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From: Vaidyanathan <[email protected]>
Date: 13 November 2014 17:50:44 GMT+05:30
To: [email protected]
Subject: [New post] Fatcat obsession: We need reform for India Uninc, not India 
Inc
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Fatcat obsession: We need reform for India Uninc, not India Inc
by Prof Vaidyanathan
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh in his address to the nation on the 21st 
September 2012 has clearly enunciated the need for reforms to achieve desired 
economic growth and not go back to the situation of the early nineties. 
Unfortunately his focus is on the reforms which are dictated by the US business 
interests and supported by local crony capitalists who occupy a small space on 
in our economy but whose voice is loud since they control all major media and 
has effective lobbies in Delhi.

If we look at the structure of our economy we find that nearly 20 % is 
contributed by government to our GDP and another 18% by Agriculture in the 
private hands. Corporate sector which gets audience with PM at the drop of a 
hat has nearly 15%and the rest consisting of Partnership and proprietorship 
firms [called non-corporate business] constitute more than 45% of our GDP. 
[National Accounts Statistics- CSO-2011]. In the USA the share of corporate 
business is more than 75% in its GDP [table 1.3.5 BEA-US Dept of commerce 2011]

Even in manufacturing the share of non –corporate business is nearly 50%.

In the service sectors consisting of

Construction
Trade—Whole Sale/ Retail
Transport [other than Railways]
Hotels / Restaurants
Real Estate /Ownership of Dwellings and business services
Other services [professional etc]
the share of non-corporate sector is more than 70%; these activities are the 
fastest growing activities with more than 8 % compounded average growth rate in 
the last decade. These are the drivers of our economic growth.

On the savings household savings constitute more than 70% of our domestic 
savings and our domestic savings of around 35 % is the primary driver of our 
investment and growth. In the case of savings data households include 
non-corporate sector.

The main thrust of reforms should be focused on our non-corporate sector that 
is facing the twin devils of credit issues and bribery. Even though the 
non-corporate sector is fastest growing its credit needs are not met by the 
banking sector but by private money lenders etc and the cost of borrowing us as 
high as 5 to 6 % per month-namely around 70 % per annum.

Their share of bank credit which was nearly 60% in the early nineties has 
become 36 % in 2011 showing a consistent decline. The share of corporate sector 
has gone up from around 30% to 44% and Government from 10% to 20%.

 

Table-1 Distribution of Outstanding Bank Credit by Categories [%]

Category        March 1990      March 1996      March2004       March 2008      
March 2009      March 2010      March 2011
Household sector (1)    58.3    51.1    47.6    36.6    32.8    32.8    36.3
Private Corporate sector (2)    31.3    38.6    38.0    46.7    48.2    48.6    
44.0
Public sector (3)       10.2    10.3    14.3    16.7    19.0    18.6    19.7
Total   100.0   100.0   100.0   100.0   100.0   100.0   100
Note: (1) Household sector includes Partnership, Proprietorship concerns, joint 
families, associations, clubs, Societies, trusts, groups and individuals for 
all accounts. (2) Private Corporate sector includes private Sector and 
cooperative sector excluding those mentioned in (1). (3) Public Sector, that is 
all Government activities, includes joint sector undertakings.

Source: Extracted from table –1.15; Outstanding Credit of Scheduled Commercial 
Banks according to Organizations; Basic statistical returns; various years; RBI

 

In other words the most productive and growing sectors of our economy is 
starved of bank credit so that they depend on money lenders and other non-bank 
sources. The crony capitalists who default bank loans get larger share for 
their wasteful expenditure The solution for it is to create a separate body to 
monitor  Non-banking Finance Sector and free it from the bureaucratic clutches.

Not only that, non-corporates also pays huge sums of bribes sometime as high as 
10 to 15% of gross turnover. So the misery index of Small and Medium businesses 
in India is interest rate and bribe rate which comes to annual rate of nearly 
80%

This misery index needs to be tackled and reforms should focus on it instead of 
worrying about profits of Wal-Mart which is in desperate search if new markets 
Reforms Needed

The actual areas where reforms are needed are

Commercial Tax
 Road Tax
 Entertainment Tax
 Excise duty on liquor
Urban land ceiling and regulations (ULCRA)
 Shops and establishments Act
Laws governing educational, medical etc institutions
Money lending regulations.
 Stamp duties Act
Food and Adulteration acts—municipalities
 Water/Power/Drainage regulations—Acts
 Registrations / Contracts act
These regulations pertaining to the activities in which non-corporate sector 
dominates and are partly in the realm of State Governments. There is a need to 
have an Inter State council meet only to focus on reforms in all the above 
mentioned areas instead of just being obsessed with FDI and FII and pink paper 
Rudalis.

We do not want to have basic and important reforms and do not even discuss it 
since they are not “sexy” and sadly unimportant to the CNBC/CII crowd. Actually 
FII and FDI have always contributed less than 10 % of our investments which are 
driven by domestic savings. Yet we think having more funds from abroad will 
solve all problems. That is not a sign of free marketer but a sign of sold out 
sepoy of global capital.

Unless and until we focus on the reforms at the State and lower levels we are 
not going to sustain our growth rates. We must come out of our thinking on the 
corporate or put it colorfully “Sensex” economy. Our corporate sector is only 
an “item number” in our economy full of glamour and that “ooch” factor. But 
from substance point of view it does not have much importance. Still we as a 
nation have an uncanny ability to focus on the inconsequential and immaterial 
and spend lots of time and effort on them and abuse others as Swadeshi or worst 
Luddite!

Delhi centric reforms can only benefit fat cats and not the most productive 
sectors and engines of our economic growth namely India “Unincorporated”. They 
are struggling to get adequate credit at reasonable rates of interest and deal 
with corruption at the lower levels of our system. What India needs is 
reforming our reform process to focus on the real India and not the India which 
the Yankees and Yankee minded reformers are imagining!

Prof Vaidyanathan | September 26, 2012 at 12:42 pm | Categories: Uncategorized 
| URL: http://wp.me/p2IA6W-4Z
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