The Asian Age

‘ Sop politics’ cost people of Karnataka dear

◗ Kumaraswam­y also took a risk of waiving farm loans amounting to 34,000 crore which might pose a big challenge to him in future

- BHASKAR HEGDE

Two Budgets and all those ambitious projects and a single year’s revenue. That sums up the “tight” situation chief minister H. D. Kumaraswam­y might have found himself in when he rose to present his maiden Budget on Thursday.

This also explains why the CM who handles the finance portfolio, has gone on a taxation spree to raise resources wherever it is possible by levying tax on petroleum products and also hiking the usually taxed products like liquor and cigarettes to make sure he has the moolah for his loan waiver scheme.

Besides, he has heavily taxed motor vehicles and made an attempt to raise revenue by levying tax on consumptio­n of electricit­y. In a nutshell, the political compulsion­s of the JD( S)- Congress coalition will force people to shell out more as the rise in petroleum product prices will have a ripple- effect on prices of goods and services.

Mr Kumaraswam­y also took a risk of waiving farm loans amounting to ` 34,000 crore which might pose a big challenge to him in future. He claimed that he would make up for the deficit by bringing in austerity measures besides raising funds through markets. The first mechanism has never paid dividends as it is impossible to raise massive funds needed for a loan waiver by imposing austerity measures. Considerin­g the buoyancy in the market, a state like Karnataka can borrow loans but the effectiven­ess of programme implementa­tion will be a big worry for him.

It was Mr Siddaramai­ah who had started the “politics of care” pampering certain sections by launching programmes like Anna Bhagya, allocating funds for SC and ST developmen­t correspond­ing to their population and launching schemes like Indira Canteen which cannot be discontinu­ed because of the understand­ing between the two coalition partners. Barring a few programmes, Mr Kumaraswam­y too has wasted an opportunit­y to emerge as a panKarnata­ka leader by announcing funds for caste- based groups and organisati­ons. Two, his over concentrat­ion on Hassan, Mandya and Ramanagara might help him in the Lok Sabha elections but will leave people from coastal and north Karnataka fuming because of the raw deal meted out to them.

As many Congress legislator­s wondered immediatel­y after the Budget, can Mr Kumaraswam­y implement all these programmes in the next eight months? His Budget, as pointed out by Union minister, Ananth Kumar, did not speak of strengthen­ing the Lokayukta by scrapping the ACB.

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