DAILY CURRENT AFFAIRS (DECEMBER 29, 2021)

INDIAN ECONOMY

1. REPORT ON TREND AND PROGRESS OF BANKING IN INDIA 2020-21: RBI

THE CONTEXT: According to the report, Report on Trend and Progress of Banking in India 2020-21”, published by the RBI, which states that the banking sector managed to improve asset quality during the Covid year with the ratio of gross non-performing assets to advances declining from 8.2 per cent at March-end 2020 to 7.3 per cent at March-end 2021 — and further to 6.9 per cent at September-end 2021.

THE EXPLANATION:

  • Also, the report says, the loan write-offs were the predominant recourse for lowering gross NPAs in 2020-21. This improvement was also driven by lower slippages, partly due to the asset classification standstill.
  • In absolute terms, gross NPAs declined to Rs 8,37,771 crore in March 2021 from Rs 8,99,803 crore in March 2020. NPAs worth Rs 4 lakh crore were added during the year while bad loans of Rs 2.08 lakh crore were written off by banks. Of the total NPAs, Rs 6.16 lakh crore in bad loans were accounted for by public sector banks.
  • The ratio of gross NPAs to advances indicates the proportion of loans out of the total lending that has not been repaid within the due period. Banks normally write off a non-performing asset when all recovery measures are exhausted and chances of recovery are remote.
  • In April 2020, when Covid hit the economy, the RBI decided to provide relief to standard bank accounts availing a loan moratorium between March 1 and May 31 that year. The 90-day NPA norm excluded the moratorium period for such accounts. The RBI provided a standstill on asset classification for standard bank accounts, implying these couldn’t be classified as bad assets after the stipulated 90-day period.
  • The report highlights, that during 2020-21, the consolidated balance sheet of banks expanded in size, notwithstanding the pandemic and the resultant contraction in economic activity. “In 2021-22 so far, nascent signs of recovery are visible in credit growth. Deposits grew by 10.1 per cent at end-September 2021 as compared with 11.0 per cent in 2020.
  • The RBI said the share of large borrowable accounts (exposure of Rs 5 crore or more) in total advances declined to 51 per cent at end-March 2021 from 54.2 per cent a year ago. Their contribution to total NPAs also declined in tandem from 75.4 per cent to 66.2 per cent during the same period.
  • The consolidated balance sheet of NBFCs expanded during 2020-21, driven by credit and investments of non-deposit taking systemically important NBFCs (NBFCs-ND-SI). Their asset quality and capital buffers also improved.

 LOAN RECOVERY VIA LOK ADALATS, IBC FALLS IN FY21

  • According to the report, the banks reported 4,071 frauds involving Rs 36,342 crore during the six-month period ended September 2021 as against 3,499 frauds involving Rs 64,261 crore in the same period of 2020.
  • Loan recovery through various channels, most notably Lok Adalats, witnessed a sizeable decline in the cases referred for resolution during 2020-21.
  • While 20.35 lakh cases were reported in FY21 involving Rs 4.56 lakh crore, only Rs 64,228 crore was recovered. In 2019-20, 61.27 lakh cases involving Rs 6.94 lakh crore were reported, with Rs 1.52 lakh crore of loans recovered.
  • Even though initiation of fresh insolvency proceedings under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC) of India was suspended for a year till March 2021 and Covid-19 related debt was excluded from the definition of default, it constituted one of the major modes of recoveries in terms of amount recovered.
  • In the year 2020, out of Rs 2,24,935 crore referred, only Rs 1,04,117 crore was recovered.
  • Recoveries through Debt Recovery Tribunals (DRTs) were lower at Rs 8,113 crore, as against Rs 9,986 crore in the year 2020, and at Rs 27,686 crore through SARFAESI Act, against Rs 34,283 crore.
  • Allowing pre-pack resolution window for MSMEs is expected to assuage the mounting pressure of pending cases before NCLTs, reduce haircuts and improve declining recovery rates.

Trends on Banking frauds

  • There was a marked increase in frauds related to private banks, both in terms of number as well as the amount involved. In the first half of 2021-22, private banks accounted for more than half of the number of reported fraud cases.
  • However, in value terms, the share of PSU banks was higher, indicating predominance of high value frauds. While the major share of loan-related cases pertained to PSU banks, private banks accounted for a majority of card/ internet and cash-related cases.

Value Addition:

What is the difference between Loan Waiver and Loan Write-offs?

  • The major difference between “Write off” & “Waive off” Loan is that Loan Waive-off is something where the loan-taker is released from the burden of paying back the loan amount, while in the case of Loan Write-off; the financial institute still hopes to recover the loan amount from the person who not repaid it back.
  • The decision of waiving off a loan is taken by the Government under certain conditions while Loan Write-off is carried out by the banks to keep a clear record of the unrecovered loan amount in their balance sheets.

