The Lost Tycoons
How Government is killing India's private sector
By Dhiraj Nayyar
At
10.30 am on the morning of May 2, two of India’s top telecom
entrepreneurs, Sunil Mittal of Airtel and Kumar Mangalam Birla of Idea,
and two CEOs’ of global telecom giants, Vittorio Collao of Vodafone and
Jon Fredrik Baksaas of Telenor, walked into the office of Union Home
Minister P. Chidambaram in Delhi’s North Block. They expressed their
grave concern about the recommendations of the Telecom Regulatory
Authority of India
announced just two days earlier on April 30, which they said would kill
the Indian telecom industry. The four businessmen spent the rest of the
day, until after 7 pm meeting ministers and bureaucrats who could
conceivably help an industry that has been repeatedly battered in the
past three years. They called on Pranab Mukherjee, Sharad Pawar,
Veerappa Moily and Montek Singh Ahluwalia, who are members of the
Empowered Group of Ministers on spectrum pricing. They met Cabinet
Secretary Ajit Seth, Commerce Secretary Rahul Khullar and Joint
Secretary PMO, BVR
Subrahmanyam.
The
sight of top businessmen shuttling frantically between Government
offices was a revival of the worst excesses of the pre- 1991 licence
raj. The UPA Government and its top functionaries have resurrected the
ghosts of India’s socialist past twenty years on. Said the usually
cautious but now agitated Sunil Mittal as he traversed New Delhi’s
corridors of power, “This has been the most destructive period of
regulatory
environment I have seen in 16 years.”
India
Inc spent much of 2011 complaining about policy paralysis in the UPA
Government. The spectre of corruption, and the prospect of being
investigated, had made jittery bureaucrats terribly shy of putting their
pen to the paper of Government files. Then in 2012, the empire of
Government awoke from its slumber to strike back at its detractors.
Large
sections of India Inc would no longer suffer from policy paralysis.
They would suffer instead from policy action of the most arbitrary,
retrograde kind. Evidence suggests that sectors which have a close
interface with Government, like infrastructure, mining and natural
resources, are struggling. Those at an arms length are doing reasonably
well. An analysis by a leading business daily of the January-March 2012
quarterly financial results of
989 companies that make up 52 percent of the total market capitalization
of the Bombay Stock Exchange showed that just five sectors were
propping up the net profits growth of India Inc. None of these five
sectors – banking, IT, pharma, Fast Moving Consumer Goods, and cement –
have extensive interface with Government. With these sectors taken out,
the net profits of India Inc actually declined by 9.6 percent compared
with the same quarter last year. Says Adi Godrej, President of apex
industry chamber CII, “There is little doubt that all businesses that
have a significant
direct interface with Government are suffering.
Those
which don’t are still doing okay.” Dr. Manmohan Singh became famous for
ending the licence raj in 1991. He is becoming infamous for reviving
it.
Recent
policy actions in telecom, coal, power, gas and taxation have badly hit
businesses. The economy is taking a beating as its engine of growth,
the private sector, suffers. The worst is yet to come. On Wednesday, May
16, the rupee hit an all time low of Rs 54.46 against the dollar. The
Sensex has fallen from just under 18,000 on March 15, the day before the
Union Budget, to just under 16,000 on May 16, two months later. Finance
Minister
Pranab Mukherjee stepped up to quell the panic and said that the rupee
and stock market were suffering because of political uncertainty in
crisis stricken Greece. The real problems lie closer home. Industrial
growth in the month of March was negative (-3.5 percent), economic
growth has fallen from 8.4 percent in 2010-11 to 6.9 percent in 2011-12.
Greece was in trouble when India recorded 8 percent plus growth. It is
certain that growth in 2012-13 will be nowhere near the Governments’
forecast of 7-7.5 percent.
Market
forecasts predict a number closer to 6 percent. Some are predicting a
number under 6 percent. The Indian economy is crash landing just at the
time when it should have been taking off to 10 percent. If growth slows
down to 6 percent or below, there will be fewer jobs, lower salaries,
and diminished savings. The middle class may, for the first time in 20
years, experience a serious fall in their standard of living.
TRAI HANGS UP ON TELECOM, MEDIA
J.S.
Sarma, TRAI’s chief from 15 May 2009 to 14 May 2012 damaged an already
bruised telecom sector with decisions that are inexplicable.
