The week ended April 30 witnessed a collapse
in India's stock markets. On Wednesday, April 27, the Sensex fell by 213
points, wiping clean an estimated Rs. 55,000 crore of paper ''wealth''.
This was the largest single-day decline in over three years. Over the rest
of the week the markets moved further down, indicating that ''Black Wednesday''
was possibly not just a stray blip on the trading screen. With evidence
that foreign institutional investors who were earlier pumping foreign currency
into India's markets were holding back, the rupee too witnessed a reversal
of the rise that excess dollar supplies had been resulting in.
There is unanimity among ''analysts'' of the factor driving the downturn:
news from the exit polls - the most ''scientific'' of available predictions
- that the NDA is unlikely to win a majority in the elections, which may
throw up a hung Parliament. In the run up to the elections, India's ''upper
crust'' - consisting of ''the markets'', the media and large sections of
the urban middle class - had convinced itself that the results of the elections
were a forgone conclusion: the NDA would form the government; only the margin
of victory was a matter for debate. The initial opinion polls only confirmed
this belief.
It is therefore not surprising that the results of the exit polls at the
end of two rounds of voting came as a shock. To boot, subsequent opinion
polls have also pointed to a lower vote and seat share for the BJP and its
allies in the remaining two rounds. This rather convenient shift in opinion
poll results has allowed the media to portray the signals from the exit
polls as being the result of an end-of-game change of mood that the earlier
opinion polls could not capture.
If the dramatic shift relative to those early opinion polls does in fact
materialize, it would be hard to explain, even by taking resource to the
Rahul-Priyanka factor or some such imponderable. With little having changed
in terms of the policies, structure and disunity in the Congress, and all
the major non-Congress players having been on the scene right from the start,
the truth would be that India's upper crust had got it wrong. It had failed
to sense the mood of the ''other India'', which was unwilling to go along
with the celebration of the NDA's rule and policies that the explicit and
implicit ''India Shining'' campaign involved.
What is noteworthy is the quick response of the market, which has declared
its displeasure with actions that not only erode the wealth of its own constituents
but, through their impact on credit and foreign exchange markets, threaten
a crisis in India's liberalized financial sector. Market developments over
the week ended April 30th cannot be explained by the stray action of a few
unhappy and/or nervous investors. The herd instinct, so typical of financial
markets and especially of foreign institutional investors, has resulted
in concerted action that threatens a sharp decline. And in India's markets,
which are neither wide nor deep, a small herd can make a big difference.
On the surface, an early correction of the baseless expectations of a few
financial investors should not be cause for worry. Few can demonstrate that
India's till-quite-recently inactive financial markets drive the economy.
However, the problem is that the crises that such changed expectations resulted
in elsewhere in East Asia, Latin America, Eastern Europe and Turkey show
that they tend to damage the real economy as well. Moreover, when the crisis
of finance becomes a crisis of the real economy, its burden falls disproportionately
on the poor and the lower middle classes, even though they do not participate
in or often are not even conscious of the workings of financial markets.
Having invited foreign financial investors into their economies, countries
find that ignoring their sentiments and/or closing the door on them when
they retreat, involves painful adjustments that the people, and therefore
democratic governments, find hard to face up to.
This feature of the play of fluid finance has become a source of power for
financial interests. The threat of exit and of a consequent crisis is now
routinely held out as reason to do anything that whimsical financial interests
demand. This threat is not just implicit, as revealed by the actual experience
with the withdrawal of financial investors from one or the other emerging
market. It has in recent times become quite explicit. We only need to recall
the financial drama that preoccupied Brazil as it became clear that Lula
and his Workers' Party would win the polls in 2002. To prevent fear of a
crisis from changing the electoral result, Lula had not merely to promise
to refrain from doing anything that would upset international finance, but
also, after his victory, implement a substantially diluted and pared down
version of his original manifesto.
The signal sent out on the Black Wednesday of the last week of April in
India was similar. By threatening a pullout if expectations of an NDA victory
were not realized, those who sway those markets, especially international
financial investors, were sending out two signals. First, they were signaling
the electorate that any outcome that is not in keeping with the expectations
of finance and the ''upper crust'' can be damaging for all. Second, they
were signaling any possible formation other than the NDA that may in fact
come to power after the elections, that statements and policies that displease
finance could be suicidal.
