|
|
|
|
February 28,
2007 Press StatementThe
Polit Bureau of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) has issued the following
statement:
Union
Budget 2007-08
In
the context of the inflationary crisis affecting the economy, Budget 2007-08
comes as a disappointment. The Finance Minister has not exploited the many
opportunities for additional resource mobilization, especially by taxing the
rich whose income shares have increased. He has kept expenditure increases under
a tight leash while restructuring it in a way that goes against the interest of
the working people and the State governments. The Budget fails to seriously
address the problems of unemployment and inflation. While the ban on futures
trading in wheat and rice is welcome, the Budget has failed to do away with the ad
valorem duty structure on petroleum products which would have helped in
bringing down fuel prices. While
the need of the hour was an extension of the public distribution and an
enhancement of food subsidy, the actual increase in proposed outlays on food
subsidy is just 6.2 per cent which actually implies a cut in real terms when
inflation of 6-7 per cent is taken into account. Likewise, the increase in
purchasing power of the poor delivered through special employment schemes is
almost negligible. Total expenditure on rural employment is budgeted to rise by
just 3.5 per cent. Even the sum total of expenditure on the three flagship
schemes – NREGS, SGRY and SGSY – is just 7 per cent which amounts to
stagnation in real terms. The number of districts covered by the NREGS is
proposed to be increased to 330 from 200, but the outlay has been increased from
Rs 11300 crore last year to only Rs 12000 crore this year. The
claim that the focus of this budget is the agricultural sector, which is in the
midst of a crisis, is also not justified in terms of allocations. Central Plan
outlay on agriculture has hardly been increased as a proportion of GDP.
Moreover, no effort has been made to provide price support to distressed
farmers. In the absence of price support, the reduction in customs duties on a
range of agricultural goods would depress agricultural prices and farmers
incomes further. It appears that the Finance Minister is choosing to combat
inflation by adversely affecting the livelihoods and incomes of the farming
community. In
the social sectors, the one area where the government does propose to increase
outlays is education. The total allocation for education has risen by a
creditable 33 per cent. Higher education outlay is also budgeted to rise by 29
per cent. This is welcome given the commitment to enhance capacity in higher
education to ensure reservations of seats for backward classes. What is
surprising is that in the midst of these increases the outlay for the Sarva
Shiksha Abhiyaan programme has been cut. The
allocation for ICDS has been increased by only Rs. 674 crore which is totally
inadequate to meet the goal of providing an anganwadi in every settlement. While
there is an increase in total expenditure on health by Rs. 3925 crore, this is
still well below what is required to meet the NCMP commitment. The allocation
for the National Rural Health Mission is still less than Rs. 10,000 crore. The
entire provision for social security for labour has increased by only Rs. 1
crore and there is nothing in the Budget for workers. Gross tax revenue is
expected to increase by only 17 per cent which is the same as the expected
growth of nominal GDP (assuming 9 per cent real GDP growth and 8 per cent
inflation). Many opportunities to tax capital have been missed, such as the
re-imposition of the capital gains tax and an increase in the Securities
Transaction Tax. Further, the reduction of peak customs duties on
non-agricultural products to only 10 per cent will adversely affect small
producers and damage employment prospects. Many of these failures
are the result of the inability to mobilize additional resources. Overall, the
Central Plan Outlay is projected to increase by 22.5 percent. Seen in light of
that fact, the Finance Minister’s claim that the States have never had it so
good is belied by the fact that Central Assistance to State Plans is expected to
rise by just 8 percent. Even in terms of their shares in central taxes and loans
and grants from the Centre to the States are expected to rise by 16.7 and 13.1
per cent respectively, which is less that the projected increase in nominal GDP. In
sum, the government has failed to deliver resources to warrant its rhetoric that
the Budget serves the cause of a crisis-ridden peasantry, the working people and
the poor. It has also failed to provide the required impetus to the Eleventh
Five Year Plan. The Polit Bureau of the CPI (M) demands that the Finance
Minister should enhance the Plan Outlay substantially in order to meet the
pro-people commitments of the NCMP with regard to agriculture, education,
health, employment generation, rural development and public distribution system.
Resources for enhanced Plan outlays should be mobilized by taxing the affluent
sections. |
|
|