Dole-nomics: Why AAP is headed down the same hole as Sonia’s NAC

Dole-nomics: Why AAP is headed down the same hole as Sonia’s NAC

-Interesting.


      

   



The Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) wants to change the “system” using honesty
 and probity as its calling cards. However, while it can impact short-term 
politics by the power of example and idealism, it cannot really change the 
system on the basis of good intentions alone. In fact, a large chunk of its
policies will end up increasing the potential for corruption, not reduce it.
This is exactly why the Congress government, advised by a dole-oriented
 National Advisory Council under Sonia Gandhi, is sinking in corruption and 
price-rise. Does Arvind Kejriwal want to repeat a bad experiment? An 
honestly executed bad idea is still a bad idea.
For this we have to understand the role doles play in increasing corruption. 
A dole is, by definition, about giving someone a benefit without seeking a 
price for it, or at least an adequate price for it.
If it costs Rs 14-15 to procure and store a kilo of rice and you sell it at Rs 3, 
it is an open invitation to corruption: the people who hawk it will see a 
potential to sell it in the black market, and deny the poor their cheap grain. 
Even the people who finally get it at Rs 3 might sell it to use the money for
 buying something else. Put another way, long-term doles make all of us
 corrupt  - even the poor.
If diesel costs far less than petrol, and kerosene even less than diesel, it is an
 open invitation to adulteration.
Surjit Bhalla of Oxus Investments notes that large parts of AAP's manifesto 
reflect a Luddite tendency, as it opposes privatisation, wants the common 
man's necessities (water, power, food) to be subsidised, and tax the rich
 and middle classes more.
]The top leaders of the AAP with its manifesto. PTI The top leaders of the 
AAP with its manifesto. PTI Leaving aside the question of taxing the better
 off classes aside for a minute, the mere prospect of increasing subsidies if
 the AAP is voted to power should scare any sensible person. It would mean 
that AAP has learnt no lesson from UPA-2, where the pursuit of mindless
 subsidies has not only slowed down growth but increased corruption to 
mind-boggling levels.
The link between doles and corruption is very direct. Since doles are meant
 for the poor, they are easy to justify politically. This is why politicians love 
doles - and Kejriwal surely does not want to be thought of as any other
 politician. 
Once you commit yourself to doles, you are essentially committing yourself 
to a degree of corruption by interfering with market forces in the pricing of 
goods and services.
It is not an accident that UPA-2 saw the highest levels of corruption and 
highest levels of dole too.
Consider the big two scams - 2G and Coalgate. They were about helping 
the poor and keeping prices of power down - exactly what Kejriwal wants.
What was the justification offered by A Raja for selling spectrum in 2008 at 
2001 rates? He said he wanted to make mobile services affordable to the
 common man. This is the argument the UPA bosses ultimately bought, since
 there was no other way to justify Raja's decision which got the backing of
 Manmohan Singh and the UPA government.
In short, the poor are always used to justify a policy that can only result in
 corruption. By selling spectrum far below market prices, UPA ensured 
gigantic corruption. How can Kejriwal rail about 2G and then want 
subsidies too?
Next take Coalgate, which came directly under the Prime Minister after
 the exit of Shibu Soren as Coal Minister. The ministry wanted to sell coal
 blocks by auction, but ultimately coal blocks were given away virtually free 
and non-transparently - again creating scope for enormous corruption.
Why give coal blocks free? The objective was, and is, cheaper power.
 But did we get cheaper power or costlier corruption?
Almost all state governments give electricity at throwaway prices to farmers. 
The net result is huge theft of cheap power from the grid. Once again, a deed 
done in the name of the poor farmer ends up benefiting someone else.
So when Kejriwal comes up with his cheap power and free water scheme,
 he can be sure that every crook will be salivating at the prospect. Kejriwal 
will be watering the soil of corruption further. A water mafia will develop, 
and power theft will become endemic.
But, no, AAP sympathisers will say, we will have a powerful Jan Lokpal who 
will police the administration and ensure that the right people get the cheap 
power and water. There will be no corruption.
Will an all-powerful anti-corruption force reduce corruption or make it worse? 
What is the guarantee that the Lokpal's agents will do their work diligently 
rather than merely accept bribes to look the other way. Don't the police, 
protectors of the law, do precisely this? Ask the Stalin-Brezhnev era Russians 
and they will tell you that when Big Brother is watching, corruption goes 
underground and become endemic. Corruption will become more systemic -
 precisely the thing Kejriwal is said to be fighting against.
The only way forward is to make doles restricted only to the ultra needy -
 and self-dissolving. Once it becomes universal and widespread, it becomes
 self-perpetuating and self-defeating.
Consider NREGA, the rural jobs scheme, which is universal. In 1999-2004, 
when there was no NREGA, jobs grew by 60 million, thanks to the NDA
 government's infrastructure investments. In the next five years, jobs growth
 vanished. Among other things, the entry of NREGA pushed rural wages up
 and drove women out of the workforce. Is the purpose of a jobs scheme
 to help people temporarily in distress and without jobs or to destroy the
 market for real jobs? Atal Behari Vajpayee's infrastructure spending created 
more jobs than the UPA's make-work schemes. And NREGA is one of the most 
corruption-ridden schemes in the country after the public distribution system.
 (Read here, here and here)
Kejriwal is barking up the wrong tree by mixing up old-style corrupt populism
 with the idea of integrity. He should remember that the post-independence 
Congress, and the early BJP were honest parties run by fairly clean politicians - 
of the kind Kejriwal himself is promising. But by embracing statism and dole 
politics, both Congress and BJP descended into corruption, bit by bit.
Memo to the most honest kid on the block: doles and corruption go hand in
 hand. Even a Jan Lokpal cannot break that invisible link.
Sonia Gandhi's National Advisory Council has pushed the UPA government 
into a deeper hole with suggestions for more and more doles, and look
 where the economy has landed.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Comments

Popular Posts