Modi 3.0 Must Move Beyond Temple and Statues

‘Modi 3.0 Must Move Beyond Temple, Statues and Vistas’

Kashish, an aspiring journalist, says Ram Temple or new grand structures will not generate employment for the teeming jobless millions. Her views:

No matter how much our current government is speaking about its glorious work – that it has increased the respect and dignity of India abroad – only ‘us’ know the real condition of our country. In this ‘us’, I am including the people who are hustling for a good job, a good income and a good life. This includes the vast majority of the poor. Yes, I am talking about the youth who are unemployed, even after acquiring the best of educational qualification.

In a recent study, it is revealed that many highly qualified people are filling forms for government jobs like peons, helpers, cleaners, and other low-level posts. This tells us the state of mass unemployment in contemporary India.

Rising joblessness and inflation are the reasons behind this terrible state of affairs. And the main point of concern is that the Indian government is refusing to do anything!

People in India are stuck between the private and government sectors. In the private sector, there are long working hours, less payouts terrible working conditions, and no job-security. Government jobs are like lucky draw coupons – there are too many aspirants and very few jobs!

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Hence, there is huge competition in the face of low vacancies. Youngsters like me are afraid and depressed due to this rise and rise of unemployment stalking the nation.

Inflation is on the rise making the survival of the middle class and poor difficult. The saddest part is that our government never wants to talk about unemployment, inflation and other crucial issues; its favourite subject seems to be solely religion, and nothing else.

Tell me, where are the ‘acche din’ as promised by the prime minister of India?

Kashish yearns for an equitable society shorn of differences and discord

Take the NEET paper leak case. The exam involved the emotions and mental health of thousands of students. The sleepless nights and early mornings, bereft of all joys of ordinary life and youth, merely to prepare for an exam on which their future depended. Most of these students come from humble backgrounds; some of them from below the poverty line. For them, it becomes well-nigh impossible to prepare again and again for the same exam, because they have to look for work to sustain their families.

One of my friends secured 670 marks in the exam. He is now in serious depression, because he will not get admission into a ‘dream college’. Who will help him now? When doctors or other professionals make a serious mistake, they are fired! Why should the officers of NTA be not held accountable?

As a journalism student, I can only hope for an honest investigation. The multi-million Ram temple at Ayodha, massive statues and cricket stadiums costing millions, don’t mean anything to us, or, the poor. As young citizens, we do not aspire for these things. We yearn for a peaceful, harmonious and developed society, with no income gap between the rich and poor; a society which supports the poorest of the poor.

Tragically, this seems much too difficult in the Modi era!

The PM’s sole purpose in life seems to promote Hindutva – is he not the prime minister of a secular and pluralist country? Is religion not a private affair? Is it not his duty to treat every religion equally?

He is only promoting temples, statues, stadiums and a new Parliament. How does this help the young? We need a development model which serves the poor and ordinary folks. Tell me, will the Ram Mandir provide jobs and security to the millions? The answer is: No!

(The narrator is studying print, digital and television media at the Jagran Institute of Management and Mass Communication (JIMMC), Noida)

Food Inflation (I) – Grains of Truth

They are contrasting tales of food inflation in the two Asian countries hosting more than 1.4bn people each and between them having more than a third of the global population of close to 8.1bn. Notwithstanding their impressive economic progress in the past two and a half decades, both China and India still have significant numbers of people living below the poverty line (BPL).

China has to its credit moving 700m poor rural people out of poverty. Even then the country has over 50m people under the national poverty line of RMB 2,300 ($317.88) annual net income per capita for rural residency. All these are confirmed by UNDP findings. As for India, the Hindu nationalist BJP led government claims that it has in the last ten years lifted 600m people out of poverty. A claim though contested by the opposition and many economists. Whatever that is, India remains home to millions of BPL people and it has large pockets of poverty, particularly in rural areas.

This being the situation, the authorities both in China and India are acutely aware that shortages of food and their high prices are sure to fuel popular discontent to the extent of threatening government stability, says agriculture expert Om Prakash Dhanuka. In India, agriculture and allied sectors being provider of employment to nearly 55% of the total national workforce the government there comes under constant pressure to ensure remunerative prices for farm produce. Not only the poor but also the middle class are smarting under high overall inflation in which the contribution of food (all items without exception) was maximum. (In stark contrast to China, India has experienced double digit inflation in food.)