 NPA Classification

About Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC)

  • The IBC, 2016 is the bankruptcy law of India that seeks to consolidate the existing framework by creating a single law for insolvency and bankruptcy.
  • It is a one-stop solution for resolving insolvencies which previously was a long process that did not offer an economically viable arrangement.
  • The code aims to protect the interests of small investors and make the process of doing business less cumbersome.

What is Lok Adalat?

  • It is one of the components of the Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) system and delivers informal, cheap and expeditious justice to the common people.
  • The first Lok Adalat camp was organised in Gujarat in 1982 as a voluntary and conciliatory agency without any statutory backing for its decisions.
  • In view of its growing popularity over time, it was given statutory status under the Legal Services Authorities Act, 1987. The Act makes the provisions relating to the organisation and functioning of the Lok Adalats.

THE ENVIRONMENT AND ECOLOGY

2. BIHAR GOVERNMENT PLANS TO STERILISE NILGAI’S

THE CONTEXT: The Bihar forest department officials, caught six nilgais from the premises of Bihta Airport Station near Patna and sterilised them. They were taken to Valmiki Tiger Reserve in the state’s West Champaran district.

THE EXPLANATION:

  • According to the Forest officials that they will not cull the Blue Bull, locally known as the nilgai or ghurparas, anymore. It will, instead, sterilise them to control their increasing population in the state.
  • The state government will sterilise 5,000 nilgais in 2022. “All district forest officers have been asked to do so in their respective jurisdiction. Sterlising Nilgais is easier and eco-friendly. This will not harm them and provide much-needed relief to farmers”.
  • The step was the result of a December 1, 2015, notification by the Union Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEF&CC) that declared the nilgai and wild boar vermin in some districts of Bihar.

What is the Issue?

  • Farmers in flood-prone north Bihar districts to drought-prone south Bihar districts have been troubled with nilgais, which regularly forage into farmland in search of food and damage crops.
  • Farmers Baban Mahto and Ramji Singh Buxar districts said the animal has been destroying their wheat, mustard, seed and potato crops since early December of 2021. Their numbers have increased in the last two-three years.

About Nilgai:

  • The Nilgai (Boselaphus tragocamelus) is one of the largest species of Asian antelope native to the Indian subcontinent. The name ‘nilgai’ translates to ‘blue cow’.
  • Major populations of the Nilgai are found in India, Nepal and Pakistan. It is found in large numbers across northern India.
  • Nilgai are herbivores feeding on grass and herbs. Nilgai are better adapted to interference from livestock regarding forage competition as they can reach high branches and do not primarily depend on ground vegetation.
  • The preferable habitat of a nilgai is the one replete with short bushes with scattered trees and grassy plains. They are common in agricultural lands as well.

Conservation Status:

  • IUCN status: Least Conservation
  • Wildlife Protection Act of 1972: Schedule III

 What is Vermin?

Vermin means wild mammals and birds which are harmful to crops, farm animals or which carry disease. In India, wild animals can be declared as vermin if they have become (i) dangerous to human life or property (including standing crops on any land). (ii) become disabled or diseased as to be beyond recovery.

How are they declared?

  • Wildlife laws divide species into ‘schedules’ ranked from I to V. Schedule I members are the best protected, in theory, with severe punishments meted out to those who hunt them. Wild boars, nilgai and rhesus monkeys are Schedule II and III members — also protected but can be hunted under specific conditions. Crows and fruit bat fall in Schedule 5, the vermin category.
  • Section 11(1)a of the Wildlife Protection Act (WPA) authorizes chief wildlife warden to permit hunting of any problem wild animal only if it cannot be captured, tranquillized or translocated.
  • For wild animals in Schedule II, III or IV, chief wildlife warden or authorized officers can permit their hunting in a specified area if they have become dangerous to humans or property (including standing crops on any land).
  • Section 62 of Act empowers Centre to declare wild animals other than Schedule I & II to be vermin for specified area and period.

THE SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY

3. CHINA LAUNCHES MINERAL SURVEY AND SCIENCE OUTREACH SATELLITES

THE CONTEXT: China launched the Ziyuan 1 (02E) Earth resources observation satellite and a small amateur radio satellite, marking the country’s 53rd orbital launch of the year.

