint memorandum recently presented to the union minister of labour, seven Central Trade Union Organisations (CTUOs) have emphasised that the government can mobilise ‘additional resources to finance the programme of development benefiting the people, by blasting corruption, paving the way for economic growth, ensuring better tax compliance, curbing tax default, realising the outstanding bank loans and tax arrears, augmenting direct tax revenues by broadening the tax base and incidence on the vastly affluent and rich landlord sections, giving relief to salaried employees by   increasing income tax exemption limits, mobilising domestic resources by launching long term development bond.’.

(INN)