The Indian central bank’s attempt to rein in prices by pegging interest rate high has not worked effectively because of supply side issues. Below normal rains during last year’s peak monsoon season from June to September and occurrences of floods and extreme dryness in different parts of the country affected production of rice, vegetables and sugarcane and this has had a major impact on consumer price index, says Dhanuka.

Take onion, an essential item in common man’s diet. Following production collapse of onion in India to an expected 25.47m tonnes in 2023-24 from 30.22m tonnes in 2022-23 and 31.69m tonnes in 2021-22, prices went through the roof causing popular unrest. In response, New Delhi first started charging an export duty of 40%, then put a ban on exports up to March end, which has been extended till further orders. But considering politically sensitive Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and UAE are perennially dependent on supplies of onion from India, a caveat is there in the order that exports will be granted on requests from importing countries.

Of far greater consequence for world trade in agri-commodities, is India’s decision in July last to stop exports of non-basmati white rice as a domestic counter-inflationary measure. Being the world’s second largest producer of the cereal after China and by far the most dominant exporter – Indian shipments are two and a half times more than that of Thailand, the next in the league of exporters – such an action by India, no doubt prompted by consideration to contain local cost of living, caused world rice prices to climb to their highest levels at one point in 15 years, according to UN Food & Agriculture Organisation (FAO).

India’s trade action, though not totally unexpected has put importing countries in south and south-east Asia and sub-Saharan countries in a bind. This is because drying up of Indian white rice exports coincided with fall in export surpluses of other major Asian suppliers such as Thailand, Vietnam, Pakistan and Myanmar, all having suffered the impact of occurrence of El Nino and climate change for the worse.

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According to official sources, Indian rice production is likely to fall for the first time in eight years in 2023-24 crop year ending June to 123.8m tonnes from the year before 135.76m tonnes. As a shield against shortages in a season leading to price spikes, New Delhi has remained steadfast in maintaining buffer stock of rice and wheat, procured by government agencies in step with progress of harvests. Supplies to the market are made from such stocks when prices rise and these also support the extensive public distribution system of food.

India has two rice crops – summer, the big one and winter. What naturally follows is focus of official procurement on summer rice harvest. Official sources say, rice procurement this time was 44.15m tonnes as of March 5, against 47.55m tonnes previous year or 7% lower. Since the current season rice procurement is already more than 40% of output, more government buying is not in order as it may lead to shortages in the open market. As for wheat, the procurement target is 31m tonnes. Under India’s PDS around 67% of people are given wheat, rice, sugar and kerosene at highly subsidized rates. Furthermore, at the intervention of prime minister Narendra Modi, the country also runs a massive free foodgrains programme. Because of all this, any surplus for exports has shrunk in a difficult crop year.

Trade officials have, however, started seeing light at tunnel end following weatherman announcement that in the forthcoming peak monsoon season, India will experience “above normal precipitation” to be caused by likely smooth transition from El Nino to La Nina condition. Will the disappointment with rice production now extend to wheat in the current agriculture year?  As for wheat production, the assessment of agriculture ministry and private agencies do not converge, points out Dhanuka.

The official target is 114m tonnes against 2022-23 production of 110.55m tonnes. But an S&P Global Commodity Insights survey of 13 analysts and traders points to lower output year on year in a range of 107m and 108m tonnes. The slight setback will be due to fall in yields though acreage remained steady. Poor monsoon precipitation in wheat growing regions left poor soil moisture and the problem was compounded by insufficient winter rains that are crucial for crop growth and productivity.

Trade officials say even while wheat production will like last year be lower than the official target, New Delhi is expected to be aggressive in procurement of because of the expanded food relief programme. The expected high levels of government procurement can only lead to supply tightness in the wholesale market to the concern of trade. Will New Delhi in this situation respond positively to the trade asking for a cut in import duty on wheat, now at 40%?

(This is the first article of a three-part series on the subject)

India Inflation 5.88%

India Inflation Dips 11-Month Low In November To 5.88%

India’s retail inflation rate based on Consumer Price Index declined to 5.88 percent in November from 6.77 percent during the previous month, according to data released on Monday by the ministry of statistics.

