Sunday, September 1, 2013

Reuters: US Dollar Report: RPT-INSIGHT-India's crisis within a crisis; finance minister fights on two fronts

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RPT-INSIGHT-India's crisis within a crisis; finance minister fights on two fronts
Sep 2nd 2013, 02:47

Sun Sep 1, 2013 10:47pm EDT

  By Sanjeev Miglani      NEW DELHI, Sept 2 (Reuters) - Late last month, with their  doors shut to the mounting market panic outside as investors  fled the country, India's cabinet ministers gathered to give  final approval to a cheap food scheme for the poor.      It was hardly a difficult decision for a government that  needs to shore up its sagging popularity before elections due by  next May. But officials familiar with the discussion say there  was one dissenting voice over what is now destined to become one  of the world's largest welfare programmes.      Finance Minister P. Chidambaram, already struggling to  convince doubters that he will keep the country's hefty fiscal  deficit under control, made a last-minute attempt to trim the  huge cost of the plan, estimated at about $20 billion a year.      Chidambaram's ultimate failure to win colleagues around -  despite his famed eloquence - is emblematic of the predicament  he faces: he must stop investors heading for the hills as  economic growth skids to its slowest pace in a decade, but he is  surrounded by politicians who haven't grasped that there is a  crisis at hand and want to spend their way to the ballot box.      In many ways, Chidambaram has been grappling virtually alone  with India's economic emergency since he became finance minister  for a third time 13 months ago.      Cabinet colleagues, wayward allies of the ruling coalition  and an obstructive opposition have together stood in the way of  bold steps that might have averted this year's collapse of  confidence in the India story.      It is a crisis within a crisis.      With elections looming, that won't change anytime soon,  which means Chidambaram will find it difficult to take robust  policy action if the situation goes from very bad to worse.      "If parliament is not able to point to the direction in  which the country's economy will go, parliament is not able to  agree on, say 10 steps which the government should take today  ... what kind of a message will it send to the rest of the  world?" he asked lawmakers in frustration last week as the rupee  tumbled ever-lower into uncharted territory.      "The fact is, the polity of this country is divided on  economic policies and that is understandable ... My plea to  everyone, despite our differences: can we agree upon some  measures which have to be taken in order to lift the country's  economy from what it is today?" he said.      Chidambaram was not available for an interview for this  story.                  AUTHORITIES "STILL DON'T GET IT"      An almost comic spectacle of the country's policy deadlock  played out in parliament last month as the monsoon session of  the legislature got under way.      Lawmakers were so busy bawling at each other over issues  that might sway voters - a corruption scandal, the partition of  a southern state and communal violence - that over its first  seven days the lower house spent just 12 minutes on legislative  work and there were 11 sittings before a single bill was passed.      While New Delhi appeared nonchalant at the economy's bind,  investors were not: they fled. The rupee has tumbled more than  20 percent since May and the fall in August was the biggest for  any month on record.      In a matter of a few years, India has turned economic  expansion of 8-9 percent into growth now struggling to reach 5  percent. The current account, the broadest measure of a  country's international trade, has a record deficit, the  manufacturing sector is shrinking, and credit ratings agencies  are hovering.      "Our primary concern is that the policy authorities still  don't 'get it' - thinking this is a fairly minor squall which  will simmer down relatively quickly with fairly minor actions,"  said Robert Prior-Wandesforde, head of Asia economics research  at Credit Suisse.      For sure, India is one of several emerging markets from  Brazil to Indonesia hit by a flight of capital due to rising  U.S. interest rates ahead of an expected tapering of the Federal  Reserve's massive bond-buying programme that unleashed liquidity  across the world. It is doubtful that any policy action in New  Delhi could do much to turn the tide.      Nevertheless, India's response has been less decisive than  other emerging market economies. Most steps taken so far to  address the problem have been small, such as lowering the cap on  transfers of money abroad and slapping import duties on  flat-screen TVs, measures aimed at reining in the world's  third-largest current account deficit that is approaching $90  billion.      Some proposals have smacked of desperation. One minister  last week suggested curbing diesel consumption by the railways,  a bigger economic lifeline than in most countries, and the armed  forces to cut import costs, an idea that got no traction.      The Economic Times newspaper reported on Saturday that the  central bank wants Hindu temples to deposit their hoards of idle  jewellery for conversion into bullion to meet demand for gold in  the world's biggest consumer of the precious metal. The idea is  that such a measure would reduce import demand for gold.            CABINET WRANGLING      The last time Chidambaram was finance minister, in  2004-2008, growth was motoring at a near-double-digit clip: he  used to call himself a "lucky finance minister" because of the  neat timing. But fortune has hardly been on his side since  returning to the job last year.      