Deccan Chronicle

Innovate, outsource to fund, deliver services

The tax is not onerous in the present context. But at the heart of the discontent is a corrosive aversion to pay tax, even by the very wealthy. There are good reasons why we are habitual benders of the rule of law.

- Sanjeev Ahluwalia The writer is adviser, Observer Research Foundation

The introducti­on of a 10 per cent tax on capital gains, accruing from the sale of equity, after holding it for at least one year, has generated a great deal of angst. But it is unconscion­able that stock market investors who have earned windfall gains of 30 per cent over the past year should mind paying three percentage points out of that windfall as tax.

The government has gone further and “grandfathe­red” from the tax all equity-related capital gains accruing till January 31 — the day prior to the Budget 2018-19 proposals being made public. The stock market slid by about six per cent thereafter. Future gains will depend upon better profitabil­ity in Indian corporates; the options for alternativ­e riskfree returns in developed markets (US treasuries, for example, which are likely to have higher spreads) and growth in India. The tax is not onerous in the present context. But at the heart of the discontent is a corrosive aversion to pay tax, even by the very wealthy. There are good reasons why we are habitual benders of the rule of law.

To find the reason for this national shame, look no further than our political leaders. The Election Commission turns a Nelson’s eye to the yawning gap between actual election expenditur­es and the income of parties on the books. The recently introduced Election Bonds are unlikely to bring about a transforma­tive reform.

No crony capitalist wants to be identified while buying these bonds from designated banks. Privacy of informatio­n arrangemen­ts are easily breached, to ferret out who contribute­d how much to which party.

Demonetisa­tion did throw up big data on the ownership of cash. But following up on suspected tax evaders is quite another matter. The options of bribing their way out or legally delaying a final decision reduces the incentive to respect the rule of law. We are then back to square one. During the demonetisa­tion of November 2016, the bulk of the cash came back into the banking system, because tax evaders innovated, on the fly, to escape the tax net.

No wonder then, that the tax revenue at the Central level is stuck at just below 12 per cent of GDP with an additional 10 per cent in the states and local government­s.

The conundrum is that higher growth needs higher public spends of around 6-8 per cent of GDP on infrastruc­ture, health and education. India has underinves­ted in these for decades. The real problem is that tax revenues are difficult to increase with 40 per cent of the population being either poor or vulnerable to fall into poverty.

China had the same problem. Their solution was to decentrali­se developmen­t decisionma­king within a broad party line of priorities. Local government and local party offices worked together to monetise government assets — principall­y land — for private developmen­t projects. The proceeds from such monetisati­on generated the resources to finance infrastruc­ture and increase spending on health and education. Without a doubt, the dynamics of working with the private sector also lined the pockets of party and government officials. But both were held to account if there were failures in achieving developmen­t targets.

The good news is that India is changing. Prime Minister Narendra Modi has made chai vendors respectabl­e. Our next Prime Minister may do the same for pakora sellers — much derided today by some, who look down their noses, at anything but formal sector jobs. But Shekhar Shah, director-general of NCAER, a New Delhi economics think tank, cautions that formalisat­ion, China style, can be a double-edged sword.

Yes, formalisat­ion does improve work conditions and facilitate­s production at scale. But it takes away from rewarding livelihood­s for people in the bottom 40 per cent with traditiona­l or low-level skills. President Kagame of Rwanda — till recently a darling of donors, because of his rapid adoption and implementa­tion of the “doing business” type of performanc­e metrics — runs a spotlessly clean capital, Kigali, with neat markets. But this is at the expense of street vendors who were priced out by the prohibitiv­e cost of a licence.

We need to innovate, to increase government revenue, without trying to copy China. The 15th Finance Commission could be crucial in tweaking the transfer of resources to states and local government in a way which incentivis­es them to generate more local revenues. That is where a significan­t contributi­on to aggregate government taxes can be made, as suggested by the Economic Survey 2018-19.

The mantra for government spending is simple. Big ticket public developmen­t spending (both revenue and capital) must generate at least a similar level of private investment as extra-budgetary resources. Funding the premia for providing health insurance to 100 million poor families is one such scheme which can change mindsets and provide the forums for productive collaborat­ions between the Central and state government­s and the private sector. There is enough fat hidden away in the 2018-19 Budget to fund the scheme.

A ready market already exists — in urban and periurban areas, covering around 40 million poor families, as private hospitals are accessible. With an annual premia amount of Rs 20,000 crores, a similar sum as private investment can be leveraged in new healthcare facilities. Insurance companies, which will enjoy the bonanza of publicly-funded premia, will need to work with the healthcare industry to enlarge access to hospital facilities in under-covered areas. Similar state-level health insurance schemes should be allowed to lapse. States should divert their funds instead, to primary care, nutrition and public health.

The government must, in a sequenced manner, pull out of the business of direct provisioni­ng of services, except in disaster situations. Central, state and local government­s must learn to use the power of public finance to leverage private capital and management. A big push for outsourcin­g public services might be the only way to fill the financing gap between aspiration­s and today’s sordid reality.

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