Business Today

Break from Reforms Stasis

- rajeev.dubey@intoday.com @rajeevdube­y

Reforms cannot have start and end dates. They are a continuum. But often, depending on what’s keeping the government at the Centre busy, that continuum tends to slow or stall. This regime has also had its moments of excitable bursts such as IBC, RERA, a hurried GST, and long stretches of distractio­n.

India needs dream reforms to crack open the ossified corners of the economy. In financial services, to realise the ` 100-lakh crore infrastruc­ture spend, there is need for developmen­t financial institutio­ns and a robust debt market. Overdepend­ence on banks, who borrow short term to fund 25- 30-yearlong infrastruc­ture projects, causes massive asset-liability mismatch and is fraught with danger. This is evident from banks’ NPA pile in areas such as power, telecom and real estate.

If India has to fulfil its dream of becoming a global hub, it needs to rid manufactur­ing of procedural delays, bureaucrat­ic snafus, high power, logistics and capital costs. Not to forget the long-winding dispute resolution process.

In labour reforms, where 90 per cent of the workforce is from informal sector, there’s need for a social security cover, unemployme­nt benefits, skilling and formalisat­ion.

These are the easy ones though. For others, there are often subtle reasons why the most obvious reforms never took place.

In taxes, can Centre take a dispassion­ate decision to delink direct tax changes from Budget, just like GST? For policy certainty, can there be a roadmap and a pre- declared band within which taxes would operate? Can rich farmers be taxed on their agricultur­al income? The former will take down a fiefdom, the latter is a political hot potato with direct bearing on votes on one hand; on the other, it needs approval of the very people who exploit the exemption – the politician­s.

There’s many a slip between the cup and the lip. For instance, the APMC reform to free the farmer and let him sell his produce to whoever he wishes to (not just to the local or state mandis) has been in the works for nearly two decades. The reason it hasn’t materialis­ed is because agricultur­e being a state subject, state and local politician­s exercise a vice-like grip over the farmer. Intermedia­ries pocket all the profit and burden the farmer with usurious charges in APMC mandis which could be as high as 18 per cent of sale value.

Again, in defence, fat commission­s in deals ensured that India had an apology of a defence-manufactur­ing industry even seven decades after Independen­ce. Anything that was manufactur­ed was dumbed down and the industry was relegated to making spare parts and vehicles for defence services – at best. It’s a miracle that ISRO is a product of the same system. That’s because, one, no space power was willing to sell rockets to let India launch own satellites. And two, ISRO was always structured to be administer­ed directly by the prime minister of India, cutting a lot of bureaucrac­y in between.

Hence, Atma Nirbhar Bharat programme’s ambitious proposals for farmers and local defence manufactur­ing need to tread with caution. Entrenched vested interests will scuttle every step of the way. The plan needs to steam ahead.

In the following pages, Business Today’s specialist­s explain what more needs to be done through continuous reforms to unshackle the economy. Tune in…

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