Times of Oman

Election spending could give a boost to economy

India’s projected campaign spending is only rivalled by the $7 billion spent by candidates, parties and support groups in the 2012 US presidenti­al race

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NEW DELHI: Politician­s are expected to spend around $5 billion campaignin­g for elections next month — a sum second only to the most expensive US presidenti­al campaign of all time — in a splurge that could give India’s flounderin­g economy a temporary boost.

India’s campaign spend, which can include cash stuffed in envelopes as well as multi-million - dollar ad campaigns, has been estimated at Rs300 billion ($4.9 billion) by the Centre for Media Studies, which tracks spending.

That is thrice the expenditur­e the centre said was spent on electionee­ring in the last national poll in 2009 — partly a reflection of a high-octane campaign by probusines­s opposition candidate for prime minister, Narendra Modi, who started nationwide rallies and advertisin­g last year.

Spending largesse

“They started much before, and they are also focusing on states where they are traditiona­lly not strong. They are leaving no area untouched,” said N. Bhaskara Rao, chairman of the Centre for Media Studies.

The campaign spending for this election could give a boost to the economy, which has been heading for its longest slump since the 1980s. Economists have forecast a second year of growth below 5 per cent in the financial year ending this month.

Candidate and party funding in India is opaque and the source of much of the spending is hard to ascertain, but the Centre for Media Studies and other transparen­cy advocates say the main contenders have built up large war chests.

“This election spending largesse will help to boost Indian consumptio­n expenditur­e over the second quarter of 2014, but this will be a temporary spike,” said Rajiv Biswas, the Asia-Pacific chief economist at IHS Global Insight.

India’s projected campaign spending is only rivalled by the $7 billion spent by candidates, parties and support groups in the 2012 US presidenti­al race, the world’s most expensive, according to data provided by the US election commission.

Spending on previous Indian elections have benefited a wide range of businesses, from media groups and advertiser­s that rake in campaign — ad revenues to consumer-based firms that capitalise indirectly on the overall jump in spending, such as motor-bike manufactur­ers and brewers.

Bribing voters

Much of India’s campaign spend will remain in its thriving black economy. Rules allow candidates to spend Rs7 million on campaigns for a parliament seat but the real cost of winning is about 10 times that, thanks to spending on rallies, fuel and media campaigns that often include payments for coverage.

Politician­s regularly bribe voters with cash payouts or alcohol to secure their support. Recent state elections have seen innovation­s such as getting money to voters via mobile phone credit and envelopes of cash delivered in morning papers.

In the last three years, election authoritie­s seized from politician­s a total of about $32.65 million in the form of concealed cash, some if it stashed in helicopter­s, milk trucks and even funeral vans, a former election commission­er said.

The dates for the month-long election starting on April 7 were announced last week, with polls staggered in nine stages to help security forces prevent polling booth fraud. Despite evidence of votebuying, elections are now largely seen as free and fair on polling day.

However, Chief Election Commission­er V. S. Sampath said he was worried about “money power” — heavy spending and the use of illegal funds to influence the outcome.

The Centre for Media Studies’ spending projection­s are based on analyses of rising costs in local and state elections in the past five years. It also surveys voters on prevalence of bribes.

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