THE EXPLANATION:

  • China has deployed a new Earth resources observation satellite via its Chang Zheng 4C rocket. The Ziyuan-1 02E satellite, along with an amateur radio CubeSat, lifted off from the Taiyuan Satellite Launch Center.
  • Ziyuan (ZY), meaning Resource, is a series of remote-sensing satellites which China uses to acquire high-resolution images that can be used for surveying Earth resources, disaster management, and ecological and land use monitoring.
  • The first Ziyuan satellite, Ziyuan-1 01, was launched in 1999 in a partnership between China and the Brazilian national space agency, INPE. Six of the nine Ziyuan satellites launched to date have been part of the China-Brazil Earth Resources Satellite (CBERS) program, with the other three – including Ziyuan-1 02E – being solely Chinese-operated. Three more all-Chinese Ziyuan-3 satellites have also been launched, while the designation Ziyuan-2 was applied to a trio of military reconnaissance satellites deployed in the early 2000s, which are not part of the civilian Ziyuan series.
  • Ziyuan-1 02E is believed to be similar in design to the Ziyuan-1 02D satellite launched in September 2019. It carries the same two imaging payloads: a high-resolution visible and near-infrared camera and a hyperspectral imager, as well as a new long-wave infrared camera.
  • The high-resolution camera will be able to produce images with resolutions of up to five meters when operating in panchromatic mode. When operating in multispectral mode, it can produce images across three bands with a resolution of up to 10 meters. The hyperspectral payload can image across 166 spectral bands.

Some India’s earth observation satellites are:

  • CARTOSAT-2 Satellite Series. …
  • RISAT-1 and RISAT-2. …
  • SCATSAT-1. …
  • OCEANSAT-2. …
  • SARAL. …
  • INSAT-3DR, INSAT-3D, INSAT-3A and KAPLANA-1.

4. LOG4J VULNERABILITY

THE CONTEXT: A new vulnerability named Log4 Shell is being touted as one of the worst cybersecurity flaws to have been discovered.

THE EXPLANATION:

  • The vulnerability is dubbed Log4 Shell and is officially CVE-2021-44228.
  • CVE number is the unique number given to each vulnerability discovered across the world).
  • It is based on an open-source logging library used in most applications by enterprises and even government agencies.
  • The exploits for this vulnerability are already being tested by hackers and it grants them access to an application, and could potentially let them run malicious software on a device or servers.
  • The problem impacts Log4j 2 versions which is a very common logging library used by applications across the world.
  • Logging lets developers see all the activity of an application.

Concerns:

  • Cryptocurrency Mining: Most of the attacks they have observed appear to focus on the use of cryptocurrency mining at the expense of the victims. However, new variations of the original exploit are being introduced rapidly.
  • Successful exploitation of this vulnerability could lead to disclosure of sensitive information, addition or modification of data, or Denial of Service (DoS).
  • Global: The Australia-New Zealand (ANZ) area was the most impacted region with 46% of corporate networks facing an attempted exploit.
  • While North America was the least impacted with 36.4% of organizations facing such an attempt.
  • India: About 41% of corporate networks in India have already faced an attempted exploit.
  • Indian companies are not more vulnerable than their western counterparts because they use Java-based applications.
  • Indian companies are at high risk because of their weak security posture, especially the smaller companies that may not have the know-how or resources to detect and fix the issue quickly.
  • In other countries such as China, some of the telcos such as China Unicom had started 5G trials as early as 2018, and have since rolled out the commercial services for users.

THE PRELIMS PRACTICE QUESTION

Q1. The term ‘ACE2’ is talked about in the context of

a) genes introduced in genetically modified plants.

b) developments of India’s own satellite navigation system

c) radio collars for wildlife tracking

d) spread of viral diseases

ANSWER FOR 28TH DECEMBER 2021

ANSWER: D

EXPLANATION:

  • Shah Nawaz Khan, Prem Kumar Sehgal and Gurubaksh Singh Dhillon were officers of Indian National Army. Their whose was held in 1945 at the Red Fort in Delhi.



Day-114 | Daily MCQs | UPSC Prelims | CURRENT DEVELOPMENT

[WpProQuiz 124]




Ethics Through Current Developments (29-12-2021)

  1. Desmond Tutu, the conscience-keeper READ MORE
  2. Falling short: Perpetrators of violence in the nameof religion must be brought to justice READ MORE
  3. Living with the enemy: The pandemic period can be an opportunity for us to change our work template and ethics READ MORE



Today’s Important Articles for Geography (29-12-2021)

  1. Fight hard to save legacy green areas READ MORE
  2. Ken-Betwa river interlinking: Core forest area of Panna tiger reserve will come under water, warns study READ MORE



Today’s Important Articles for Sociology (29-12-2021)

  1. Why Centre wants to raise marriage age of women READ MORE
  2. What NFHS-5 data reveals about gender in India READ MORE



Today’s Important Articles for Pub Ad (29-12-2021)

  1. Judiciary is Indian democracy’s only flicker of hope READ MORE
  2. Step Motherly? Is the denial of FCRA renewal for the Mother Teresa founded NGO at all justified? READ MORE
  3. The ‘three pillars of democracy’ is a lie READ MORE



WSDP Bulletin (29-12-2021)

(Newspapers, PIB and other important sources)

