Showing posts with label Finaicial Express. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Finaicial Express. Show all posts

Financial Express - National Interest: Crude politics


By:  Shekhar Gupta on 26th May 2012
 
UPA’s dismal political management turns a belated (and much needed) petrol price hike into an ‘event’.

More than two months after the prime minister said we needed to bite the bullet, and a couple of weeks after the finance minister talked of hard decisions, we finally have one: the petrol price increase. Even more encouraging, there is no talk of a rollback yet. Petroleum Minister Jaipal Reddy even showed some old-style political skill in asking people to wait a few days before a price reduction might be considered. Crude has been slowly moderating lately and the oil marketing companies are supposedly free to reset the petrol price on a fortnightly basis anyway.

The question to ask, therefore, is: why have they not been doing that lately? Because if they were, this week’s approximately 10 per cent hike would not have become such a story, or rather, event. Before this, the last increase of Rs 1.80 per litre in petrol prices was carried out on November 4, 2011, followed by reductions of Rs 2.22 and 78 paise in the following two fortnights. And then the process stopped. Why? Because, apparently, the UPA was getting ready for the Uttar Pradesh elections. We suspended that fortnightly rhythm in search of cynical electoral gains which never came. Then we waited even longer as nobody wanted to give the silly Opposition a chance to scuttle the Budget Session of Parliament. At the same time, crude kept rising, and the dollar falling, the deficit widened and inflation peaked, so the voter all over the country got angrier anyway. Even at the risk of some over-simplification (but we are talking political governance, not statistical perfection), look at it this way: in the same period, overall inflation has been running at around 10 per cent, and nobody, not even Mamata Banerjee, has been out in the streets protesting. Would anybody, even the voter of Uttar Pradesh on whom this fiscal suicide is being blamed, have noticed?
How would a more political government have handled this? It is lazy now to say that Atal Bihari Vajpayee’s NDA had an easy time because they had crude running at $12 a barrel. The fact is, Vajpayee carried out 33 (yes, 33) fuel price increases over his six years. Of course, the average increase was so tiny nobody seemed to notice too much — while there were token protests by the Congress and the Left. Yet, in the process, the price of kerosene, the most politically sensitive fuel, was taken from Rs 2.52 to Rs 9.01 per litre, an increase of more than 350 per cent. The second most sensitive, diesel, was more than doubled from Rs 10.25 a litre to Rs 21.74 and the equally troublesome, LPG, was nearly doubled, from Rs 136 to Rs 241.60. Petrol went up only by 50 per cent, from Rs 22.84 to Rs 33.71 and, in the process, the distortionary gap that is rapidly — and destructively — dieselizing our economy and environment, was narrowed to manageable levels.
In comparison, in the eight years of the UPA, crude has risen nearly 170 per cent, the rupee has fallen more than 20 per cent, yet prices of kerosene and LPG have been increased by 65 per cent only and diesel and petrol by 88 per cent and 114 per cent respectively. In the process, the fisc has been vacuum-cleaned, and yet, for its spasmodic but headline-making price increases, the UPA has got much more bad press. Diesel, meanwhile, is back to being the evil polluting king of all fuels. The inherently indecisive style of this establishment is compounded by the fact that its administrative and political authority is so scattered — so scattered, in fact, that the buck has to make a dozen halts en route, like a DTC bus, before it finally stops with somebody. This results in even routine decisions dragging themselves out into public controversies and, finally ending up as "events". Thirty-three fuel price hikes, one every two months or so on an average, can never be events — in fact the frequency and the tiny size of the increases make them relatively non- news worthy. But that is not the style of the UPA. It dithers and meanders into making everything out to be a story, a controversy, an event.
The current plight of civil aviation is a pretty good case. Every day there is a speculative headline somewhere saying that FDI in private airlines will soon be allowed. Nobody reminds anybody that it is already allowed, to the extent of 49 per cent. So what is the story? It is just that this FDI policy was customized to the "needs" or "demands" of one private airline known for legendary "persuasive" powers in New Delhi then. So if you are a chappal, apparel, automobile, candy manufacturer, in any business whatsoever, you can invest in an airline in India. But not if you are a foreign airline. Now, would you call that incredibly stupid? No, it is incredibly smart of an Indian capitalist who found the right cronies and had the law customized for him so that all competition is kept out. This incredibly unique restriction is not merely the most striking example of Indian crony capitalism, it makes us look like a banana republic. Changing this should have been a minor, routine editing correction. Yet, we have dithered over this for so long that it has been allowed to grow in the popular mind as some kind of a bailout for an Indian capitalist as "effete, decadent, wasteful and incompetent" as Vijay Mallya. So when this FDI policy is indeed rationalized, it will be another event.