Sarma
was appointed in controversial circumstances. He had been Union telecom
secretary under A. Raja and was then appointed to head the Telecom
Dispute Settlement and Appellate tribunal which hears appeals against
decisions made by TRAI. The move to make him TRAI chief after he had
held crucial policy and appellate functions in telecom was unusual. He
issued far reaching, anti-business recommendations on telecom just two
weeks before he demitted
office. In fact, he answered the telecom ministry’s queries on his
original recommendations on his last day in office, Sunday, May 14 ,
when it would have been proper to leave that task to his successor.
Business
leaders argue that JS Sarma went well beyond what the Supreme Court had
asked of him. They have a valid point. The Supreme Court had directed
TRAI to lay down the guidelines for the re-auction of the 122 licenes
that A Raja had doled out in 2008 and which the court had cancelled in
February 2012. India has 22 telecom circles so a total of 122
licences would roughly translate into 6 pan-India licences. Each
Pan-India licence would have to be allocated 4.4 MhZ of spectrum. A
total of 26.6 MhZ of spectrum therefore needed to be reauctioned before
the SC deadline of August 31. Instead, Sarma’s recommendations say that
only 5MhZ of spectrum will be up for auction. That is enough for just
one pan-India licence. In such a scarcity scenario, the bid prices will
be driven up. To compound the cost problem, Sarma suggested a reserve
price ten times that of
the price Raja doled out the licence. Sarma suggests that the final bid
price will only be 20 percent higher than the reserve price. That
calculation defies experience. In the auctions, it was 80 percent
higher. More bizzarely, by Sarma’s own admission contained in the TRAI
recommendations, the price of spectrum in India is 70-80 times the
spectrum price charged in advanced economies which have much higher
income levels. That is not all.
Sarma
has his reasons for withholding spectrum. In a clear over reach he
decided to club the auction of the 122 cancelled licences with a future
policy on ‘refarming’ of spectrum. Under refarming, TRAI will take away
the efficient 900 Mhz bandwith from Airtel, Vodafone and other operators
when their 20 year licence agreements start ending next year, and force
them to move to the less efficient 1800 MhZ, which is what the 122
cancelled
licencees had. Such a move requires operators to double the number of
telecom towers. By a Vodafone stimate, this refarming could cost Rs,
10,000 crore. Idea Cellular put its cost at Rs 17,000 crore. By some
estimates, Bharti, Vodafone and Idea may also have to pay up to Rs
45-000-50,000 crore ($ 9-10 billion) per head at the time of renewing their licenes. All put together, such costs could genuinely destroy telecom
companies that are already struggling to make money in a brutally competitive market.
According
to a senior policy official, the real problem is not the costs --- some
cost would have to be incurred in renewing license after 20 years – but
the fact that TRAI has not created a level playing field. “Note the
conspicuous silence of the dual technology operators like Tata and
Reliance Communications, “ he says. While some of their spectrum will
also be refarmed, they will have an opportunity to bid for the more
efficient 900 MhZ and thus reduce their costs. “At the least, they will
lose less than the GSM operators,’ says the official. On May 15, the
Cellular Operators Association of India issued a statement which said,
“COAI vehemently rejects the flawed and biased recommendations put forth
by Trai and disapproves of the discriminatory environment between dual
technology operators and GSM operators and the subsequent violations of
the level playing field.”
TRAI’s
recommendation to liberalise spectrum use i.e 2G, 3G and 4G can be used
to provide any service is also problematic, since all were auctioned
separately at different prices, thus disturbing a level playing field.
Says
former finance minister Yashwant Sinha summing up the disaster in
telecom, “The telecom sector, a big growth engine for the nation, has
had no growth for almost two years.”
Sarma
did damage to more than telecom. On his last day in office, he issued a
licence raj era order for television broadcasters --- TRAI also
regulates broadcasting. He said that no television channel could
broadcast advertisements for over 12 and a half minutes per hour.
That is not the regulator’s job. The decision will likely be appealed in the appellate tribunal.
Despite
his lopsided decision making Sarma was strongly supported by the
telecom minister Kapil Sibal for a second term in office. The Prime
Minister salvaged the situation by appointing Commerce Secretary Rahul
Khullar to the job. On taking charge on May 15 Khullar, a straight
talking officer, who has a reputation of being absolutely fair and
unbiased in decision making said “It is an onerous responsibility.” For
Khullar to play a
role, the Government will have to reject Sarma’s recommendations or
refer them back to TRAI once again. The government must do so urgently.
