Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

PM who catalysed India’s infra, telecom revolution­s

- Roshan Kishore roshan.k@htlive.com

Atal Bihari Vajpayee was the first non-Congress Prime Minis- ter to complete a full five-year term in office. When his government lost power in 2004, most commentato­rs attributed the defeat to the BJP’s ‘India Shining’ campaign backfiring. This, in a way, describes the biggest economic legacy of Vajpayee. While economic reforms were started in 1991, and there was, by and large, an economic continuity on major issues under the previous Congress and UF government­s, it was Vajpayee who was seen as having pushed the envelope on economic reforms, even if it entailed a political cost.

The BJP’s rise as a force to reckon with in Indian politics was on the back of a militant Hindutva campaign demanding that a Ram temple be built where the Babri Mosque stood in Ayodhya. Ironical as it may sound, the Vajpayee government will be remembered for “constructi­ng” completely different things.

Statistics speak for themselves. Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy data shows that the length of standard multi-lane national highways in India was 1,576 km in 1997-98. This increased more than four-fold by the end of 2003-04, the last year under the Vajpayee government. Most of the credit for this goes to his government’s Golden Quadrilate­ral project. Road travel underwent a revolution­ary transforma­tion in India after this initiative. It was not just roads the first NDA government was building. India witnessed one of the highest growth phases in the constructi­on sector under the Vajpayee government. This was not by fluke. His government substantia­lly increased income tax deductions attributab­le to interest payments on housing loans. This gave a big boost to housing demand in the country. In hindsight, the constructi­on boom, which outlived the Vajpayee government, can be described as the cushion which prevented the economy from crash landing on the employment front. Rising share of constructi­on Annual growth in constructi­on

Constructi­on’s share in India's total employment (Figures in %) in total employment, notwithsta­nding the problems associated with earnings and social security, helped re-route labour from the farm sector which has been mired in a systemic crisis for quite some time.

Not all of Vajpayee’s economic achievemen­ts were stateled. It was his government which unleashed animal spirits in the telecom sector in the country. In 1999, his government moved from a licence-fee regime to a revenue-share regime. The number of mobile phone connection­s, under 10 million then, doubled every year after that for the next five to six years. The then Comptrolle­r and Auditor General did make a point about the huge loss of revenue to the exchequer on this account in a draft report, but Vajpayee and his telecom minister Pramod Mahajan clarified that their goal was to increase tele-density, not focus on revenue maximisati­on. India’s mobile-phone revolution owes a lot to these reforms.

His was also the first government to put in place a disinvestm­ent ministry. While some of the decisions by this ministry landed in controvers­y, even the next government did not dismiss the idea of disinvesti­ng Public Sector Units (PSUs) in principle. Indeed, some analysts maintain that Air India might have been in private hands now if the Vajpayee government had come to power.

Many economic commentato­rs often highlight the contradict­ion between the Swadeshi moorings of the Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh, the BJP’s ideologica­l parent, and the pro-reform orientatio­n of BJP government­s. One area where Vajpayee aced this contradict­ion was in the Doha Round of World Trade Organisati­on (WTO) negotiatio­ns. Represente­d by Murasoli Maran, Vajpayee’s commerce minister (and perhaps India’s best ever), India forced the World Trade Organisati­on (WTO) ministeria­l conference held in Doha in 2001 to recognise that the multilater­al trade regime could not be only about liberalisa­tion, and must recognise the concerns of the global south on the role of trade in developmen­t and poverty.

It was India which led the charge on behalf of the third world in Doha. That the advanced countries have refused to honour the Doha mandate till date, even at the risk of jeopardisi­ng decision making in the WTO itself, shows the importance of India’s success in making them agree to it in the first place. This could not have been possible had Vajpayee not given his full backing to Maran against pressure from countries such as the US.

Vajpayee’s economic legacy will be evaluated by persons of differing political-ideologica­l persuasion­s. What is also true is that India’s economic history will be significan­tly poor if it does not include an objective analysis of the Vajpayee years.

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