The Smorgasbord |
Monday, 23. September 2002
the rantings of a commie
charles
21:49h
while i don't know praful bidwai personally, i have a great deal of respect for his intellectual breadth. having said that, there are times, when he, like many other writers i know, go a little over the top. a classic example being the whole issue of privatisation. a friend mailed me this article bidwai wrote. it appeared originally at http://www.thehindu.com (thanks niranjan) to anyone with even a remote understanding of the economics that govern india, it'll be fairly obvious why the man has got his numbers wrong. quite clearly, bidwai doesn't believe in adam smith =================================== Divestment Minister Arun Shourie has with characteristic hyperbole accused his Cabinet colleagues of acting at the behest of 'vested interests.' He wants to return to neo- liberal 'reform' 'with the urgency of a man whose The decision to postpone oil sell-off was not made not on merits, but on the basis of shifts in power balances. After George Fernandes demanded a Power games apart, there is a compelling economic argument for keeping core-sector PSUs public -- in petroleum, major minerals and metals, electricity, and in services such as railways, water supply and sanitation. The public sector is not inherently less efficient than private enterprise; it can be reformed and made more profitable and accountable. It can and To start with, it is important to get rid of one basic misconception, namely, that Indian PSUs are typically loss-making, while the private sector is profitable. This is based upon the neo-liberal ideological premise: all that's public is bad and inefficient; all that is private is good and efficient. This voodoo-economics premise flows from dogmatic In India, more than 200 of the 246 Central PSUs are profitable. The bulk of the chronically loss-making PSUs are units like National Textile Corporation and Scooters India, which were milked dry by private By contrast, no fewer than three lakh private sector companies lie sick and closed, including 249,630 small-scale industries. This closure has enormous Many sick PSUs can be revived or profitably sold off. The land owned by NTC mills alone would wipe out their losses. By contrast, most sick private units are dead as dodos. A case can certainly be made for selling off loss-making PSUs or hotels. But there can be no justification for selling off perfectly profitable, Generally, in the world, the public sector has not performed badly-except in countries where governments have themselves failed. During the Golden Age of Capitalism, the West's most sustained 40 years of growth and prosperity, the public sector accounted for 40 per cent or more of GDP. Public services in industrial societies run along non-American models are distinctly superior to those in 'free-market' America. Britain and France The argument for keeping PSUs public applies with special force to India's oil companies, including ONGC, Oil India, BPCL, HPCL, and Indian Oil -- Oil is a strategically vital, fast-depleting raw material, control over which is critical to economic and political power. Oil has triggered dozens of wars and conflicts -- has anyone heard of a 'chocolate war'? -- including most recently, Suez, the Gulf War, and the New Great Game being played from the Caspian, through Afghanistan, to the Gulf. The US' plans to invade Iraq are inseparable from its oil insecurity. The Rand Corporation recently described Saudi Arabia, the world's largest oil producer, as the The 'Seven Sisters' cartel (much older than much-maligned OPEC) has fixed prices, rigged contracts and physically liquidated potential rivals/opponents -- in Italy (which tried to establish an indigenous oil India is one of the few countries of the world to have created a broad-based indigenous petroleum capacity -- against the global cartel's resistance. Thanks to Jawaharlal Nehru and K D Malaviya's establishment of ONGC, India could produce hundreds of millions of tonnes of oil which, the Indigenous oil has saved India the equivalent of three times the cumulative FDI flow! It is precisely because of oil's importance that India's policymakers -- then inspired by a long-term vision --nationalised Burmah-Shell, Esso and Caltex after the 1965 and 1971 wars, during which they proved uncooperative. They also created the Oil Coordination Committee, cross-subsidised the Oil Pool, and promoted conservation. The NDA wants to liquidate the gains from all these painstaking efforts of 45 years. There is, can be, no economic rationale for this. Our oil companies are competitive by international standards. For instance, BPCL, HPCL and Indian Oil have respectively beaten Shell, Esso and Caltex hollow in the sale of lubricants, which was unfairly thrust on them at their own retail outlets. ONGC has won international contracts against MNCs. India's governments have milked public oil companies to finance profligacy, paying them a fifth of the international crude price, interfering with their day-to-day working, and forcing them to sell oilfields discovered by them The NDA wants to liquidate the oil PSUs altogether. This is a thoroughly misconceived policy, the kind that led former World Bank chief economist and Nobel Laureate Joseph Stiglitz to term privatisation 'robberisation.' This must be stopped. PSUs in the core sector must be reformed and granted full autonomy. It is also vital that their employees acquire a high stake
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