Prelim and Main

  1. PM inaugurates Bina (MP)-Panki (UP) Multiproduct pipeline project READ MORE
  2. RBI flags banks’ capital buffer needs READ MORE
  3. Loan recovery via Lok Adalats, IBC falls in FY21; banks report fewer frauds READ MORE
  4. Write-offs in Covid year helped banks reduce bad loans: RBI READ MORE
  5. Bihar plans to sterilise, not cull, nilgais READ MORE
  6. China launches mineral survey and science outreach satellites READ MORE
  7. India to chair UNSC’s counter-terror panel READ MORE

Main Exam    

GS Paper- 1

  1. Why Centre wants to raise marriage age of women READ MORE
  2. What NFHS-5 data reveals about gender in India READ MORE

GS Paper- 2

POLITY AND GOVERNANCE

  1. Judiciary is Indian democracy’s only flicker of hope READ MORE
  2. Step Motherly? Is the denial of FCRA renewal for the Mother Teresa founded NGO at all justified? READ MORE
  3. The ‘three pillars of democracy’ is a lie READ MORE

SOCIAL ISSUES AND SOCIAL JUSTICE

  1. Prevention is better than cure: There are several compelling reasons for extending outpatient health care coverage READ MORE

INTERNATIONAL ISSUES

  1. India is dusting off 30 yrs of Central Asia neglect. Delhi is ready with a message for China READ MORE

GS Paper- 3

ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT

  1. An opportunity for Digital India READ MORE
  2. India can be a winner in semiconductors READ MORE
  3. Digital financial transactions need a safety net READ MORE
  4. India is key to world economy’s recovery READ MORE
  5. Strengthening IBC: Proposed changes will reduce delays READ MORE

ENVIRONMENT AND ECOLOGY

  1. Fight hard to save legacy green areas READ MORE
  2. Ken-Betwa river interlinking: Core forest area of Panna tiger reserve will come under water, warns study READ MORE

GS Paper- 4

ETHICS EXAMPLES AND CASE STUDY

  1. Desmond Tutu, the conscience-keeper READ MORE
  2. Falling short: Perpetrators of violence in the nameof religion must be brought to justice READ MORE
  3. Living with the enemy: The pandemic period can be an opportunity for us to change our work template and ethics READ MORE

Questions for the MAIN exam

  1. The trajectory of national security discourse in India is witnessing a shift from its military fascination to a holistic approach in the light of contemporary realities. Explain
  2. An integrated approach to national security policymaking in India faces challenges from multiple fronts. Comment.

QUOTATIONS AND CAPTIONS

  • To know a person’s religion, we need not listen to his profession of faith but must find his brand of intolerance.
  • Countries need leaders in government, leaders in the opposition. But they also need social philosophers, conscience-keepers who do not seek popularity and are not afraid of unpopularity.
  • The Arab Gulf is poised to become an important player once again in a Taliban-ruled Afghanistan.
  • Despite sporadic bursts of communal violence, India, unlike its neighbours in South Asia, has survived and thrived as a multicultural and multi-religious nation till date.
  • Made in India digital tools can help other emerging economies deal with economic, governance challenges.
  • Digital public goods spread speed, transparency, ease and productivity across the individual-government-market ecosystem and enhance inclusivity, equity and development at scale.
  • Be it the destruction of the green cover of the Himalayas, the mangroves of the Sundarbans and Mumbai, the wetlands of Chennai and Bengaluru, the assault on our green resources has been relentless.
  • The grammar of secularism was not adopted to eschew religion; it was a pathway to peace. Today, we have shunned this principle, favouring instead a competitive religious politics that co-exists with hate.
  • India’s broad range of fiscal, monetary and health responses to the crisis are helping mitigate a longer-lasting adverse impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.
  • The pandemic period can be an opportunity for us to change our work template and ethics.
  • The need for quicker resolution of insolvencies cannot be overemphasised. It will make capital more efficient, improve credit culture, and help boost growth.

50-WORD TALK

  • The sight of police crackdown on protesting doctors just as India braces for Omicron should have been avoided. The delay in allocating colleges to PG medical students and resolving the EWS issue in NEET shows colossal mishandling by the executive and the judiciary when doctors are already stretched beyond capacity.
  • Union home ministry should make public the “adverse inputs” that led it to refuse renewal of Missionaries of Charity’s FCRA registration. Modi government’s action against NGOs getting foreign funds hasn’t looked transparent or fair. Adding Mother Teresa’s Christian charity to the list without explanation only gives it needless political colour.

Things to Remember:

  • For prelims-related news try to understand the context of the news and relate with its concepts so that it will be easier for you to answer (or eliminate) from given options.
  • Whenever any international place will be in news, you should do map work (marking those areas in maps and also exploring other geographical locations nearby including mountains, rivers, etc. same applies to the national places.)
  • For economy-related news (banking, agriculture, etc.) you should focus on terms and how these are related to various economic aspects, for example, if inflation has been mentioned, try to relate with prevailing price rises, shortage of essential supplies, banking rates, etc.
  • For main exam-related topics, you should focus on the various dimensions of the given topic, the most important topics which occur frequently and are important from the mains point of view will be covered in ED.
  • Try to use the given content in your answer. Regular use of this content will bring more enrichment to your writing.



