Business Standard

Spat reveals Punjab’s liquor dependence

- SAI MANISH

It started last week with bad blood between Punjab Chief Secretary Karan Avtar Singh and the state’s finance minister, Manpreet Badal. Within a few hours, the connection of the chief secretary’s son to the liquor business came to light. With Punjab’s top bureaucrat also holding the post of financial commission­er (taxation), Chief Minister Amarinder Singh faced yet another potential public humiliatio­n, triggered by internal dissent in the midst of a raging pandemic. With allegation­s of conflict of interest and charges of presiding over declining excise revenues flying thick and fast, the chief secretary was divested of the responsibi­lity by virtue of which he decided liquor taxation policy in the state. Eventually on May 13, the Punjab government tweaked its excise policy to introduce concession­s for liquor contractor­s.

The dust hasn’t settled yet. “His (Karan Avtar Singh’s) attitude wasn’t right at all before and during cabinet meetings. The conflict-of-interest charges are too serious to be brushed aside easily,” said Raja Warring, Congress MLA.

This seems to have laid bare the state’s dependence on alcohol in more ways than one. First, even though the chief secretary has stepped aside from lording over taxation issues, the subsequent changes to excise policy, providing concession­s to liquor contractor­s, are not in the spirit of the ministers’ “conflict of interest” charges against the officer. A look at licensed distilleri­es shows that many have connection­s with politician­s and influentia­l business families. Of the 16 distilleri­es in the state, at least eight are connected with influentia­l persons, including family members of the late Ponty Chadha and his brother Hardeep’s daughter (the brothers died in a gunfight in 2012).

Among politician­s, a minister owns a distillery. Two others are owned by exCongress­man Venod Sharma and ex-akali MLA Deep Malhotra. Reportedly, the retail liquor business also has a significan­t political presence with Malhotra, along with Congress leaders Amrik Dhillon and relatives of Punjab Health Minister Balbir Sidhu, being in the trade. Another politician, Shiva Lal Doda, who fought as an independen­t in 2017 and is believed to be close to the Akalis, is also entrenched in liquor retail. Doda is currently serving a life term for murder.

Second, while the production and sale of liquor are heavily politicise­d, the trade plays a crucial role in augmenting the state’s precarious finances. At 40 per cent, Punjab has the worst debt to gross domestic product ratio (GDP) among larger states. In 2019-20, the state earned ~5,676 crore from excise duties on the sale of liquor and licence charges — a fifth of its tax revenues. After state goods and services tax (SGST), nothing earns more revenue for Punjab than its taxes on liquor. In 2018-19, the state earned almost ~100 crore less from liquor than in the previous year, with businesses calling for a crackdown on smuggling from neighbouri­ng states like Himachal Pradesh and Haryana.

The allocation of licence for liquor vends, dominated by a few influentia­l families and politicall­y connected persons, generates immense buzz each year. In 2018-19, over 40,000 individual­s and firms reportedly applied for around 5,700 vends in the state. Lastly, of all states in India, after the lockdown was imposed, Punjab was the first and the most enthusiast­ic one to call for lifting the ban on selling alcohol. The state has now allowed home delivery of alcohol, giving liquor vends the freedom to plan the timing and logistics. While the bureaucrat-politician tussle may have brought out the role of an invisible yet powerful lobby at work to force policy changes, it has also revealed a darker side of a society already battling the scourge of opioid abuse.

A recent survey by AIIMS estimated 29 per cent of the people of Punjab drink, the proportion being the highest in the country after Tripura and Arunachal Pradesh. More children consume alcohol in Punjab than in any other state. As many as 44 per cent of alcohol users in the state are dependent on it — the highest after Puducherry; 10 per cent of its drinkers need medical help.

 ??  ?? Punjab Chief Secretary Karan Avtar Singh has been divested of excise and taxation department charge after altercatio­n with ministers over excise policy
Punjab Chief Secretary Karan Avtar Singh has been divested of excise and taxation department charge after altercatio­n with ministers over excise policy

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