In
a season for scandals, allegations of large scale
corruption have captured political India's attention.
The instances to which such allegations relate are
many, varying from the sale of 2G spectrum and the
mobilisation and/or disposal of land and mining resources,
to purchases made as part of large and concentrated
public expenditures (as in the case of the Commonwealth
Games). Features that these ostensible instances of
corruption have in common are their large size in
terms of sheer magnitude and the brazen violation
of the law they involve. If true, the allegations
not only indicate that corruption still prevails but
that it may have increased in scale, overwhelming
the evidence of small scale corruption among petty
bureaucrats and local government functionaries.
Some of these allegations of corruption on a large
scale are of particular significance because they
point to changes in the profile and the qualitative
implications of corruption. Associated with such instances
of the possible misuse of powers held by state functionaries
for substantial private gain is huge profit for some
of the richest individuals and for leading domestic
and foreign business groups. This leads to substantial
surplus accumulation among two groups. The first is
among those serving the state apparatus in high positions.
The belief that this could be occurring is strengthened
by the growing nexus between politics and business
with big business having strong links (direct or indirect)
with politicians and individual politicians elected
to parliament and the legislatures reporting huge
increases in asset holding over time. The second set
of potential beneficiaries of surpluses accumulated
in this fashion consists of the business groups, which
derive gains from the purchase of pecuniary benefits
for a small price. Thus, if we go by the Comptroller
and Auditor General's estimate, the loss of revenues
to the state from the mispricing of 2G spectrum alone
is Rs. 1.76 lakh crore or close to 10 per cent of
Gross Fixed Capital Formation in the economy in 2008-09.
If a large share of that loss is being transferred
to those acquiring spectrum, it points to huge benefits
for business groups.
It needs to be noted that transfers of this kind to
private capital are not always seen as the result
of corrupt practice. There have been many instances
where sections of the private sector have made huge
gains through means that are ''unfair'', even if not
illegitimate, though they have not been associated
with credible allegations of corruption. One such
within the cellular industry that is the focus of
current attention, was the implicit bail out of investors
who made erroneous and even irrational bids for spectrum
during the first round of auctions. A few players
chose to make huge bids for licences to operate in
multiple circles and won the right in many more than
one. If they had been required to make payments for
all circles they had won, these bidders would have
been in financial trouble. The government, therefore,
allowed them to retain a few of these licences and
give up the rest. But, despite this, when these bidders
turned operators, they discovered that they could
not operate profitably if they were actually required
to pay the amounts they had bid to obtain their licences.
The government, therefore, allowed them to migrate
to a revenue sharing regime rather than a specific
licence fee system, allowing them to make huge profits
subsequently.
The point to note is that the irrational bids made
by these operators had kept out a number of rational
bidders who may have been more efficient suppliers.
When it became clear that those offering the highest
bids were unable to meet their commitments for one
reason or the other, they should have been penalised
and their more rational competitors brought in. By
allowing the irrational bidders to limit the commitments
they had to honour and then dilute those commitments
by permitting migration to a revenue-sharing scheme,
the government rewarded the irrational bidders. This
was, to say the least, unfair, even if not illegitimate
because no clear evidence of corruption emerged. This
was one more instance where unfair business practices
and patronage from the state at the expense of the
exchequer permitted sections of the private sector
to garner huge profits. Thus, patently wrong policies
that transfer surpluses to the private sector are
visible not only in instances where allegations of
corruption are involved.
It is to be expected that such instances would increase
under liberalisation since the state increasingly
dilutes or gives up its role as an agent influencing
and regulating the nature and scale of private activity
to take on that of being a facilitator of private
investment. In fact, the very process of transition
to a more ''liberal'' regime is fraught with potential
instances of corruption, as the allegations of under-pricing
of public assets in the process of disinvestment of
public enterprises illustrates. The process of decontrol
and deregulation is also accompanied by efforts at
promotion of private investment, involving help to
the private sector to acquire land, grow in new areas,
and expand its activities. As a result, besides the
old type of corruption where state functionaries demand
a price for favouring individual firms with purchase
orders or permissions and exemptions, there is a new
form in which those benefiting from state support
could be called upon to share the transfers they receive
with the decision makers involved.
