The
Polit Bureau of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) met in New Delhi on July 11, 2004. It
has issued the following statement:
The
Polit Bureau had already given its reaction to the budget speech of the Finance
Minister. It had appreciated the emphasis given to agriculture, education,
employment, conserving water resources and giving relief to the people by
raising the income tax exemption upto Rs. 1 lakh.
There is also an increase of rupees ten thousand crore of gross budgetary
support to the plan. However,
the allocations in various sectors are meagre and if the CMP proposals in
these areas are to be implemented seriously, much more resources will have to be
mobilised and allocated.
The
CPI(M) has consistently opposed the opening up and entry of foreign capital in
the insurance sector. It may be
recalled that when the first Insurance Regulatory Authority Bill was introduced
in 1997, the CPI(M) had opposed it in Parliament at the time of the United Front
government. It had also opposed the
introduction of the Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority Bill in the
Lok Sabha and subsequently voted against it.
While in 1997, the FDI cap proposed was 20 per cent, in 2001, the
Vajpayee government raised the cap to 26 per cent. Now the Manmohan Singh
government wishes to allow 49 per cent for foreign capital.
The
argument that more foreign capital is required for expansion in this sector does
not wash. There are big Indian
companies which have access to bank funds for their expansion needs. Further, the state insurance sector is the biggest
contributor to Plan funds since independence. Privatisation of half the sector
would adversely affect the country’s overall economic development. The CPI(M),
therefore, will oppose the move to amend the IRDA, if it comes up in Parliament.
In
addition to the Polit Bureau’s response to the Finance Minister’s speech,
the Polit Bureau also took note of the proposal in the Finance Bill
to amend the law which grants the right to issue small savings
instruments to the postal department. At
present, the whole range of small saving schemes like the
National Saving Certificate, Kisan Vikas Patra, post office deposit
schemes etc are run by the postal department.
The amendment would allow banks and other approved institutions to conduct the same service as the post
offices. This would
lead to a big loss for the postal services and cripple them financially.
The government should, therefore, consider the adverse impact on the
postal department before going ahead with this move.
The
CPI(M) is conscious of the fact that the UPA government is interested in
honouring the verdict of the people in the recent Lok Sabha elections and
fulfilling its commitment to the Common Minimum Programme.
The CPI(M) will discuss with
the Left parties on taking up these issues with the government and for
mobilising the people
in support of the positions taken by the Left.