TOPIC: 30 YEARS OF ECONOMIC REFORMS

THE CONTEXT: Three decades ago, India embarked on a new economic journey when Manmohan Singh, then Finance Minister, placed the reform Bill and echoed Victor Hugo, “No power on earth can stop an idea whose time has come,” in Parliament. Since then, the crisis-hit economy has come a long way and marked its firm presence in the global platform. In this article, we will analyze India’s Journey in these three decades.

AN INTRODUCTION OF THE ECONOMIC REFORMS

  • Economic reforms in India refer to the structural adjustments initiated in 1991 to liberalize the economy and accelerate its economic growth rate. The Narsimha Rao Government, in 1991, introduced economic reforms to restore internal and external confidence in the Indian economy.
  • The reforms aimed at bringing in greater participation of the private sector in the growth process of the Indian economy. Policy changes were introduced with respect to industrial licensing, technology up-gradation, removal of restrictions on the private sector, foreign investments, and foreign trade.
  • The reforms aimed to attain a high rate of economic growth, reduce the rate of inflation, reduce the current account deficit, and overcome the balance of payments crisis. The important features of the economic reforms were Liberalisation, Privatisation, and Globalisation, popularly known as LPG.

NEED FOR ECONOMIC REFORMS

The need for the introduction of the reforms was because of the following factors:

POOR PERFORMANCE OF THE INDUSTRIAL SECTOR: Before the introduction of economic reforms, the industrial sector suffered due to bureaucratic controls. The industries had to obtain several licenses and permissions for any undertaking activity such as setting up a new firm, starting a new product line, expanding an existing business, foreign investments, etc. Many public sector enterprises were incurring huge losses due to poor productivity.

The main objectives of the industrial policy introduced in 1991 were:

  1. To unshackle the Indian industrial sector from the cobwebs of unscrupulous bureaucratic controls.
  2. To introduce liberalization to integrate the Indian economy with the world economy.
  3. To remove restrictions on foreign investments and relieve the entrepreneurs from the restrictions of the MRTP Act.
  4. To shed the load of public enterprises that were incurring heavy losses.

ADVERSE BALANCE OF PAYMENTS: India faced a severe economic crisis during the end of the 1980s. India was unable to meet its international debt obligations and was pushed to a situation of near bankruptcy. The foreign exchange reserves were insufficient to pay the import bills. The Balance of Payments deficit could not be financed beyond a certain point.

Some of the factors responsible for the crisis were: 

  1. The rising level of expenditure over revenue.
  2. Heavy government borrowing.
  3. Inefficient utilization of resources.
  4. Excessive protection to domestic industries.
  5. Inefficient management of public sector enterprises.
  6. Lack of technological development and innovation
  7. Lack of investments in research and development.

RISE IN FISCAL DEFICIT: This was mainly due to the increase in the non-developmental expenditure of the government. The government had to borrow a huge sum of money to finance the deficit and meet these debts interest obligations. The government was in a debt trap. Thus, there was a need to bring in reforms to reduce the non-developmental expenditure and to bring about a fiscal discipline.

INFLATION: Due to continuous borrowing by the government to meet its mounting expenditure, there was a rapid increase in the money supply. The government resorted to deficit financing wherein the RBI financed the borrowings by the Government of India by printing currency notes. This leads to a rise in the money supply. When the money supply increased, the demand for goods and services also rose, increasing their prices and causing an inflationary situation.

THE GULF WAR: The Gulf war during 1990-91 had a significant impact on the supply of oil. As a result, the price of oil shot up, increasing India’s foreign currency outlays. The Gulf crisis also affected the flow of foreign currency into India. The NRI deposits were moving out of India and remittances from Indians employed abroad were also affected during the war.

THE ECONOMIC REFORMS

The main objective of liberalization was to unshackle the industrial sector from the cobwebs of unnecessary bureaucratic controls. The main features of liberalization policy were

ABOLITION OF INDUSTRIAL LICENSING: The new industrial policy of 1991 abolished the industrial licensing for all the industries except for a selected 18 industries due to security and strategic concerns.

REMOVAL OF RESTRICTIONS: Other than those 18, all industries could set up and sell shares without any restrictions; they could expand their business and start a new product line without obtaining any license.

RELAXATION OF MRTP RESTRICTIONS: The Monopolies and Restrictive Trade Practices (MRTP) Act aimed at controlling monopoly practices to prevent concentration of economic power. The MRTP Act has now been replaced by the Competition Act, 2002, which came into effect in 2009. The Competition Act checks all anti-competitive practices and prohibits abuse of dominance. To protect consumer interest at large, it aims at promoting and sustaining competition in the market.

