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DeMon: Modi govt shoots itself in the foot
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Amulya Ganguli | 24 Oct, 2017
Much of the efforts of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leaders to
explain away the current economic slowdown as the result of "technical"
glitches, as party president Amit Shah tried to do, or as teething
troubles of demonetisation and the Goods and Services Tax (GST), are
likely to be seen as instances of whistling in the dark to keep up the
party's spirits ahead of a series of state assembly elections.
Even
International Monetary Fund chief Christine Lagarde's certificate about
the "solid track" of the Indian economy refers to the future rather
than to the disturbing present.
For the time being, therefore,
the BJP's problems relate to both the absence of jobs and the economic
stagnation, which indicate that the employment situation will not look
up any time soon.
For bringing the party to this sad juncture
after its rousing victory three years ago, the BJP has itself to blame
if only because the political and electoral scene has been bereft of any
challengers since 2014. It can be said to be guilty, therefore, of
scoring self-goals.
If the BJP's political dominance is under
threat, the reason is that the party has shot itself in the foot by both
the controversial measures -- demonetisation and GST.
Interestingly,
neither of the two was seen as life-threatening at the time when they
came into force. Instead, they were thought to be "life-changing", to
quote the supposedly autonomous University Grants Commission's (UGC)
adulatory phrase about Narendra Modi's speeches.
Demonetisation,
for instance, was hailed by the hoi polloi as a dramatic step against
the parallel economy. At one stroke, it was said to have wiped out all
the accumulated wealth which the holders of black money had kept under
their mattresses.
The argument that currency notes constituted a
minuscule percentage of hidden treasures was ignored. The subsequent
disclosure by the Reserve Bank that 99 per cent of the scrapped notes
had been returned underlined the correctness of this assessment.
But
even as account-holders stood for hours in queues outside banks to
deposit their suddenly useless notes and get new ones -- 100 of them
dying during the ordeal -- as many as 1.5 million jobs were lost in the
informal sector all over the country.
While the human cost of
this crippling blow to the small and medium businesses will never be
fully known, it has brought the BJP to its present pass. If any party
can be said to have wilfully undermined its own prospects, it is the
BJP.
The party enacted the same folly with the GST. Initially, it
was thought to be a reform whose time had come. The fact that it was
first proposed by the Manmohan Singh government and was then taken up by
the BJP despite its earlier opposition suggested that its good points
were undeniable.
After all, who doesn't like the idea of one
country, one tax? Like the uniform civil code, GST was expected to bring
in an element of simplicity and evenness in the tax structure.
But
just as the civil code has been hanging fire because of the
difficulties of dispensing with age-old adherence to personal laws, the
complexities of the GST have stumped small and medium businesses which
are unused to hiring the expensive services of chartered accountants to
prepare their balance sheets.
The woes of demonetisation and GST
have, therefore, proved to be a bonanza for the BJP's opponents. They
are now able to show up the party as incompetent. This perception is
particularly true of demonetisation. What was expected by the BJP to be a
political masterstroke, which enabled it to claim that it has made the
black money hoarders run for cover, has proved to be a fiasco of the
first order.
Little wonder the BJP quickly changed its line on
demonetisation from being an act against the parallel economy to being a
pro-digitalisation initiative. "Note bandi" was to make the paper legal
tender disappear altogether in favour of plastic money, but the process
is still under way.
If the Modi government did not want to
believe that cash was the life blood of the economy, especially at the
rural and semi-urban areas, it was presumably because the decision of
sucking out 85 per cent of the notes from the system was taken by only a
few.
Hubris was behind this "bold" decision which was to prove
to be fatal. Modi was riding high towards the end of 2016 with the
opposition nowhere in sight and the chants of "Modi, Modi" during his
foreign tours ringing in his ears.
His party, too, was completely
under his thumb. If there was anyone in it who thought that
demonetisation was risky, he or she did not have the guts to say it. If a
noted economist like Manmohan Singh said that the move was a monumental
misjudgment, he was dismissed as a carping critic who was saying what
he did because of being in the opposition.
Arguably, if Raghuram
Rajan was not hounded out of the Reserve Bank by the saffron maverick
Subramanian Swamy, he might have given sage advice.
Rajan says in
his autobiography that he told the government in February last year --
demonetisation took place nine months later -- that its "short-term
economic costs" would outweigh the long-term benefits.
This is
exactly what has happened. While the immediate economic consequences of
demonetisation have been little short of disastrous, there is no
certainty when its favourable impact will be felt.
Meanwhile, as
the government grapples, ineffectually, with various problems --
unemployment, farmers' distress, and the antics of saffron vigilantes --
the Congress is showing signs of revival.
(Amulya Ganguli is a writer on current affairs. The views expressed are personal. He can be reached at amulyaganguli@gmail.com)
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