The Asian Age

To save public money, start to disinvest fast

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Finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman’s announceme­nt to privatise two public sector banks and a general insurance company marks a clear departure from a cautious approach adopted by the Narendra Modi government since 2014 over the disinvestm­ent policy. This move reaffirms the government’s intent, announced last year, to exit all non-strategic sectors.

Despite his stated belief in the concept of “less government and more governance”, Prime Minister Narendra Modi had done very little in terms of reducing the government’s ownership of companies. In fact, the Department of Public Enterprise’s data shows that there are 339 CPSEs (excluding insurance companies) as on March 31, 2018, compared to 290 CPSEs on March 31, 2014.

Several attempts to sell state-owned companies that have become a burden on exchequer were skilfully scuttled by conditions framed by bureaucrat­s. If the political leadership becomes successful in implementi­ng its plan, it could prevent taxpayer’s money from being invested in running inefficien­t companies, and that money could be fruitfully used elsewhere.

The core issue at the heart of the demand for privatisat­ion is not so much about the propriety of the government’s role in businesses as it is about the uselessnes­s of such presence. When the Jawaharlal Nehru government decided to set up large state-owned industries, it was more a need of the hour than an ideologica­l statement because private industrial­ists had no financial muscle to bankroll such massive projects. This approach was also in tune with the recommenda­tions made by the country’s eight top industrial­ists of the day, which was referred to as the 1945 Bombay Plan.

Though Indira Gandhi’s decision to nationalis­e banks was dictated by her political agenda, it brought about confidence among people in the safety of their money deposited in banks. From the year 1934, when the Reserve Bank of India was establishe­d to the time of bank nationalis­ation in 1969, over 1,500 banks had failed in the country, eroding people’s faith in the banking sector. An implied sovereign guarantee to people’s money in banks resulted in the greater formalisat­ion of public savings which helped in creating capital for entreprene­urs.

While the earlier government’s interventi­on in critical sectors had helped the country in creating a strong industrial base, whereupon a new India was built, it is time for the government to move on and exit all sectors where private companies are strong. If there are no buyers, the government should give handsome compensati­on to employees and shut industries.

To protect itself from allegation­s of selling family silver and also to create the base for future high-tech industries, the government should chip in to create the ecosystem required for semiconduc­tor fab factories or high-tech medical equipment companies or aircraft manufactur­ing using the Maruti model, where the government invests money and the private partner brings in the technology. If the government succumbs to pressure to continue with the status quo to please a few lakhs of PSU employees, it would be a great disservice to crores of Indians of the present and future generation­s.

It is time for the government to move on and exit all sectors where private companies are strong. If there are no buyers, the government should give handsome compensati­on to employees and shut industries.

Riyadh, Feb. 10: A civilian plane was engulfed in flames Wednesday after Yemen’s Huthi rebels launched a drone strike on an airport in southern Saudi Arabia, days after the US moved to delist the insurgents as terrorists.

Saudi authoritie­s did not immediatel­y report any casualties from the attack, claimed by the Huthis, the latest in a series of rebel assaults on the kingdom despite a renewed American push to de-escalate the six-year conflict.

“A cowardly criminal terrorist attack launched against Abha Internatio­nal Airport in Saudi Arabia by the Huthi militia,” state-run Al-Ekhbariya television quoted the Riyadh-led military coalition battling the rebels as saying.

“A fire that engulfed a passenger plane due to the Huthi attack on Abha Airport is under control,” it added.

The coalition did not say how the attack was carried out, but earlier in the day reported that it had intercepte­d two “booby trapped” drones in the south.

The Iran-backed Huthis, who control much of northern Yemen, said they had struck Abha airport with four drones. Yahya Sarie, spokesman for the Huthis’ armed wing, claimed the airport was used to launch attacks on Yemen.

But the coalition insisted that targeting the airport constitute­d “a war crime” and “put the lives of civilian passengers in danger”, according to the official Saudi Press Agency.

The rebels appear to be stepping up attacks on the kingdom and on Riyadh-backed Yemeni forces after the United States moved last week to lift a short-lived designatio­n of the Huthis as a terrorist group.

The Huthis have resumed an offensive to seize the Yemeni government’s last northern stronghold of Marib, according to a government source, with dozens of casualties on both sides. —

Exports of non-basmati rice more than doubled to Rs 22,856 crore during AprilDecem­ber 2020-21 against Rs 10,268 crore in the year-ago period. "The exports of nonbasmati witnessed a growth of 122.61 per cent in rupee term and 111.81 per cent dollar terms," the commerce ministry said in a statement. India exports non-basmati rice to Nepal, Benin, UAE, Somalia, Guinea, US, among others.

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