Khaleej Times

HOW POLITICAL PARTIES GET FINANCING AND HOW THEY SPEND THE MONEY

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FINANCING RULES

> Individual­s and corporatio­ns donate to Indian political parties, but lack of transparen­cy makes it impossible to follow the money trail.

> Traditiona­lly, parties have received funds in cash, cheques, and electoral trusts. Beginning in 2017, the BJP made several changes to election contributi­on rules.

> A cap on corporate donations to political parties, which banned donations worth more than 7.5 per cent of average net profit over three years, was removed.

> Companies with partial foreign ownership were allowed to donate. > And firms were no longer obliged to disclose which parties they were financiall­y backing. > The most high-profile change was the creation of ‘electoral bonds’, which allow individual­s or companies to deposit funds in a political party’s bank account at the State Bank of India.

> Donors can purchase as many bonds as they please and their identity is not revealed.

> Political parties must declare the amount of money they have received through the bonds, but not the funders’ identity.

SPENDING RULES

> Political parties are free to spend at will while parliament­ary candidates are only allowed to spend up to Rs7 million (about $100,000) in this election.

> But lack of effective oversight by the Election Commission of India (ECI) has allowed candidates to flout the limit without much fear of being caught, according to politician­s and election experts.

> The last time a candidate was disqualifi­ed for breaking spending rules was in 2011.

> Candidates from major parties say that actual spending, that happens through ‘unaccounte­d funds’, is as much as eight times the limit.

> Hoards of cash, liquor and drugs — designed to garner support from voters — seized by the election body during elections is one of the indicators of money spent.

> Authoritie­s say they have seized goods and cash worth about $456 million since March 26, more than twice the amount seized in the entire 2014 election.

NUMBERS

> In the 2004 general vote, India’s top six national parties officially spent about Rs2.69 billion, as per their declaratio­ns to the ECI.

> A decade later, in the 2014 election that swept Modi to power, their declared spending had jumped nearly five-fold to Rs13.09 billion.

> The gulf between the BJP and Congress has also grown.

> In the 2014 campaign, the BJP declared spending of Rs7.12 billion, over 40 per cent more than Congress. In the fiscal year end March 31, 2018, the BJP had an income of Rs10.2 billion, five times the level Congress declared.

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