FOREIGN INVESTMENT: The reforms reduced several procedural bottlenecks for foreign investments. Approval was given for foreign direct investment up to 51 percent of the equity in high-priority industries.

FOREIGN TECHNOLOGY: Automatic approval was provided to Indian industries with respect to foreign technology agreements, especially in the case of high-priority industries. Permissions were not required for hiring foreign technicians and experts and for foreign testing of indigenously developed technologies.

GLOBALISATION – MEANING AND FEATURES

Globalization may be defined as the integration of the domestic economy with the world economy to facilitate the free movement of goods, services, people, ideas, technology, etc. It refers to the opening of the economy to international competition.

The major features of globalisation measures as undertaken in 1991 were:

Reduction of Trade Barriers: With the introduction of globalisation measures, trade barriers restrictions were reduced. It provided immense opportunities to Indian industries to expand their markets abroad and offered Indian consumers a wide variety of quality goods at competitive prices. The export-import policy announced for the period 1992-97 removed all restrictions on external trade and enhanced the export capabilities of the Indian industries.

Promotion of Foreign Direct Investment: Many Indian industries were opened to foreign direct investment. India became a favorable investment destination for foreign investors due to the low cost of production and availability of cheap labor resources. The government of India further initiated a series of measures to promote foreign technical collaborations in the case of high-priority industries and for the import of foreign technology. Foreign Investment Promotion Board (FIPB) was set up to facilitate foreign direct investments in India.

To Encourage Efficiency: Globalisation encouraged domestic industries to become more competitive and efficient to face competition at the global level. The domestic industries had to produce quality goods at low cost to compete with the foreign producers’ cheaper and superior quality goods.

Diffusion of Technology: An opportunity for India to have access to global technology and India could utilize the technologies of developed countries without many investments in research and development.

PRIVATISATION-MEANING AND FEATURES

Privatisation refers to the introduction of private ownership in public sector enterprises. The government holding in public sector enterprises was sold to increase private participation. Many public-sector units were incurring losses due to inefficiencies in management and lack of innovation and investments in research and development. Privatisation measures enabled modern technology, improved the quality of service, and led to efficient utilisation of resources.

Various privatisation measures introduced in India included:

  1. Transfer of ownership of public sector units, either fully or partly, to private hands through denationalisation.
  2. Transfer of control to the private sector through disinvestment policies.
  3. Opening of areas that were exclusively reserved for the public sector.
  4. Transfer of management to the private sector through franchising, contracting, and leasing.
  5. Limiting the scope of the public sector.

The privatisation wave in India, which was a part of the economic reforms of 1991, increased the role of the private sector and restricted the public sector to priority areas which included:

  1. Physical and social infrastructure
  2. Mining and oil exploration
  3. Manufacture of products that were of strategic importance and where security concerns were involved like in the case of manufacture of defense equipment, and
  4. Investments in technologies that required huge outlay and where private sector investment was inadequate.

Privatisation measures were introduced in India as part of the economic reforms in 1991 for the following reasons:

To Reduce the Burden of the Government: Many public sector units were only functioning to protect the interests of the laborers. Privatisation offloaded this burden from the government and reduced the strain on resources.

To Promote Efficiency: Many public sector companies were also struggling due to inefficient management, lack of transparency, and corruptive practices. Privatisation measures got rid of these problems and enabled the public sector units to achieve optimum productivity.

To Enhance Investment Opportunities: Privatisation helped in reducing the inconsistencies in management and improved the economic status of many public sector units. This brought in good returns and attracted investments.

To Facilitate Growth of Infrastructure: Privatisation of industries led to the growth of the industrial sector on modern lines. The private enterprises, to provide competitive products and services, initiated and facilitated the improvement of the infrastructure.

To Reduce Unnecessary Bureaucratic Interventions: Privatisation reduced unnecessary government intervention in the management, thereby giving the private enterprises more autonomy in management and operations. This enhanced their efficiency and profitability.

SUCCESS AND FAILURE OF REFORMS: AN ANALYSIS

THE SUCCESS:

SIZE OF GDP AND GROWTH: From a GDP of $512.92 billion in 1991, India had grown to $2.70 trillion by 2020. Besides, the average annual growth rates in GDP, post the 1990s, have been around 6.25 percent against 4.18 percent for the three decades prior to the reforms.

RATE OF INFLATION: The average annual inflation rates in the post-reform period were significantly lower at around 5 percent and the gross fiscal deficit was below 4.80 percent of GDP. While curbing automatic monetization of deficits and strong monetary measures contributed to lower inflation, disinvestment via privatization and fiscal restraint in the form of lower subsidies arrested the deficits.

IMPORT-EXPORT: On the external front, the reforms made a significant impact too. Firstly, India’s trade openness increased from a meager 13 percent in 1990-91 to 42 percent in 2020. The exports, driven by the devaluation of the rupee in 1991 and further depreciation in later years, have increased from $17.96 billion in 1990 to $324.43 billion in 2019.