The BJP, which has all along been making a case for an electoral verdict
that strengthens its (and not the NDA's) hands and allows it to continue
the policies that in its view make India shine, has been quick to exploit
these signals from the financial markets. For example, on April 30, BJP
President Venkaiah Naidu, on the campaign trail in Jaipur, declared: ''The
market reaction to the (exit poll) predictions give an idea how the economy
would respond when the BJP and its allies appear weakened. The poll predictions
have made the economy suffer. The markets have crashed and the rupee value
has come down and this is only a trailer.''
This use of market sentiment as a vote-gathering device is in keeping with
the collusion between the NDA government and financial capital. The BJP-led
NDA government has been blatantly ''market friendly'', keen to placate big
business and international finance and desperate to resolve its budgetary
difficulties by selling some of the most valuable and profitable of public
sector assets at extremely attractive prices. Foreign players, whose presence
in India's financial sector has increased substantially as a result of liberalization,
and Indian big business, were the biggest beneficiaries. So were those who
managed or facilitated their investments.
The exit polls hold out a threat to those profits. A hung Parliament would
undoubtedly delay the process of government formation and make policy-making
a more democratic and consensual, and therefore a slower and perhaps less
market-friendly process. It is the latter which has upset those who people
and invest in India's markets. They have for the last five years become
attuned to policies that have made India the flavour of the season for international
capital, especially mobile financial capital that has diverted huge investments
into India's lucrative markets and fattened India's foreign exchange reserves.
This discovery of India by international finance explains in part the ''India
Shining'' ethos and the confidence in the NDA among the nation's upper crust.
The increase in liquidity that capital inflows resulted in triggered a housing
finance and consumer credit boom in the non-agricultural sector. Coupled
with India's software and outsourcing ''mini-revolution'', it helped create
a booming enclave economy.
Besides those who directly profited from these developments, there were
others who were gainers in this new situation. A relatively small group
of middle class Indians gained access to better paying service sector jobs.
Their incomes and the easy availability of credit finance allowed them to
consume a host of commodities that invaded India's shopping malls after
liberalization. In pre-liberalization India, middle class success depended
on entry into government or migration abroad. Now, private sector employment
at home promised a taste of the lifestyles that successful migrants led
outside the country. The short span of time in which this transformation
occurred held out a hope for others, who expected the boom to persist at
least till they found themselves a slot in the charmed circle of India's
post-liberalization elite.
It must be said that the boom in the liberalization-created enclave not
only generated some demand elsewhere in the economy, but also drew other
sectors into its fold. Principal among these were the media, which not only
thrived and proliferated because of the advertising bonanza that the boom
generated, but financed their expansion with the help of the liquidity that
financial liberalization provided.
Unable to see beyond their own circumstance, these sections that have come
to benefit from the new regime did believe that governance in India had
changed for the better. If in addition, the opposition was disunited and
the Congress in disarray, victory for the NDA seemed inevitable. What was
missed was the damage that the NDA government's policies had done in terms
of the worsening livelihoods of the farming community, the displacement
of already employed workers, the fall in the rate of generation of new employment
opportunities, the increases in the cost and decline in the availability/quality
of public services and the collapse of the small business economy. The losers
inhabiting this large universe, the other India, could be voting against
the NDA even if not for the opposition, if the exit polls are right.
When the NDA came to power, the perceived danger was a widening communal
divide, which has indeed materialized and marginalized the minorities. What
was not expected to the same degree was the widening economic divide, which
has remained relatively unnoticed, but is becoming visible as the exercise
of winning the voter has proceeded.
The signals the markets are sending out midway through the election process
is that even if the evidence points to the fact that this division makes
it difficult for those who widened it to remain in power, the policies that
create the divide must remain in place. What matters is the success of the
enclave that liberalization generates, not the well being of the rest who
must be coerced into voting for governments and policies that surrender
sovereignty at their expense. The exit polls suggest that the ''other'',
predominant India may be unwilling to submit to these authoritarian ambitions
of finance capital. May 3, 2004. |
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