If the Government needed a reminder about the mess it has created in
telecom, it got one when A Raja walked out of jail, after 15 months, on
bail on the evening of May 15.
FINANCE MINISTRY TAXES, SCARES BUSINESS
Sarma
isn’t the only bureaucrat who has damaged business in recent months.
Finance Secretary R.S. Gujral, who holds charge of the revenue
department, managed to scare away foreign investors, through two
retrograde announcements – the retrospective tax amendment on Vodafone
and the General Anti Avoidance Rule (GAAR) for foreign investors -- in
the Union Budget on March 16. According to sources in the finance
ministry, Gujral and the
Income Tax bureaucracy kept their colleagues in the Department of
Economic Affairs, including Chief Economic Advisor Kaushik Basu, in the
dark about these proposals. The department of economic affairs is in
charge of all matters related to foreign investment, capital markets and
the macroeconomy. Gujral’s revenue department inserted the tax
proposals into the Budget document, but not in the FM’s speech, which is
vetted by officials from the Department of Economic Affairs. According
to sources, Gujral and the tax bureaucracy persuaded the Finance
Minister that these were
reasonable ways of raising revenue which could help reduce the fiscal
deficit of 5.9 percent.
The
retrospective tax amendment was widely condemned. Even the usually mild
mannered Adi Godrej was outraged. “Some of the decisions (in the Budget)
were very poor. I think the retrospective tax amendment was a very
negative step.” he said shortly
after the FM’s speech. Vodafone had won its case in the Supreme Court
and retrospective policy changes indicate that there is no sanctity of
the prevailing law. Gujral went into overdrive. He made it clear that
the Government was not going to restrict its tax collection to the
original liability of Rs 11,000 crore. Speaking to a television channel
on May 9, he said that the Government would add penalty and interest to
the claim. Gujral tried to underplay the impact, “Once the delayed
interest is updated, the tax demand would rise by a few hundred crores,"
he said. It actually
rises by a few thousand crore to Rs 20,000 crore. Gujral ruled out any
compromise. “There is no question of government negotiating with any
company,” he said.
Not
all bureaucrats are supportive of Gujral. “Gujral is either ignorant of
the macroeconomic implications or his trying to please his political
masters by suggesting crude ways to raise revenue to finance populist
programmes,” says a senior economic policy official. In late April, the
finance secretary was summoned by C. Rangarajan, Chairman of the Prime
Minister’s Eocnomic Advisory Council. Rangarajan had taught Gujral while
he was at IIM Ahmedabad. He admonished his former student for pushing
through GAAR at a time when the Government was battling a current
account deficit (the excess of imports over exports)
of 4 percent of GDP. It needed foreign institutional investors to
bring dollars to finance the deficit rather than run away. Under GAAR,
foreign investors have to prove that they have genuine businesses in
zero tax countries and they
are not routing their investments into India from say Mauritius simply
to avoid tax.
Under
Gujral’s formulation, the burden of proof lay with the investor and the
taxman had complete discretion to investigate. Rangarajan, a rare
pro-business voice in Government, went to finance minister Pranab
Mukherjee and persuaded him to postpone implementation by one year. He
also persuaded him to transfer the burden of proof to the taxman rather
than investor. Mukherjee, realizing he made have been advised badly,
corrected course in
his reply on the Finance Bill in parliament.
Still,
industry is worried about the Government’s intentions. Says Rajiv
Kumar, secretary general of FICCI, “The Government is pushing back the
private sector and making space for itself.” Kumar believes that the
Government must curtail its populism, especially its excessive spending
which cornering precious resources, and crowding out the more productive
private sector. Others believe that that is impossible as long as the
instinctively anti-business Congress party is calling the shots.
Speaking at the launch of a book to honour the Prime Minister in April, a
senior editor of a leading business daily, a well known supporter of
reform, said with sarcasm, “India is still a communist state. The party
rules over the government.” With Lok Sabha elections due in less than
two years, it is only reasonable to expect an expansion of populism and
the might of the state at the expense of the private sector. Reformist
legislation has been shelved. On May 10, the Cabinet deferred a decision
on the relatively
non-controversial insurance Bill which simply seeks to raise FDI limit
from 26 percent to 49 percent.