FOREIGN INVESTMENT: Abolition of license-raj and curbing of excessive regulations saw rewards in terms of better foreign investment. From $236.69 million in 1991, the net FDI inflows stood at $50.61 billion in 2020. With more foreign companies entering India, domestic consumers benefited from healthy market competition. For Indian manufacturing, the foreign collaborations meant access to technology and, thereby, efficient production. Also, there has been a significant improvement in forex reserves, which are now sufficient to cover 15 months’ imports.

REDUCING POVERTY: The reforms had a telling impact on India’s socio-economic fabric. From about 45 percent of the population below the national poverty line in 1994, the rates fell to 21.9 percent in 2011. There have also been improvements in literacy rates, gross enrolments ratio, and life expectancy, among others.

AVERAGE MONTHLY PER CAPITA HOUSEHOLD CONSUMPTION EXPENDITURE: It was Rs 243.5 and Rs 370.3 in July-Dec 1991 and this stood at Rs 1,430 and Rs 2,629.7 from July 2011 to June-2012 for rural and urban areas.

FOREIGN EXCHANGE RESERVE: Increased $1.1 billion in 1991 to $642 billion in 2021.

PER CAPITA INCOME: Increased $300.10 to $2200.60 in 2020.

However, opening up the economy makes it susceptible to external shocks. Within a few years after the reforms, the first challenge for India came from its East Asian neighbors in 1997. In a span of three years, the world economy was hit by the dot-com bubble, and the third challenge came in the form of the global financial crisis in 2008. It was prudent economic policies and disciplined financial markets that helped the Indian economy to resist and recover quickly from all three crises.

THE FAILURES: 

INCONSISTENT PERFORMANCE: India’s growth rate and its progression as one of the leading developing economies of the world are inconsistent with the Human Development Index (131st rank in 2020), Global Hunger Index (94th position in 2020), Gender Inequality Index (122nd rank in 2018) and Environmental Performance Index (168th rank in 2020).

RICH-POOR DIVIDE: It has widened the gap between rich and poor. The World Bank estimates show that the Gini index, a measure of income inequality, had deteriorated marginally from 31.7 in 1993 to 35.7 in 2011. According to NSSO consumption surveys, while the bottom 20 percent of the population contributed to 9.20 percent of consumption expenditure in 1993-94, their contribution had declined to 8.10 percent in 2011-12. Further, the share of the top 20 percent of the population has fattened from 39.70 percent to 44.70 percent during the same time.

POVERTY RATE: As per the Tendulkar Committee estimations, India’s 21.92% of the population was living below the poverty line in 2011-12. However, as per the National Family Health Survey-4 (2015-16), the multi-dimensional poverty rate stood at 27.9%. The poverty rate, which was 45% in 1994, declined, especially during 2004-2011 when India implemented substantive anti-poverty measures and rights-based initiatives to uplift the poor. This has been affected by the pandemic due to loss of work and earnings and the people, especially informal and daily wage laborers, are pushed into the vicious cycle of poverty. A study conducted by the Azim Premji University (2021) finds that “230 million additional individuals slipped below the poverty line defined by the national floor minimum wage” and took away the anti-poverty efforts that were in place during the pandemic for the last 25 years.

UNEMPLOYMENT: The reduction in poverty rate during 2004-2012 was due to the employment shift from farm to non-farm, especially in the services sector. The construction sector absorbed many informal/unskilled labor resulting in the real wages enhancing the purchasing power of the people. On the other side, the number of jobs created during this period was very less, ie, 0.6% per year than the growth of the working-age population. According to the International Labour Organization’s ILOSTAT database, India’s unemployment rate in 2020 was the highest since 1991 with 7.11%.

MORTALITY RATE: Surely economic liberalisation should result in better care for our children, the country has made considerable progress on that front, with the under-five mortality rate coming down from 125.8 per thousand in 1990 to 47.7 per thousand in 2015. But neighbouring Bangladesh and Nepal, much poorer than India, have brought down their under-five mortality rates more than India.

SHARE OF MANUFACTURING IN GDP%: One would have expected that the New Industrial Policy would have been a pivotal moment for the manufacturing sector and India would soon take its place among the manufacturing powers of East Asia. Still, while, in 1989-90, the share of manufacturing in the gross domestic product was 16.4%, it reduced to 16.2% in 2015-16.

COMBINED FISCAL DEFICIT OF CENTRE AND STATES: One underlying reason for the crisis of 1991 was the indiscriminate rise in government borrowing in earlier years. It was only to be expected therefore that after the crisis, the government would do all it could to curb its fiscal deficit and that of the states. Unfortunately, that didn’t happen. By 2000-01, the combined fiscal deficit of the center plus the states, as a percentage of GDP, had risen beyond the 1991 level.