Advocates of liberalisation have always argued that
by reducing state intervention and increasing transparency
economic reform would reduce corruption. The allegations
of, and evidence on large scale corruption, show that
this is not true. In fact, they make clear that liberalisation
does not mean that the state withdraws from intervention
but merely that there is a change in the form of state
intervention, which also enables the state to deliver
illegitimate gains to individuals and private players.
The flip side of this process is that there are new
avenues through which the private sector can garner
windfall gains that raise private profits, increase
internal resources and allow for an acceleration of
private capital accumulation. There is ample evidence
of a substantial increase in private profitability,
corporate savings and private wealth since the launch
of liberalisation and especially during this decade.
But this has been attributed to the entrepreneurial
energy released by liberalisation, with no role given
for to the benefits from transfers engineered by the
state. In fact, when discussions of corruption occur,
the possibility that it serves as a mechanism for
private aggrandisement receives little attention.
The tenor of the discourse is that the virus of corruption
afflicts only the government officials and politicians
who control and misuse state power. This may have
been a partly reasonable position to take if corruption
is merely reflective of the price to be paid to state
functionaries for private individuals or entities
to realise what would have been legitimately due to
them. But increasingly corruption appears to reflect
payments made by the private sector to realise illegitimate
gains that are not merely violative of fair practices
and/or the law, but damaging from the development,
environmental or fiscal points of view. Given the
large amounts that can be garnered in this fashion,
the state seems to be turning into an important site
for primitive accumulation for the private sector
during the phase of liberalisation and economic reform.
If true, this makes the private sector not just complicit
but a participant in the acts of corruption, if any,
involved.
An aspect possibly associated with such corruption
is the flight of capital from the country. Those making
illegitimate or excessively large windfall gains may
need to evade the tax and/or other laws of the country.
The illicit transfer of wealth facilitates such evasion.
Thus liberalisation by making such transfers easier
encourages capital flight. According to a recent estimate
by the Global Financial Integrity programme of the
Centre for International Policy, the money that had
illicitly flown out of India to accounts abroad over
its post-Independence history stretching from 1948
through 2008 was around $213 billion. The adjusted
present value of those historical flows has been placed
at $462 billion or around 36 per cent of India's GDP
in 2008. Interestingly, there are signs that the outflow
has increased substantially in recent years and that
more of the money is now moving to offshore financial
centres. According to the report that includes, Global
Financial Integrity's estimate, titled The Drivers
and Dynamics of Illicit Financial Flows from India:
1948-2008, ''68 percent of India's aggregate illicit
capital loss occurred after India's economic reforms
in 1991, indicating that deregulation and trade liberalization
actually contributed to/accelerated the transfer of
illicit money abroad.'' It is in this background that
the source of transfers needs to be discussed. Their
timing, size and direction in recent years suggest
that corporate players are likely to be involved.
Thus, a feature of the new liberalised economic environment
seems to be that private players begin to look for
ways in which state influence can be exploited for
quick and substantial economic gain, sometimes at
the expense of the state exchequer. A concomitant
is an increase in the instances of alleged corruption.
While sectors like real estate and mining are obvious
examples of how this can occur, the number of such
instances is larger and more varied. But this feature
of the new environment tends to be missed. A sudden
increase in the wealth of an individual can be as
much an indicator of business acumen as of the misuse
of power or the violation of law for profit. But in
a world where profit making and the accumulation of
wealth is celebrated and rewarded, where it is the
''bottom line'' that finally matters, unless circumstances
lead to the detection of fraud or a violation of the
law, there is no needle of suspicion when wealth is
accumulated rapidly and in large measure. An increase
in the wealth of a private sector player is normally
seen as a virtue and a reflection of ''entrepreneurship''
and ''innovation''.
This does limit the degree to which the problem of
corruption can be addressed. If corruption tends to
be embedded in the process of accumulation, it is
expected that it would be far more present than would
otherwise be the case. Whenever allegations of corruption
emerge because of ''leaks'' possibly triggered by corporate
or political rivalry, controversy ensues and investigations
begin, but little of significance results. The nature
and functioning of the law in the country is such
that the investigations drag on for such a long time
that public attention wanes and is in any case diverted
to new instances of corruption. This makes the demand
for better ways of investigating and awarding punishment
in proven cases of corruption eminently sensible.
But this alone would not do. What is required is a
change in the policy regime that legitimises the conversion
of the state into a site for the primitive accumulation
of capital. Also required is caution when celebrating
evidence of quick and substantial enrichment of sections
of the private sector.
December 3, 2010.
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