Disinvestments
has been a main source of revenue mobilisation by the central government in the
previous years. As of the last union budget, government plans to raise 1.75
lakh crore through disinvestment out of which 1 lakh crore should come from
selling government stake in Public Sector Banks and financial institutions and
75 crores should come from the receipts of Central Public Sector Enterprises
stakes. In many cases VRS and privatisation go hand in hand. For instance, the
VRS announcement of Bharat Aluminium Company (BALCO) in 2001 to recent VRS
announcements of employees in Indian Railways and BSNL in 2020 are some
explicit examples. Quite often, these
schemes act as channels to offload workers before the ownership is moved to
private sector. According to the current plans, a substantial part of Indian
Railways would be managed by the private sector by 2023 (Vinoj and Ritika,
2020).
The
increasing privatisation including the outsourcing of public services to
private hands by and large occur as a tool for enhanced public sector
efficiency. But in most of these cases which is often termed as ‘state
failures’, one should not ignore that the state was trying to do something much
more difficult than what many private businesses do. It is not merely the
efficiency argument nor accumulation of profit the mandate behind the very
establishment public sector enterprises. Rather it was to foster the essential
development goals such as building infrastructure capacity, delivery of public
services at an affordable rate and nation building. Moreover, the efficiency
arguments do not hold true as market failures and bankruptcies of private
sector firms are nor rare events in India.
These
cases relating not only to Indian scenario as it happens all around
the globe irrespective of the nature of government and stage of development.
How many of us know touch pad of our mobile phones, global positioning technologies
and Google’s search algorithm etc are the products of public funded research. The
company, which was supposed to provide security protection in the London
Olympics, was massively failed and therefore the British Army was called for.
The examples do not end here. ISRO
provide its low-cost technology to manufacture Lithium-Ion Battery (LIB) to
private players, which is expected to transform the automobile industry. Product level information on the capital
goods sector in India shows that it was one public sector firm (BHEL) used to
dominate in terms of size of production and more importantly product
diversification and forward and backward linkages. The point I try to make here
is that much needed mission-oriented investments in production, infrastructure
and technological innovations by and large are public funded and profits are
privatised.
As
of 2017-18, top 12 corporate NPAs cost exchequer twice as much as the total farm
loan waivers in India. Privatisation of
Public Sector Banks and financial institutions may now provide a case for
profit run banks. But who will appropriate the profits and who carried the
burden of loss and Non-Performing Assets? It was public money the loss-making
banks got recapitalised. Yet another important issue in privatisation and
disinvestment of public sector enterprises are lower valuation of assets. The
raging controversy in the beginning of 2000s regarding the privatisation of two
hotels Airport Centaur and Juhu Centaur are striking examples. It was later
found that the assets were highly undervalued, and the disinvestment was done
through single bidder transaction. Moreover, both hotels were profit making
entities till government decided it to privatise.
The
disinvestment channel of revenue mobilisation is the result of non-confidence
of the government in it’s role. Scholars including Mariana Mazzucato talks
about the role of the state in promoting the catching up process as an
entrepreneurial risk taker of the first resort than more passive facilitator of
the last resort.
Role
of state: State has played an active role in the ‘hotbeds’ of innovation and
entrepreneurship as we see in San Jose,
California. Silicon Valley example shows state not only facilitate the knowledge economy, but
actively create it with a bold vision and targeted investment (Mariana
Mazzucato, the Entrepreneurial State,2014). Often, we have to learn from examples of public sector funding ends up than merely fixing market failures. The role
of state should be that of a risk taking one. However, some of the experiences
from the recent past shows the scenario of a system failure rather than the market failure.
Think why Apple was able to have such a vast amount of public investments that boosted the iPhone and iPad revolution ? It has received substantial public funding in the initial stage itself. Remember without these publicly funded ideas, there would not have been an option to surf even! The example set by ‘Apple’ raises the questions that challenge the practices of the role of the State. In the absence of government support, private actors will hesitate to undertake certain economic activities especially the research and development (R&D). The gross R&D spending in India is notably below 1 percent of GDP, but at the same time a major chunk of the R&D activities in India are carried out by central and state governments, public sector companies and research institutes, which are essentially public funded (as of 2018).
The very visible hand of state has to act smart in the challenging times and to set example with substantial state funded research. Therefore, it is important to reflect upon how quick and smart Government can behave with its better strategies of innovation, public funding of technologies rather than being non confident in playing its role in an elegant way. The role of the state should not be seen in a parasitic relationship between the public and private sectors where one party always do the necessary investments and the other appropriate the returns. It must go hand in hand where both the risk and reward are fairly shared. Instead of selling of the public assets, coordination and collaboration through effective joint ventures between the public and private sectors will prompt the private sector to carry out activities they would not have done in isolation.
DH Business Page 05 April 2021
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