[《The Narendra Modi government has now carried its penchant for undermining
institutions to the national budget itself. Not only has it treated what
should have been an interim budget, as its tenure lasts barely two months
into the new financial year, as a full-fledged budget, but it has also
palpably refrained from applying its mind to several key budgetary schemes.
The aim has been not to launch some seriously thought out schemes for the
poor but to create hype-worthy news.》]

https://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/interim-budget-2019-allocations-economy-gdp-the-boundaries-of-welfare-5567324/?fbclid=IwAR0mKkhKuUF8jrfbOAKuj8UK6PINBuQiCzjjlTgEQtUDPqMGiy6c_hIzoEw

The boundaries of welfare
Interim budget indicates that the government’s electoral strategy is to win
over the ‘intermediate classes’ while ignoring the poor.

Written by Prabhat Patnaik |

Updated: February 4, 2019 1:03:47 am

As for the pension scheme for the workers in the unorganised sector, it
does not promise a pension to the existing old people (By Suvajit Dey)
The Narendra Modi government has now carried its penchant for undermining
institutions to the national budget itself. Not only has it treated what
should have been an interim budget, as its tenure lasts barely two months
into the new financial year, as a full-fledged budget, but it has also
palpably refrained from applying its mind to several key budgetary schemes.
The aim has been not to launch some seriously thought out schemes for the
poor but to create hype-worthy news.

Consider the three main “sops” of the budget. Twelve crore “small
landholding families” are to be given Rs 6,000 each annually. This is a
paltry amount, but let us ignore that. The scheme does not distinguish
between irrigated and un-irrigated tracts. Minister Piyush Goyal also did
not specify whether “landholding” refers to “land-owning” or
“land-operating”, and whether “land” includes “homestead land”. But one can
infer that he was referring to “non-homestead” “land-owning” households.
Indeed according to the NSS (Report 571) the number of households with
“ownership holdings” between 0.002 hectares (below which land would be
solely for homestead) and 2 hectares, comes to 13.3 crore in 2013, which is
close to the number he mentioned. What this means, however, is that both
labourers and tenants are left out of the scheme. In short, a host of
absentee landowners would get the government handout, while actual
cultivators without ownership rights would be left out.

Besides, the estimation of the number of ownership holdings from a sample
survey is one thing; but the actual identification of who owns what over
the country as a whole, where crores of households are involved, is quite
another. The Telangana Rythu Badhu scheme, the presumed inspiration behind
all these programmes, was preceded by an updating of land records that
established land ownership. But given the abysmal state of land records in
the country as a whole, whose rectification would take months at the very
least, the idea that immediate payments within the current financial year
itself can be made to the deserving beneficiaries, and that too to the tune
of Rs 20,000 crore, defies reason. Little thought has clearly gone into the
launching of this scheme.

As for the pension scheme for the workers in the unorganised sector, it
does not promise a pension to the existing old people; it does not promise
a pension that is half the minimum wage, which has been a long-standing
demand, and which, if implemented, would mean a pension of around Rs 5,000
per month today itself, compared to the promised Rs 3,000 per month 30
years from now for a 29-year old of today; above all, however, it is a
contributory scheme. Minister Goyal talked about the government
contributing a matching amount, but the figures he cited belie this
promise. If a male worker just turned 29 pays Rs 100 per month until he is
60, then by that date he would have contributed a total sum close to Rs
1,50,000 at 8 per cent annual compound interest rate. Given the current
male life expectancy of 65 years, he should be able to live the remaining
five years of his expected life at almost Rs 3,000 per month out of his own
savings. Where, then, is the government’s matching contribution to the
pension scheme?

This scheme, in short, is essentially a savings scheme, not a pension
scheme. It creates a saving instrument for unorganised sector workers, but
is not a pension scheme with substantial government contribution. Much
noise, however, will no doubt be made about how it helps 10 crore
unorganised sector workers.

The third major “sop” relates to income tax rebate, where the main
provision is that individuals having annual taxable income up to Rs 5 lakh
will get full tax rebate and will not be required to pay any income tax.
This, curiously, is not expected to make much of a difference to income tax
revenue: The share of income tax receipts to GDP is expected to go up
despite these concessions from 6.4 per cent in the current year’s revised
estimate to 6.6 per cent next year.

This is likely to be window-dressing; and in any case not much can be read
into the budget figures, since fudging statistics has become an official
habit these days. For instance, despite a whopping shortfall of Rs 1 lakh
crore in GST collections in 2018-19 (RE) compared to the budget estimates,
and no curtailment in expenditure, the fiscal deficit relative to GDP,
which is the one figure that globalised finance watches closely, has
remained almost unchanged between budget and revised estimates (3.4 instead
of 3.3 per cent). No doubt, the new exaggerated GDP estimates, by pushing
up the denominator, have done the trick.

To say this is not to endorse the view of finance that the fiscal deficit
should always be strictly bounded, a view that Joan Robinson, the renowned
economist, had called the “humbug of finance”; it is only to underline the
growing vacuity of official statistics, including budget figures.

Interestingly, however, the government has not used its predilection for
manipulating statistics to show larger allocations for MGNREGA and other
pro-poor programmes. MGNREGA allocation has marginally declined by Rs 1,000
crore. Goyal has said that funds will be made available for MGNREGA if
needed; but this is exactly what all previous finance ministers have said
even while whittling down the programme. A recent ground-level study shows
that a good deal of demand for employment under MGNREGA is not registered
at all; and the actual employment provided is only 68 per cent of the
registered demand.

The niggardliness towards MGNREGA and the exclusion of labourers and
tenants from the Pradhan Mantri Kisan Samman Nidhi scheme on the one hand,
and income tax concessions together with the handouts to farmers up to 2
hectares (which will comprise holdings of better-off peasants in irrigated
tracts) on the other, suggest that the government’s electoral strategy is
to win over the “intermediate classes” while ignoring the poor. But the
lack of application of mind that marks several key budgetary schemes may
thwart even this electoral strategy.

The writer is a former professor of economics at JNU, Delhi

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