Because the UPA takes so long with its deliberations — in fact, it usually prefers deferring a decision a lot more than taking one — it has forgotten the virtue of political management by boring routine. In state after state now, electricity utilities have gone bankrupt (their combined losses now top Rs 2 lakh crore and the banks are bracing for another shock) while the regulators have either sucked up to their governments and not allowed tariff increases or because the chief ministers have also caught the UPA virus. It has taken two really powerful chief ministers, J. Jayalalithaa and Mamata Banerjee, to make abrupt, sizeable tariff increases of 37 and 25 per cent recently. Most of the others — except Rajasthan — are letting the monster grow. You do not have to be an economist to see how, with new capacity being added, India will be power surplus by 2015. Yet, by then, everybody involved in the electricity business, from producers to distributors to their banks, would have gone bankrupt. We will not address these tariffs and deficits as a matter of routine now, and one day everybody will need a giant bailout — may be from the IMF. Now that will be some event, not witnessed since 1991.

Financial Express - Column : Prices are pinching again

By: PK JOSHI, VAISHALI DASSANI on 28th May 2-12
The authors are with the International Food Policy Research

Because despite the shift in consumption patterns, rice and wheat still dominate in policy debates.

Food prices are again pinching the pockets of Indian consumers; the recent data released by the ministry of commerce and industry revealed that food inflation breached the double digit again after six months. With no relief in the household budget, the inflation stands at 10.5% in April as compared to 9.9% in March 2012. Vegetables, which had shown some sign of relief in the previous month, shot up to 61% in April as compared to 30.6% in March, while potato prices increased by 53.44% from 11.6% the previous month, thus denting the household budget even further. The inflation for meat, eggs and fish remained unchanged, with some relief to the budget, but milk showed slight sign of increase.

If we try to understand the dynamics, as to what causes the shift, then it is noteworthy that within the food basket, with rising incomes, consumption patterns are diversifying. The per capita consumption of rice and wheat by the Indian consumer is slowly declining, whether it be the rich or the poor in either rural or urban areas. On the contrary, if we look that over the years from 1983-2004, the per capita consumption of fruits and vegetable has increased from 49 kg to 76 kg for the rural household and 55 kg to 81 kg for the urban consumer, and budgetary share of cereals has declined by 17% in rural areas and by 8% in urban areas, which has been diverted towards high value food commodities. The increasing shift from rural to urban and also increased demand from the processing industry for products such as juices, jams, pickles, ready-to-eat items etc has added additional pressure on the demand side. Due to inadequacy of storage and refrigeration facilities, vegetables and fruits suffer over 30% wastage due to perishable tendency. Increasing reach of MGNREGA has substantially increased the wage rates of agricultural labourers, thus increasing the input cost and also increasing the demand because of increase in earning. Average daily wage rates in agricultural sector have increased across the country. The minimum wage for agricultural workers in Andhra Pradesh in 2007 was Rs.64 and in 2010 it was Rs.112; similarly in Haryana and Punjab, it was at Rs.98 per day in 2007 and in 2010 it was Rs.162 and Rs.136, respectively, for the two states. Another important factor of price rise is the impact of the seasonal cycle. In every new season, during the initial weeks, the slow supply of vegetables in the market results in higher prices, and then over a couple of weeks with an increase in supply the prices fall.

So, what steps can be taken to divert pressure and balance the supply and demand equation? Despite the shift in the consumption pattern, in policy debates, rice and wheat still dominate and remain the focus of food security concerns. It may be interesting to note that India has rice and wheat stocks 125% higher than the buffer stock norms; stocks exceeding 70 million tonnes. So, India has been not only meeting its effective demand for basic staples but also producing enough surplus to build its buffer stocks. The shift is required towards high value produce, and investment priorities and programmes need to be shifted towards high value food commodities (vegetables, fruits, milk, meat, poultry and fish). It is welcome that the year 2012-13 is being celebrated as the year for horticulture. Programmes for introducing best practices, promoting micro-irrigation and fertigation, and linking producers with the markets are necessary. Investment in post-harvest infrastructure, such as cold storage, refrigerated vans, processing units etc will help to reduce wastage and help in improving supply of these commodities in distant and remunerative markets where demand is high.
The role of the organised private sector is important in developing markets and for post-harvest facilities. Investment in infrastructure such as roads and transportation will help to connect markets.

Another important step forward is the development of market institutions such as modern food retailing that strengthens and compresses the value chain and offers low prices to the consumers and higher realisations for the farmers. Opening of foreign direct investment in multi- brand retailing will help in strengthening the supply chain and increase centralized procurement of agri- products from farmers. This will open new avenues of assured market and technology inputs, and increase the knowledge of market demand, thus creating affordable prices for the consumers.