GOVERNMENT"S RESOURCE CURSE
The
appointment of Sonia Gandhi-confidant Pulok Chatterjee as Principal
Secretary to the Prime Minister in October 2011 aroused great
expectations from both the bureaucracy and business. It was expected he
would get things done. More than seven months on, he has failed in the
one major task he set himself – to sort out coal supply bottlenecks
which have paralysed the power sector. The public sector coal monopoly
Coal India has simply
refused to follow Chaterjee’s instructions.
In
February this year, Chatterjee Coal India to sign, before March 31,
2012, fuel supply agreements with all power plants that had entered
into long term power purchase agreements with power distribution
companies and that will be commissioned by March 31, 2015. Under these
fuel supply agreements, Coal India would guarantee 80 percent of the
coal requirements of power plants. Coal India’s acting chairman Zohra
Chatterjee, an
additional secretary in the Ministry of Coal, ignored the instructions
of India’s most powerful bureaucrat. On April 3, the Government had to
issue a rare presidential directive to Coal India to sign the fuel
supply agreements. Coal India insists that it does not have the coal to
supply to power producers. Its domestic production has been hampred by
the environment ministry’s no-go areas for mining and problems with land
acquisition.
Rajiv
Kumar of FICCI rubbishes Coal India’s claim. “This is a company sitting
on cash reserves of Rs 56,000 crore and has 200 million tonnes of coal
reserves in environmentally clear areas,” he says. The current shortage
of coal is around 85 million tonnes. “if anyone has a problem with
non-go areas, it is private power producers who were promised captive
mines, but have not been able to mine at all,” says
Kumar.
Imports
are the obvious alternative for power producers, but they are more
expensive, raising costs by 60 percent. For imports to be viable,
producers have to renegotiate tariffs with distribution companies.
Most distribution companies are unwilling or financially unable to do so.
There
is a solution that has been suggested to Coal India by Pulok Chatterjee
and his advisors. Under this plan Coal India would import coal in bulk,
blend it with their domestic output and then supply it to power
producers. The price would be higher than plain domestic coal, but only
at a rate of 15 percent as opposed to 60 percent if all was imported.
Coal India has refused to act on this suggestion so far.
Says
a senior secretary to Government, “The Government has power producers
in a corner. You will not let them mine privately. And you are unable to
persuade Coal India to help.” Power companies are suffering. Adani
Power, to take just one example, has recorded a loss of nearly Rs 300
crore in the quarter between January and March 2012 compared to a profit
of over Rs 500 crore at the same time last year.
Consumers
will suffer in the peak of summer as the demand for power will
comfortably exceed its supply. There isn’t much hope for the near
future. In a Cabinet meeting on May 11, environment minister Jayanthi
Natrajan refused to give her nod to a new Coal Regulatory Bill that
would have imposed checks on Coal India’s monopoly. She says the Bill
takes away discretion on mining from her ministry.
The
crisis in resources isn’t restricted to coal. The oil and gas sector is
caught in a bitter battle between Mukesh Ambani’s Reliance Industries
and S. Jaipal Reddy’s petroleum ministry. The Director General of
Hydrocarbons, the ministry’s apex regulator has asked the ministry to
disallow Reliance from recovering Rs 6,000 crore out of its Rs 26,000
crore total cost in developing the KG-D6 basin because the output has
fallen from 61.5 mmscnd to 35 mmscnd largely because RIL has only
drilled 18 wells instead of the 31 it had committed to.
According
to the production sharing contract signed by Reliance and the
Government, any dispute between the two parties must be resolved by an
arbitration. Reliance has already appointed its arbitrator and counsel.
The Government has refused. On April 18, Reliance filed a petition in
the Supreme Court asking it to direct the Government to appont an
arbitrator. The Government may well have a case against Reliance –
Ambani believes it
doesn’t --- but it cannot avoid following due process signed into
contract. Investment in the oil and gas sector has been negligible in
recent years. A protracted dispute over KG-D6 will not help.
It
is, of course, remarkable to see the well connected Mukesh Ambani being
harassed by the Government, unable even to persuade Government to
follow due process. If that is the fate of Mukesh Ambani, India Inc
ought to be very scared.
--
Dhiraj Nayyar
Deputy Editor
India Today
F-14/15 Connaught Place
New Delhi 110001
dhiraj.nayyar@gmail.com
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