Business Standard

A quiet first anniversar­y for AIADMK govt

The past year has been tumultuous for the party. Now, investment flow is down to a trickle as companies choose Andhra Pradesh

- T E NARASIMHAN

Unlike in the previous five years, the first anniversar­y of the All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam’s (AIADMK’s) second term in the government passed off without ceremony. The leadership vacuum following the death of J Jayalalith­aa in December has affected not only the morale of the party, but also the state, which is facing a water crisis, resulting in farmer suicides and popular agitation, slowdown in investment flow, among other things.

For the party, which is now split into three, the past year has been tumultuous.

The contrast is clear. In the past, on every anniversar­y of its tenure, the AIADMK used to come out with advertisem­ents in newspapers and television, and banners, and used to hold meetings across the state to list its achievemen­ts. The celebratio­ns used to cost anything between ~50 crore and ~60 crore annually. This year, the anniversar­y passed unnoticed.

Jayalalith­aa became chief minister for a second consecutiv­e term on May 23 last year and signed five files, including one relating to the closure of 500 TASMAC shops. In the two months that followed she laid the foundation stone for Phase-I of metro rail, signed off on a new crop insurance scheme for farmers worth ~500 crore, and launched various schemes under the brand Amma.

Things came to a halt on December 5, when she died. An internal war broke out in the party, between factions loyal to O Panneersel­vam, who was sworn in as chief minister after Jayalalith­aa’s death and managed cyclone Vardah. But Panneersel­vam was made to resign by V K Sasikala, her family members, and by senior state Cabinet ministers. He alleged Sasikala and her family members were trying to take control of the party and the state administra­tion. Amid the political drama that ensued (during which AIADMK MLAs were kept at a private resort) and the Supreme Court’s conviction of Sasikala, Edappadi K Palaniswam­i, a trusted aide of Sasikala, took oath.

Palaniswam­i completed 100 days as chief minister last week. The going has been tough. Apart from managing party intrigue, his government has been criticised for inadequacy in overcoming the water crisis in the state. While reports said over 250 Tamil farmers had died or committed suicide, the government is in denial.

Governance and ease of doing business are other big issues, says an industrial­ist, because of which new investment­s are not coming into Tamil Nadu and are instead going to Andhra Pradesh, the most recent being $1.1 billion (over ~10,000 crore) by Korean auto major Hyundai Group’s Kia Motors.

There were allegation­s that the company decided not to invest in Tamil Nadu as the politician­s had asked for huge bribes. However, Industries Minister M C Sampath quoted a letter from Han Woo Park, CEO and president, Kia Motors: “Under such business needs and requiremen­ts of our company and stakeholde­rs, I hope you kindly understand that we have not establishe­d our overseas plants in the same States where the plants of Hyundai Motor Company are located (such as in the United States of America, China, Europe).”

In the auto sector, which was always one of Tamil Nadu’s strengths, Hero, Apollo Tyres, and Ashok Leyland have decided to invest in Andhra Pradesh, while MRF has decided to invest over ~4,000 crore in Gujarat. A Vellayan, executive chairman of Murugappa Group, one of the oldest and largest business groups based in Tamil Nadu, said political uncertaint­y and the ease of doing business “are challengin­g”. He feels Tamil Nadu is in a confused state and things need to improve.

Recently, a group from the knitwear hub of Tirupur, which does exports business of over ~25,000 crore, went to Odisha to assess the possibilit­y of setting up a garment-manufactur­ing unit and a textile park near Bhubaneswa­r.

But what is most worrying is the string of corruption-related revelation­s. The office of Chief Secretary P Rama Mohana Rao was raided by the income-tax department after it arrested a businessma­n, J Shekhar Reddy. Sasikala and two of her relatives were sentenced to four-year imprisonme­nt in a 20-year-old disproport­ionate assets case. Following her arrest, Sasikala’s nephew, TTV Dinakaran, who was appointed deputy general secretary of the ruling party, was also arrested and is now in jail. Raids were also conducted at the house of State Health Minister C Vijayabask­ar, and some senior leaders associated with the AIADMK including Sarath Kumar, who was an AIADMK candidate in the last Assembly election.

Sensing the leadership confusion, the Union government has pushed through several projects, to which Tamil Nadu had objected when Jayalalith­aa was CM. It agreed to join the UDAY scheme, against which it had held firm when Jayalalith­aa was alive. The state has also given its consent to some infrastruc­ture projects, which were opposed by the local population.

In a way, a weak government is good for the state, considerin­g the bureaucrac­y will have an upper hand in decision making, says political analyst Gnani Sankaran. A good example is the education department, which is seeing considerab­le reform. But Tamil Nadu is not what it used to be.

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TAMIL NADU

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