People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXVI
No.
14 April 01, 2012 |
Disinvesting in
Tribal Development
Archana Prasad
THE budget for 2012-2013 and its inadequate
allocations for tribal development shows that the UPA-II government is
not
interested in meeting its constitutional obligations towards the tribal
people.
Ever since the Fifth Five Year Plan, the central government has had an
additional obligation to provide special assistance for tribal
development
under the Tribal Sub Plan (TSP). Prior to 2010, every ministry of the
central
government was supposed to allocate funds for the TSP in proportion to
the
tribal population in the country. However, in 2010 a task force was set
up in
the Planning Commission to review the working of TSP and the Special
Component
Plan (SCP) for scheduled castes. In the light of the recommendations of
this
task force, the operational directions issued at the time of the
formulation of
the budget of 2011-12 showed that the orientation of this assistance
had changed
significantly from an area-based to a beneficiary-oriented approach.
This shift
in orientation reflects the structural changes that are being induced
within
the tribal societies in a neo-liberal era. These changes are
characterised by
large scale dispossession and the plunder of the natural and economic
wealth that
is now being appropriated by corporate houses. This has been done
through the relaxation
of environmental regulations and the active assistance of the
government. A
total of 1,82,389 hectares of forest land has been diverted to big
projects
between January 2008 and August 2011. Further, the withdrawal of the
State from
its own obligations in the social sector has resulted in increasing
rates of
hunger, malnutrition and migration to urban areas especially in the
context of
the continuing agrarian distress. Any changes in funding patterns and
the
special assistance under the TSP should be seen in this context.
GUIDELINES
AND OBLIGATIONS
In accordance with constitutional obligations,
the total allocations under the TSP should equal to the proportion of
the
schedule tribe population within the country i.e., about 8.5 per cent. In the 2012-13 budget proposals, Rs 21,710.11
crore has been allocated for tribal specific schemes under the TSP. The
finance
minister sees this allocation as an increase of 17.6 per cent from the
estimates
of 2011-12 (Rs 18,486.23 crore). However, his statement is misleading
because
the percentage of TSP allocation to the total plan budget has actually
declined
marginally from 4.3 per cent in 2011-12 to a projected 4.1 per cent in
2012-13.
This shows that even the limited commitment of the UPA-II government
towards
tribal welfare is waning and that it does not intend to fulfil its
constitutional obligations.
The key to the steadily decreasing proportion of
funds for tribal welfare lies in the operational guidelines of 2011
which
divided the ministries into four categories. Category
I consisted of ministries that were
not required to allocate any funds for tribal specific schemes under
the TSP. This
meant that all ministries were not required to allocate at least some
funds for
tribal welfare. But the commitments under these official guidelines
have not
been fulfilled. In the 2012-13 proposals, about 32 of the 68 ministries
and
departments allocated funds under the TSP as compared to 28 ministries
and
departments in 2011-12. Thus about half of the departments remain
outside the
scope of the TSP, which itself violates the spirit of the
constitutional
obligations.
The second category or Category II ministries
had to make minimum allocation towards the TSP, i.e. allocations less
than 7.5
per cent of their total budget to tribal welfare. In 2011-12, 13
ministries
were identified in this category with only one department (department
of
information technology) having the obligation to invest more than 5 per
cent in
tribal welfare. Many crucial ministries allocate less than 4 per cent
of their
resources to the TSP. These are ministries and departments like food
and public
distribution, road transport and highways etc that provide basic
amenities to
the tribal areas. In the present budget a total of 0.08 per cent of the
total allocations
for department of food and distribution and 1.9 per cent of the total
allocation of road transport and highway ministry have been demarcated
for
tribal welfare. The only allocation made under the road transport and
highways
is for districts affected by ‘leftwing extremism’ and not for the
improvement
of fair weather and other roads linking remote villages to main
habitations
under schemes like Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojana. Given the lack of
public
funds for such infrastructural facilities, it is obvious that the
corporate
players will enter into the fray through PPP models.
The third category or Category III departments
and ministries are those which are to allocate 7.5 to 8.2 per cent of
their
funds to the TSP. Thirteen identified ministries include labour and
employment,
women and child development, agriculture and cooperative, panchayati
raj,
health and family welfare and others. It is important to note that such
ministries are important, both for employment generation as well as for
providing social services such as mid day meals and health services
that are
especially important for areas where hunger, malnutrition and
unemployment
persists. The role of these ministries is also crucial in providing
support
towards livelihood and other opportunities. Therefore, it is surprising
that
some ministries like agriculture, panchayati raj and labour have not
been
provided with a mandate to allocate more funds especially in the wake
of the
severe agrarian crisis and the non-implementation of PESA. Clearly, the
government is looking towards private players to provide impetus to
employment
and is not interested in activating local self governments in these
regions.