This essentially means retail inflation in India is now at an 11-month low and it declined below 6 percent, which is in RBI’s comfort zone.

The central bank had so far already hiked the key policy rate by 225 basis points since May to 6.25 percent to cool off domestic retail inflation that has stayed above the RBI’s upper tolerance limit for over three quarters now.

Under the flexible inflation targeting framework introduced in 2016, the RBI is deemed to have failed in managing price rises if the CPI-based inflation is outside the 2-6 percent range for three quarters in a row.

An out-of-turn meeting of the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) of the Reserve Bank of India was held in early November to discuss and draft the report to be sent to the central government for having failed in maintaining the inflation mandate.

The meeting was called under Section 45ZN of the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) Act 1934, which pertains to steps to be taken if the central bank fails to meet its inflation-targeting mandate. Further details about the special meeting are not officially in the public domain. (ANI)

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How India Fares On Economic Indicators

Given even half a chance, politicians of all hues will indulge in breast beating. The country was witness to this once again when in the course of 2022-23 budget presentation finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman claimed India’s expected GDP (gross domestic product) growth of 9.2 per cent during 2021-22 would be highest among all large economies. This “sharp recovery and rebound of the economy is reflective of our country’s strong resilience.” In the meantime, however, the Manila headquartered Asian Development Bank in its recently released ‘Asian Development Outlook 2022’ report says India’s GDP last year ‘likely’ grew 8.9 per cent. Mark the word likely in ADB’s calculation.

Whatever 2021-22 growth is finally recorded, Sitharaman could always say in her defence that she presented the budget two months before the closure of financial year and she was only referring to advance estimates. A Trinamool Congress MP was certainly not fair in saying the FM was speaking with ‘fork tongued’ in making such a tall claim for the economy under her charge. No doubt she was boastful, for last year’s growth should ideally be seen against the background of GDP slipping 6.6 per cent in 2020-21. And the 2019-20 GDP growth was a dispiriting 3.7 per cent, very closely approximating the Hindu rate of growth coined by economist Raj Krishna.

The whole of 2019-20 when the bite of Covid-19 pandemic manifested in a series of deadly infections, lockdowns, supply chain disruptions and large-scale migration of labourers to their villages and small towns suffering in the process unbearable hardships was a washout for all economies and India was not an exception. Even while fears of new Covid waves remained throughout the year that closed in March 2021, any relief on that count was negated by high rates of inflation.

Retail inflation, as measured by consumer price index combined (CPI-C) was 6.6 per cent during 2020-21, breaching the Laxman Rekha or threshold level of 6 per cent. But with the revival of economic activities in the post Covid 2021, high inflation became a global phenomenon. For example, among developed countries, the US experienced inflation of 7 per cent in December 2021, the highest since 1982 and in the emerging economic bloc, Brazil suffered price rise of 10.1 per cent in the same month. Expectedly inflation at the rate of 6.6per cent became a source of major popular discontent leading New Delhi to take supply side measures and that tamed it to 5.2 per cent in 2020-21 till December.

But any comfort on inflation front unfortunately for the government and the masses proved short lived. Energy prices were already high when President Vladimir Putin sent his troops to Ukraine in an act of aggression on February 24. That sent oil and gas prices through the roof. As oil and gas and aviation turbine fuel invite very excise duty and also stiff levies at the state level, the two commodities not being covered by GST (goods and services tax), their prices are now greatly stoking inflation. Look at prevailing domestic LPG prices from PPP (purchasing power parity) dollar angle, truly reflecting the local currency’s purchasing power and the income level of average Indian, these are the highest in the world. As for petrol, we pay the third highest price only after Sudan and Laos. Indian oil marketing companies have started buying Russian crude at discounted rates.

As is to be expected, Indian buying of Russian crude has not gone down well with Western nations sanctioning the aggressor country on a growing number of counts. For example, the US has banned all energy supplies from Russia and the UK is working on phasing out oil and coal of that origin by yearend. Whatever sins Russia may be committing, India has deep political and economic ties with that country and the world is aware of that. India has served notice that it will continue to buy crude oil from Russia to protect its own economy.

