India economy flounders after ‘monsoon washout’
INDIA: A total impasse in India’s parliament is not only
undermining the world’s biggest democracy but also deepening its
economic woes as long-awaited reforms fall by the wayside. A now
familiar chorus of recriminations echoed around the grandiose circular
chamber on Friday as the second of the three annual sessions ended in
paralysis.
Faced with MPs from the main opposition BJP party shouting and waving
papers, the parliamentary speaker called an end to proceedings shortly
after midday.
The BJP has been demanding the resignation of beleaguered Prime
Minister Manmohan Singh over a scandal involving the awarding of coal
mining concessions in his first term as premier, which has come to be
dubbed “Coalgate”.
Auditors say the concessions were handed out too cheaply and in a
process that lacked transparency -- heaping more embarrassment on the
main ruling Congress party and Singh in particular who was in charge of
the coal ministry at the time.
Once widely admired as the architect of reforms in the 1990s that
transformed the Indian economy, Singh now finds his latest legislative
plans thwarted at every turn. In the latest “monsoon” session which
began on August 8, lawmakers spent just 25 out of a possible 120 hours
considering legislation, according to PRS Legislative Research, a New
Delhi-based independent study group.
Only four bills were cleared by both houses of parliament, despite as
many as 30 being listed for consideration on issues such as pensions,
land acquisition, tax reform and corruption.
“The coal scandal has changed the entire political and economic
complexion of the country,” Arun Kumar, chairman of the Centre for
Economic Studies and Planning in New Delhi, told AFP.
“The victim of this deadlock is the economy which has been stopped
from getting back to growth,” Kumar said adding that lawmakers had
unanimously ignored their “real business” which, is to “pass bills and
introduce reforms”.
“They are holding back India’s economic growth story.” Singh, not
normally known for his temper, made a rare outburst to reporters as he
expressed his frustration on Friday afternoon outside parliament.
“We take pride in the fact that since independence we are a
practising, functioning democracy.
What we have seen in this session is a total negation of that,” said
the 79-year-old Congress party veteran.
While few commentators believe the BJP really wants to force
elections before the scheduled date in spring 2014, the Coalgate
revelations have put further wind in their sails at a time when the
economy is experiencing a sharp slowdown.
India’s economy grew by 5.5 percent in the second quarter of the year
against a figure of eight percent over the same period in 2011.
AFP
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