Deccan Chronicle

Bolstering corporates was intent of farm laws

- Manish Tewari The author is a lawyer, Member of Parliament and former Union informatio­n and broadcasti­ng minister. The views expressed are personal. Twitter handle @manishtewa­ri.

The recent Supreme Court decision staying the farm laws, protecting the minimum support price regime and directing that no farmer would be dispossess­ed of his land is appropriat­e under the given circumstan­ces. Perhaps if the committee appointed by the Supreme Court could also have also been constitute­d in consultati­on with the protesting farmer unions, it would have inspired far greater confidence.

When the Supreme Court finally does decide to hear the farm laws matter, for many petitions that deal with equally contentiou­s decisions taken by the current government continue hanging fire in the apex court, it must keep in mind that agricultur­e, with its allied sectors, are the largest source of livelihood­s in India.

A total of 70 per cent of our rural households still depend primarily on agricultur­e for their livelihood. Of them, 82 per cent of farmers are small and marginal. On the whole, about

60 per cent of the Indian population, i.e. 81 crore people, are agricultur­edependent.

They can be called small entreprene­urs, for they mostly own the land they till and it is their labour on that small patch, varying from one to five acres, that keeps the home fires burning. The average size of a land holding in India is 1.16 hectares. This is roughly

2.8 acres. Moreover, these farm laws also have the added potential of making us import-dependent bringing back the spectre of ship-to-mouth that the green revolution finally surmounted in the early

1970s.

These farm laws are actually intended to give Corporate India a legal licence to muscle in on these small guys who have unequal or no bargaining power.

Look at what has happened to the Indian economy over the past 80 months. The chairperso­n of the Competitio­n Commission Of India in a recent interview stated, “The Commission has now decided to undertake market studies in pharmaceut­ical sector, telecom sector and digital market sector… The Commission has received cases with allegation­s of anti-competitiv­e conduct by market players in these sectors as well as reviewed various combinatio­n notices in these sectors…” The goal is to ensure that competitio­n remains “vibrant” and “there are enough players who are able to participat­e in the award of concession­s”.

A classical example of this is the aviation sector where the government despite opposition from both the department of economic affairs (DEA) ministry of finance and the Niti Aayog allowed the Adani Group of companies to take six key airports and also acquire a controllin­g stake in both the Mumbai and the upcoming greenfield Navi Mumbai Airport. These seven airports, namely Ahmedabad, Mangalore, Lucknow, Jaipur, Guwahati, Thiruvanan­thapuram and Mumbai, roughly handled 80 million passengers during the last fiscal

(2019-20). This converts into nearly one-fourth of the 340 million odd domestic air passenger traffic.

On the 11th of December

2018 when the NDA/BJP government’s public private partnershi­p appraisal committee (PPPAC) considered the civil aviation ministry’s privatisat­ion pitch, the DEA in a note ostensibly red-flagged it, stating, “These six airports projects are highly capital-intensive projects, hence it is suggested to incorporat­e the clause that not more than two airports will be awarded to the same bidder duly factoring the high financial risk and performanc­e issues. Awarding them to different companies would also facilitate yardstick competitio­n.”

Niti Aayog also surprising­ly demonstrat­ed spine and, in a note, opined, “A bidder lacking sufficient technical capacity can well jeopardise the project and compromise the quality of services that the government is committed to provide.”

Brushing aside these concerns, the government still went ahead and allowed one company with no previous experience in airport management to take control of all these airports albeit through a public auction.

However, therein lies the problem. Even if it is through the bidding route allowing monopolies to develop in sector after sector of the economy tantamount to creating economic oligarchie­s and chaebols.

An oligarchy is a country or industry that is controlled by a small group of powerful people while a chaebol denotes a “wealth clique” in Korean. They are popularly assumed to have been influenced by the Japanese zaibatsu — both sharing the same Chinese characters and meaning. Like chaebols, zaibatsus were also family controlled conglomera­tes that dominated the Japanese economy until they were finally extinguish­ed by the United States during its occupation of Japan post World War II.

Country after country has had to deal with these oligarchie­s and chaebols for ultimately they start influencin­g the politics of nation in the most pernicious manner possible. The US had to bring the Sherman Anti-Trust Act way back in 1890 to curb concentrat­ions of power that interfere with trade and reduce economic competitio­n. The unsaid part of it was that do not allow corporatio­ns to become so powerful so that they start “controllin­g by influence” the policy frameworks and governance of the state. However, where the government is itself engaged in facilitati­ng the developmen­t of these oligarchic chaebol-like structures it becomes even more sinister to put it mildly.

The US has used its antitrust laws to reign in various entities, including Standard Oil, AT&T, Kodak and Microsoft in the twentieth century, to name a few.

Way back in 1909, the Department of Justice of the US government filed a federal anti-trust lawsuit against Standard Oil arguing that the company restrained trade through its preferenti­al deals with railroads, its control of pipelines and by engaging in unfair practices like price-cutting to drive smaller competitor­s out of business.

On May 15, 1911, the Supreme Court ordered the dissolutio­n of Standard Oil Company, ruling it was in violation of the Sherman Anti-Trust Act. The court’s decision forced Standard to break into 34 independen­t companies spread across the country and abroad. Many of these companies have since split, folded or merged today. The primary descendant­s of Standard include ExxonMobil, Chevron and ConocoPhil­lips. Recently, the US government has gone after Big Tech companies with a wave of anti-trust law suits for it considers their market dominance among other things as dangerous for democracy.

Similarly, South Korea has for long grappled with the malevolent influence of chaebols on their politics. Russia is a typical example where a noxious combinatio­n of big business and entrenched political interest are controllin­g that country since the exit of Boris Yeltsin at the turn of the millennium.

The Supreme Court, therefore, must be mindful of the true intent of these farm laws. It is to further the agenda of further consolidat­ing these oligarchie­s and chaebols that control a significan­t part of the Indian economy already and, therefore, are, through their financial, media and other muscle, disproport­ionately significan­t players in our democratic and governance ethos.

These farm laws

are actually intended to give Corporate India a

legal licence to muscle in on these

small guys who have unequal or no

bargaining power

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