(Submitted
to the UPA-Left Coordination Committee
Meeting On January 12, 2006)
Successive governments in India have lacked
the vision or the political will to recognize
that for adopting a broad-based and effective
pro-poor programme as well as finance
its development, it must shift its fiscal
policy in a direction that is geared towards
taxing the rich effectively in order to
generate more tax revenues and a high
tax-GDP ratio. In fact, the trend has
been to the contrary: the rich have received
several tax concessions. The capital market,
the corporate sector and the new service
sectors have also received unduly large
concessions in the name of growth and
development goals, but have actually contributed
relatively little in terms of real sector
widespread growth and, more importantly,
broad based employment generation. Despite
the adoption of the Common Minimum Programme
(CMP) by the current UPA government, which
is a mutually agreed upon set of policy
prescriptions between the ruling coalition
and its left allies (who are lending support
from outside) that includes specific provisions
for a revision of the tax regime, the
actual policy scenario has seen a continuation
of the previous trends. This note outlines
the specific demands for an alternative
resource mobilization strategy which has
been put forward by the combined left
parties in India.
February
10, 2006. |