TAX TO GDP RATIO: One reason why government deficits remained high is that, despite robust economic growth, tax revenues weren’t buoyant. The central government’s gross tax revenues as a percentage of the gross domestic product have remained below the 1991-92 level.

DOES INDIA NEED ANOTHER REFORM?

Successive governments have built on LPG reforms, but a lot more needs to be done if India is to achieve its full potential. A look at the key areas that need urgent intervention to address long-standing issues to help the country achieve double-digit growth.

EDUCATION: Possibly the most pressing focus area given the urgency to leverage human resources. Total revamp from primary level to higher education with equal emphasis on skills. Outcome- and learning-based education so that only those eligible progress to the next level. Along with health, education should get much higher funding.

HEALTHCARE: Needs reorganization and more funding. Expensive out-of-pocket health spending major cause of poverty. Massive public healthcare supported by insurance for critical care is needed.

JUDICIAL REFORMS: Inadequate court capacity & judicial delays undermining the economy. More courts, better processes, and simpler laws to reduce caseload. (Vacancies of Judges- 38.70%) (Pending cases- 63,146 in SC, 56.43 lakh in High Courts and 3.71 Cr in Districts and Subordinate Courts)

TAX REFORMS: Direct tax reforms progressing as per template. GST needs a makeover; all items should be included.

POWER SECTOR: Unbridled populism has made power expensive, unreliable, and inadequate. State finances are in disarray in many cases due to power subsidies. Users must pay for power; DBT for those states want to support. Privatize discoms, enforce open access, continue focus on renewables.

INNOVATION: Unshackle the startup system totally. Provide funding missions for startups in innovation areas crucial to India. Encourage blockchain technology in payment systems.

UNIVERSAL BROADBAND: Reach broadband across the country, keep it affordable. Go for satellite broadband in remote areas.

EASE OF DOING BUSINESS: Much progress made, but the cost of doing business is still high. Multiple last-mile hurdles, particularly in the states. Massive review of policy, rules, and regulations to simplify business. Use technology for governance and nonintrusive oversight.

SOME OTHER TARGET AREAS: Comprehensive social security, which would also make labor reforms easier. Steps towards low carbon economy; continued emphasis on EVs and renewables. Further relaxation of foreign investment where possible. Massive privatisation to reduce state sector. Clear framework to bring back private investment in infrastructure. Framework for dispute resolution and enforceability of contracts.

THE WAY FORWARD: The journey of three decades of economic reforms has certainly transformed our economy from a slow and regulated to a fastened and liberalised path of growth. During this process, what was really missed out was the large workforce of the informal sector. This non-inclusive approach is one of the limitations of the trickle-down economic growth model and needs serious revision. The 1991 reforms have provided the required dynamism to the economy. However, it has fallen short in sustaining the pace of growth owing to structural and institutional deficits, including the model of development and centralised governance. 91% of the labor force participation working in the informal sector needs to be provided better avenues of employment by leveraging the inherent potentials of agriculture and allied sectors. In spite of the pandemic, the expenditure on the health sector is still low compared with our neighbors like Bangladesh and Sri Lanka, which are ahead of India in terms of human social and political (governance) reforms are imperative to achieve the goal of sustainable and equitable economic growth.

THE CONCLUSION: While Covid-19 has been a big blow, the economy was already showing signs of deteriorating growth even in periods preceding the pandemic. This would require immediate intervention to tackle the predicaments of unemployment, poverty, and other social issues. The pandemic has also raised concerns over existing health infrastructure and the future of education. The government must make higher investments in these sectors.

Just add to your knowledge

Disinvestment: This is one of the most important strategies adopted by the Government of India as a part of its privatisation measures. Disinvestment is an act by which the government sells its complete or a part of its holding in a public sector unit to the private sector. The disinvestment policies of the government also enable it to raise huge revenue to finance its fiscal deficit. About Us. 20,000 cores were raised through disinvestment in public sector units between the period of 1991-92 to 2001-02.

The funds raised through disinvestment are also used:

  1. To shut down the industries declared sick by the Board of Industrial and Financial Reconstruction (BIFR) and settle their claims.
  2. To restructure and modernize the public sector enterprises.
  3. To settle the public debt. The disinvestment policies of the government, by bringing in private participation, improve the efficiency of public sector units by lowering their costs of production. It enables access to modern technology, thus, improving the quality of products and services. Disinvestment can be carried out through the public issue of equities to retail investors through Initial Public Offer (IPO). The Government of India, in its 2017 budget, has set a target of raising Rs. 72,500 core through disinvestment during the financial year 2017-18.

Questions:

  1. Critically analyse India’s three-decade journey under the new economic policy. Do you think the reforms are failing at the social front? Analyse your view.
  2. Analyse the success and failure of the Economic reforms of 1991. Do you think, in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic, India needs a new economic policy?