People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol.
XXIX
No. 08 February 20, 2005 |
Towards
a Pro-People & Pro-Student Perspective
Following
is the text of the discussion paper tabled by the Students Federation of India (SFI)
before a gathering of students, professors and trade unionists on the coming
union budget 2005-2006. Professors Prabhat Patnaik and Jayati Ghosh who
participated in the discussion cautioned against the IMF-World Bank machinations
and the destruction of thought through a pliable media. They called upon bodies
like SFI to rise and build the capacity to see through these machinations and
expose them. They also touched upon the very serious crises of imperialism and
the fact of five Left wing governments existing in Latin America and providing
different alternatives.
The
exemption of a variety of taxes for the rich was part of the appeasement of
finance capital, they said. About the IMF conditionalities Professor Ghosh said
at times the aid first comes on soft terms and then the harmful conditionalities
begin. She lambasted the central government for lacking political will and
acting at the behest of blue-eyed boys of international finance capital.
THE
UPA government had come to power as a result of the overwhelming popular mandate
against the NDA government and the anti-people neo-liberal policies that it had
pursued. This mandate was reflected to an extent in the Common Minimum Programme
adopted by the government. However, in the past one year of its rule the
government has repeatedly fallen short of the commitments it had made to the
people and has refused to deviate from the neo-liberal path being pursued by
successive governments in the past years. Now that it is time again for the
Union Budget to be presented, we demand that the government make a departure
from the neo-liberal economic policies in order to address the pressing needs of
the people. In particular we demand that:
Among
the first actions taken by the UPA government was the passing of the retrograde
Fiscal Responsibility and Budgetary Management (FRBM) Act. This Act seeks to
give legislative force to the IMF-World Bank dogma of cutting fiscal deficits at
the cost of socially necessary investment and welfare expenditure. It makes it
legally binding on the government to reduce the fiscal deficit and eliminate the revenue deficit of
the central government by March 31, 2008 (the deadline is to be extended by a
year). Moreover, the Act requires the central government to reduce the fiscal
deficit by 0.3 per cent of GDP each year, and the revenue deficit by 0.5 per
cent each year a process that has already started with last year’s budget. What
is worse is that the Act lays down that in case of a shortfall in revenue
collection the government would have to cut expenditure in order to meet the
deficit requirements.
This
Act is a completely illogical piece of legislation. Its premise that fiscal
deficits are inflationary by themselves or that higher fiscal deficits squeeze
private investment has no justification in economic theory. In the present state
of our economy where a large proportion of people are unemployed and there is no
shortage of foodgrains, foreign exchange or other inputs what is required is
more higher government expenditure which can generate more demand rather than
the reverse. Behind all the
mumbo-jumbo, this Act actually amounts to curtailing the autonomy of the
legislature so that the neo-liberal project of the withdrawal of the State can
be carried out without any regard to democratic accountability.
The
forthcoming Budget should not be subject the provisions of this anti-people Act.
While
the UPA government has once again declared its intention of cutting down the
meager subsidies that are at present available to the poor, it has remained
silent on the massive subsidies that are being given to the rich in the form of
tax waivers. As shown in the table below, the
tax-to-GDP ratio has continuously declined during the years of liberalisation.
Year
|
Tax/GDP
Ratio (%) |
1988–89 |
8.0 |
1998–99 |
6.0 |
2003-04 |
6.7 |
(Source:
Calculated from the RBI Handbook of
statistics on the Indian economy)
Indeed,
if the tax-GDP ratio had been maintained in 2003–04 at the same level as in
1988–89, the government would have been able to mobilise an additional 34
thousand crore rupees in revenue. Moreover, the tax-GDP ratio in our country
is among the lowest in the world. Even developing countries like
Malaysia and Sri Lanka had tax-GDP ratios as high as 19.5 per cent and 16.0 per
cent respectively in the later half of the 1990s (Source: IMF India Country Report 2002). If the tax-GDP ratio were to be
raised to the level prevailing in Sri Lanka, the additional revenue would be to
the tune of about Rs 100 thousand crores. Tax breaks are not the only form in
which transfers have been taking place to the rich. In the year 2002–03 the gross non-performing assets of public sector
banks were of the order of Rs 54,000 crore most of it because of
non-repayment by large corporate borrowers.
We
demand that these huge transfers be stopped forthwith by increasing corporate
taxes, customs duties and wealth tax and by making the personal tax system more
progressive. Taxes
should be imposed on speculative financial transactions and on short-term
international financial flows.
IMPLEMENT
UNIVERSAL EGS AND PDS; INCREASE EXPENDITURE
The Common Minimum Programme states: “The UPA government will immediately enact a National Employment Guarantee Act. This will provide a legal guarantee for at least 100 days of employment to begin with on asset-creating public works programmes every year at minimum wages for at least one able-bodied person in every rural, urban poor and lower middle class household.” However the Employment Guarantee Bill placed in parliament substantially dilutes this promise. We demand that the anomalies in this Bill be rectified and that provision be made in the Budget for an Employment Guarantee Scheme which would be applicable throughout the country within a timeframe, be fully funded by the centre, cover all households and not just those officially recognised as poor and pay the statutory minimum wages.
We
also demand that the Budget make provision for universalising the Public
Distribution System by removing the distinction between Above Poverty Line and
Below Poverty Line households and reducing prices to ensure food security for
the poor.
Public
spending on the social sector has been grossly neglected in the era of
liberalisation. The plan expenditure on health in the UPA’s first budget was
exactly the same as that in the interim budget presented by the NDA. The Union
government’s allocation for the welfare of SC/ST and OBC in real terms has
actually gone down in the past few years.
We
demand that the present Budget reverse this trend and at least meet the
commitment in the CMP of spending 3 per cent of the GDP on health and increase
the outlay for poverty alleviation and the welfare of deprived section.
Public expenditure on education continues to remain far less than the 6 per cent of GDP, which has been promised by successive governments.
% Share of Expenditure on
Education in the GDP
|
1990-91 |
1995-96 |
1999-2000 |
2001-02 |
Elementary |
1.58 |
1.44 |
1.58 |
1.66 |
Secondary |
1.10 |
0.98 |
0.94 |
0.98 |
Higher |
0.36 |
0.37 |
0.47 |
0.43 |
TOTAL |
3.59 |
3.60 |
4.22 |
4.18 |
Union
Govt’s per capita Allocation to Defence and Education
at
Constant (1993–94) prices (where the unit is Rs, presumably)
Year |
Defence |
Education |
1995-96 |
252.9 |
24.4 |
2000-01 |
329.6 |
39.9 |
2001-02 |
340.9 |
39.9 |
2002-03 |
332.5 |
50.9 |
In
this context we demand:
Substantial
increase in the allocation on education in keeping with the CMP promise of
phased increase to 6 per cent of the GDP in five years.
Adequate
allocation for the universalisation of primary education in accordance with
the recommendations of the Tapas Majumdar Committee’s report and for the
mid-day meal scheme as mandated by the Supreme Court.
Reversal
of the trend of decreasing proportional allocation to the higher education
sector. Rejection of the policy of mobilising an increasing proportion of
funds for higher education from the student community.
Special
emphasis on technical education to provide accessible public alternatives to
profit-minded private professional institutions.