Finally, the fourth category or Category IV
ministries and departments have to allocate more than 8.2 per cent of
their
budget towards the TSP. There are five departments and ministries which
allocate funds under this category. As expected the ministry of tribal
affairs
provides 100 per cent of its funds for tribal welfare, but it is
significant
that none of the other four ministries/departments (i.e. rural
development,
school and literacy, and drinking water) are meant to provide even 20
per cent
of their funds for the TSP. This shows that after 2011, the TSP has
been
designed to ensure that the flow of public funds is limited and that
spaces are
opened up for private players. This strategy falls in line with the way
in
which policies are being changed in all sectors to aid the corporate
penetration
taking place in mineral rich tribal areas.
ANALYSING
BUDGETARY
ALLOCATIONS
Given the above framework, it is not surprising
that the recent budget is just one more step in the direction of the
withdrawal
of the State from its responsibility towards the tribal people. This is
evident
from the pattern of funding given below:
Category |
Number of Ministries/ Departments |
Proportion of funds proposed in 2012-13 (percentage) |
I |
36 |
0 |
II |
13 |
5.8 |
III |
14 |
28.8 |
IV |
5 |
65.4 |
The allocations made above show that more than two-thirds
of the funds for the TSP are to come from only five ministries. Of
these, the
major portion of the funds come from the tribal affairs ministry whose
total
allocation of Rs 4090 crore form only 0.7 per cent of the entire
budget. The composition
of the Category IV budget proposals
(i.e., allocations of more than 8.2 per cent) are also revealing:
Department/Ministry |
Proportion of Funds to be allocated as per 2011
Guidelines (percentage) |
Proportion of funds allocated RE 2011-2012 (percentage) |
Proportion of funds allocated BE 2012-2013 (percentage) |
Land Resources |
10 |
9.9 |
9.9 |
School Education and Literacy |
10.70 |
12.2 |
12.6 |
Drinking Water and Sanitation |
10 |
10 |
10 |
Rural Development |
17.50 |
4.1 |
4.7 |
Tribal Affairs |
100 |
100 |
100 |
The table above shows that the Department of
Rural Development has been most lacking in its commitment to make its
constitutionally obligated allocations. Further, it is important to
note that no
funds have been allocated under the TSP in the MNREGA. The allocations
under the
Swarna Jayanti Gram Swarozgar Yojana have also only gone up by Rs 112
crore to
Rs 723.74 crore, which will only take care of the inflationary prices.
This
trend of miniscule allocations in an important sector shows that the
government
is not serious about tackling the livelihood insecurity prevailing in
the
tribal areas. Increasing trends of rural-urban migration also reveal
the
distress of the tribal economies under economic reforms.
Perhaps the most revealing is the trend in
social sector allocations as revealed by an analysis of some Category
III
budget proposals (i.e., allocations of 7.5 to 8.2 per cent) as shown in
the
table below:
Department/Ministry |
Proportion of Funds to be allocated as per 2011
Guidelines (percentage) |
Proportion of funds allocated RE 2011-2012 (percentage) |
Proportion of funds allocated BE 2012-2013 (percentage) |
Higher Education |
7.5 |
10 |
7.5 |
Agriculture and Cooperation |
8 |
4.3 |
4.3 |
Medium and Small Scale Enterprises |
8.2 |
5.9 |
4.9 |
Coal |
8.2 |
5.7 |
6.2 |
Youth and Sports Affairs |
8.2 |
4 |
4.2 |
Labour and Employment |
8.2 |
9.8 |
8.2 |
Panchayati Raj |
8.2 |
0.1 |
0.3 |
Women and Child Development |
8.2 |
9.7 |
8.2 |
Health and Family Welfare |
8.2 |
9.9 |
8.1 |
This table is instructive because it shows that
a significant amount of decline has taken place in the percentages of
allocations to the TSP in many employment and social security related
schemes
and ministries. This seems to be the real reason for the disinvestment
in
tribal development.
Thus we see that the restructuring of the TSP
has been done to enable the drying up of public funds for tribal
development.
Therefore, the fight for more public investment in the TSP can only be
fought meaningfully
if the restructuring of the TSP is demystified. In order to do this,
demands
must be made to ensure that there is no categorisation of ministries
and all
ministries are directed to allocate at least 8.5 percent of their
budget
towards the TSP. Only this will ensure that the government meets its
constitutional obligation towards the tribal people.