In any case, fuel prices continuing to rise to new record levels are having an inevitable domino effect with food, edible oils and stationery prices getting revised periodically in sync. A survey conducted by the leading Bengali daily Anandabazar Patrika of families in the monthly income bracket of ₹15,000 to ₹45,000 about how they are coping with the sudden major spurt in inflation found one common answer that even after doing with less of every single item of food and other daily necessities, their savings are going for a toss. Some have lost the capacity to save. Others have started using up what they saved in the past. Experiences of families with identical income or even a little more in other parts of the country are either faring the same or even worse. If this is the condition of people with a regular income, whatever is the size, then think how badly the ones who lost their jobs during the Covid and never got them back or whose deep salary cuts are still to be restored are doing.  

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Mercifully, the unemployment rate, according to the Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy (CMIE), has started declining with economic activities slowly gathering steam. CMIE’s monthly time series data shows unemployment rate was down to 7.6 per cent in March from 8.10 per cent in February. Economist Abhirup Sarkar, however, makes the pertinent observation that even “this unemployment rate is high for India which is a poor country. Poor people, particularly in rural areas cannot afford to remain unemployed, for which they are taking up any job that comes their way.”

Even while the overall national unemployment rate continues to fall, the ranks of unemployed in some states remain worryingly high ranging from 14.4 per cent for Bihar to 26.7 per cent for Haryana. The accepted fact remains inflation has a negative impact on growth and real per capita income. Inflation is not neutral. In no case does it support growth. That is why on the occasion of release of monetary policy the other day, Reserve Bank of India (RBI) governor Shaktikanta Das said: “In the sequence of priorities we have now put inflation before growth. For the last three years starting February 2019, we had put growth ahead of inflation in the sequence. This time we have revised that because we thought that the time is appropriate and that is something which needs to be done.”

Largely caused by Ukrainian war, the inflation outlook has worsened globally as also for India. RBI has revised upward its inflation forecast for 2022-23 to 5.7 per cent from the earlier 4.5 per cent. If the war persists and sanctions further tightened, raging inflation will not be doused. In fact, inflation here could very well cross the Laxman Rekha as the year progresses. If inflation stays this high what option could be there for RBI but to cut this year’s growth forecast to 7.2 per cent from the earlier 7.8 per cent. Inflation and growth outlook being so fluid, Das’ observation that “we are not hostage to any rulebook and no action is off the table when the need of the hour is to safeguard the economy,” is an important pointer to RBI monetary policy staying flexible.

Commodity prices across the board from oil to steel to aluminium and to copper have all significantly appreciated. This is particularly pinching for the micro, small and medium (MSME) sector, which has a share of around 30 per cent of GDP and provides employment to 111 million. High input prices have pushed up working capital requirements of the sector. Will that incremental financial accommodation be available from banks? Unlike large enterprises, most MSMEs don’t have reserves to fall back upon. New Delhi must see that the MSME sector having a share of close to 50 per cent of total national exports is able to walk through difficult times unscathed.

Industry as a whole has welcomed the government investing heavily in infrastructure projects creating demand for products of a host of industries. The combination of mega capital expenditure programme that hopefully will bring Indian infrastructure close to world class resulting in marked fall in logistical cost and supply side measures is the response expected from the government. Private sector too is not found wanting in announcing major investments and this is led by the steel industry with investment commitment of over ₹1,000 billion in new capacity building.

In the challenging circumstances, Indian farmers well deserve a pat on their back for agriculture and allied industries are expected to have recorded growth of 3.9 per cent in 2021-22 against 3.6 per cent in the previous year. There is no promise that the coming days will bring any relief. One may, however, see a silver lining in the Economic observation: “Despite all the disruptions caused by the global pandemic, India’s balance of payments remained in surplus throughout the last two years. This allowed the Reserve Bank of India to keep accumulating foreign exchange reserves (they stood at US$634 billion on 31st December 2021). This is equivalent to 13.2 months of merchandise imports and is higher than the country’s external debt. The combination of high foreign exchange reserves, sustained foreign direct investment, and rising export earnings will provide an adequate buffer against possible global liquidity tapering in 2022-23.”