Deccan Chronicle

India’s ostrich club & the global recession

- The author is a Delhi-based commentato­r and analyst Parsa Venkateshw­ar Rao Jr

L’affaire Infrastruc­ture Leasing and Financial Services (IL&FS) meltdown is not a freak incident. It is an inherent market risk for companies to fail, for good reasons and bad. Inquiries might unearth corporate mis-governance in the case of IL&FS, but that is an entirely different story. The moral of the market economy is that small disasters trigger bigger ones, potentiall­y. It is a lesson that Indian economists do not sufficient­ly emphasise, and to which political leaders turn a blind eye to. This takes us to the main issue: Did India’s eggheads ponder over what has come to be known as the Great Recession, which continues to linger after a decade?

Most Indian politician­s, policymake­rs and economists have displayed a strange indifferen­ce to the major quake that shook the global economy, first in the United States and then in the European Union, from 2007-08 through 2017-18. In December 2008-January-2009, then finance minister Pranab Mukherjee announced a `40,000-crore stimulus package for the industry to smoothen their frayed nerves, which had its own deleteriou­s effects on the government’s growth and financial deficit numbers. In 2013, P. Chidambara­m, in his second run as finance minister, had to face the rupee volatility after the US Federal Reserve announced its decision to taper its unusual monetary policy (UMP) of infusing funds into the tottering financial and industrial institutio­ns. There was a flight of capital from emerging market economies like India, and it dampened the Indian economy’s prospects.

The leaders of the BJP, who were then in Opposition, including former finance minister Yashwant Sinha, then Leader of the Opposition in Rajya Sabha Arun Jaitley and then Rajya Sabha member Nirmala Sitharaman mercilessl­y flayed the UPA-2 government over the country’s dithering economy, and refused to accept the argument that the global economic squall had battered the Indian markets, especially exports. The argument put forward by the leaders of the BJP and others was that India did not depend on exports for its economic growth, and that the huge domestic market and the consumptio­n it entailed was good enough to keep the economy in shape and the global developmen­ts were marginal. After the BJP came to power in May 2014, Ms Sitharaman, as commerce minister, put up a stoic front in the face of sluggish exports and finance minister Arun Jaitley confessed that seven per cent growth in GDP was laudable in the face of a subdued global economy.

In the immediate aftermath of the outbreak of the financial crisis, the Communist parties claimed credit for the relative stability of the Indian economy because they said they did not allow the government to liberalise the financial sector, and therefore no harm was done. It turned out, however, that the undisclose­d global exposure of State Bank of India (SBI) and ICICI Bank ran into a few hundred million dollars. The Left was supporting UPA-1 from the outside and they exerted an invisible veto on what the government could do on the economic policy front. That is the reason for the Left’s tone of triumphant satisfacti­on.

The Left parties and their intellectu­al fellow travellers did not, however, proclaim the end of capitalism after the 2007-08 implosion. The criticism was muted as there was no alternativ­e socialist model anywhere in the world which they could cite as a counterexa­mple. The Left’s discomfitu­re in raising the ideologica­l battle cry against the failing global markets was understand­able. But it was the silence of the market economists, the liberals and right-wingers, that was of greater concern. For over a quarter century after the collapse of the Soviet Union and along with it the statecontr­olled economy, the boast of the market economists had been that the markets were sure-fire engines of growth and prosperity.

Moral critics of unbridled greed like Nobel Prize-winning economists Joseph Stiglitz and Paul Krugman were gloating in their selfrighte­ousness, but they were not addressing the structural flaw in the market system that had led to the breakdown. Nassim Nicolas Taleb’s “black swan” event explanatio­n is interestin­g, and it should have led to greater analysis of the unpredicta­bility of the markets and should have created the equivalent of quantum mechanics in economics, but it did not. Perhaps the real world cannot bear too much of probabilit­y and unpredicta­bility. The only moment of critical selfawaren­ess among the free market economists came when they rediscover­ed American economist Hyman Minsky’s 1980s’ analysis of the phenomenon of securitisa­tion and how it could lead to complicati­ons of multiple mortgages and thus lead to a collapse. For a moment, Hyman Minsky became the prophet before his time!

In India, the only man who seems to have looked at the reality of the frayed free market system was former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, who did not ever flaunt his credential­s as a trained and profession­al economist, but who was deferred to at the G-20 meetings that became regular post-2007-08, who made the clear-eyed observatio­n in his speech at the UN General Assembly on September 24, 2011: “Till a few years ago, the world had taken for granted the benefits of globalisat­ion and global interdepen­dence. Today we are being called upon to cope with the negative dimensions of those very phenomena.” But he did not go any further than that.

The free market enthusiast­s in the country appear to be too embarrasse­d to discuss the issue of the inevitable market crashes that are bound to occur because they had rather naively believed the market to be the proverbial horn of plenty, and that no inefficien­cies could be associated with it. There is a slow veering round to the view, which would have been laughed out of court a few years ago, that the State has a necessary role to play in sustaining the markets.

The moral of the market economy is that small disasters trigger bigger ones, potentiall­y. It is a lesson that Indian economists do not sufficient­ly emphasise, and to which political leaders turn a blind eye to.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India