Aides say he has come under huge stress in recent weeks, but  in public he has kept his cool, not surprising for the  Harvard-educated lawyer who sharply told an interviewer earlier  this year: "When did self-confidence become a vice?"      Financial markets have long had just as much faith in the  smooth-talking politician as he has in himself. They remember  his pro-business 'dream budget' of 1997 that brought taxes down,  and when he returned to the finance ministry last year investors  were thrilled, anticipating a new push for economic reform to  end years of policy drift and an economic slowdown.      A short burst of reforms, including the opening up of  retailing and aviation to foreign investors, followed.  Chidambaram also succeeded in bringing down the fiscal deficit  to 4.9 percent of GDP in fiscal 2012/13 from 5.8 percent,  helping avert a sovereign credit rating downgrade.      However, the reform drive soon lost momentum, in part  because of the main opposition party's recalcitrance in  parliament.      But resistance within Chidambaram's Congress party was as  much to blame.      Two senior ministers leaned on Prime Minister Manmohan Singh  earlier this year to reverse a decision allowing 100 percent  foreign direct investment in domestic pharmaceutical companies,  a finance ministry source said. But Chidambaram pushed back,  saying that if they had objections they should take them to the  cabinet rather than surreptitiously lobbying the prime minister.      At a meeting in July, three ministers got together to push  through extra funding for roads in the far-flung northeast and  Jammu and Kashmir state, overriding cost concerns raised by the  finance ministry.      And last month, Chidambaram wanted his colleagues to stick  to the original version of the food security bill under which 18  out of 29 states would get less wheat and rice than allotted to  them under an existing public distribution system because of a  drop in the number of poor there.      But other members of the cabinet resisted him, warning that  the opposition could block the landmark bill - which guarantees  810 million Indians grain at a fraction of market prices - when  it got to parliament. Their argument carried the day, at an  additional cost of 50 billion rupees a year.      "There is no point fighting it beyond a point," said a  finance ministry official, recalling the wrangling over the  legislation. "What we have said is that it's fine: you do this  because that is the demand of the constituents, but you will  have to cut somewhere."      Many in the left-leaning Congress led by Sonia Gandhi  believe that the fruits of India's fast growth since it  unshackled the economy from the grip of the state in the early  1990s were not shared with the country's millions of poor, and  that electoral success lies in more distribution.      Critics say the problem is that a new group of aggressive  second-rung leaders in the Congress party, pushing for  'inclusive growth', are setting out new principles of economic  policymaking, creating further dissonance within government.      "Individual ministers and ministries are all running on  their own. Nobody is looking at the national interest," said  former Home Secretary G.K. Pillai, who served with Chidambaram  when he was brought in to fix homeland security after the 2008  attack by militants on the city of Mumbai.      "Everyone has his own view, which is why you have different  interpretations of cabinet decisions. The lack of leadership is  telling."            POLITICAL CONSTRAINTS      The criticism may seem odd. Prime Minister Singh took bold  steps in 1991 as then finance minister to set India on a high  growth path after a balance of payments crisis, earning himself  a place in history as the architect of India's emergence as a  global economic power.      Now, he is routinely derided by the opposition and media for  the policy drift of recent years. The 80-year-old broke his  silence on Friday after weeks of market turmoil, telling  parliament that whatever critics might say he still enjoys wide  respect around the globe.      But when it comes to dealing with the currency crisis,  markets will be hanging on every word of Chidambaram, not the  prime minister. Congress party insiders say the finance minister  plays a dominant role in cabinet meetings, often calling the  shots even as the prime minister sits by.      The stakes are high for Chidambaram himself, who has been  talked about as a potential successor to Singh if his party wins  the election and Rahul Gandhi, the heir to the Nehru-Gandhi  dynasty's mantle, insists on a behind-the-scenes party role for  himself - like his mother, Sonia.      The baby-faced Chidambaram, who is from a wealthy business  community in the southern state of Tamil Nadu, has a reputation  for intellectual prowess, but also for arrogance that has made  him enemies within his own party and on occasion alienated  public opinion.      Political constraints ahead of the election have so far made  potentially unpopular policy steps difficult to take, but if  Chidambaram is indeed eyeing the premiership he may be reluctant  to press for them himself.      Sanjaya Baru, a former media adviser to the prime minister,  wrote in the Indian Express newspaper that the political climate  has made Chidambaram less enterprising than he was in his first  stint as finance minister in the 1990s and less confident than  he was in the second.      "Now placed firmly in a potential line of succession to the  top and with his hands constrained by the party's need to  prevent any political mishap before an election, P. Chidambaram  Mark-3 has proved to be more risk-averse," he said.  
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