hat people from India have over a trillion dollars of financial assets held abroad is established. Given the situation facing financial institutions in the US and the EU, it would make sense to bring such funds back to India. A government less committed than the UPA to the welfare of US-EU financial institutions (at the cost of its own people) would have made it possible for this to be done, most likely through a one-time amnesty. However, as in China, decision-makers here have been trained through education and experience to consider the interests of US-EU institutions, rather than their own. As a consequence, what is likely is that such funds will remain where they are, and melt away in the next crash.
In the absence of an amnesty, the best course would be vigorous pursuit of those secreting funds abroad. Sadly, the Union Finance Ministry and its agencies seem incapable of other than cosmetic gestures to get back such funds. The so-called "High Level Committee into Black Money" comprises the same officials who for decades have comprehensively failed to even scratch the surface of the problem. Like the proverbial dog in the manger, those in power seem unwilling to do what is needed, even while they spend their energy fending off challenges to their monopoly over policy and its implementation. The recent Cabinet reshuffle has ensured that Vilasrao Deshmukh will be joined in the government by Rajiv Shukla. The two together should certainly be capable of rooting out Black Money, seeing their vast expertise in the subject, and ought to be incorporated into the "High Level Committee".
By 2 August, the US will go into default, unless the Republican Party can be persuaded to abandon its scorched earth policy towards President Obama. Representative Eric Cantor and the Tea Party sect believe that it is sinful to ask the very rich to pay taxes or to provide heathcare to those below the median income level. Should Cantor have his way, the US financial system may be in for a ride as rough as that of 2008. Pity the
Chinese, who put their savings into institutions and
instruments that are anything other than sound. China's public finances and India's private foreign wealth may be the biggest casualties of a 2012 US-EU financial meltdown.
http://www.sunday-guardian.com/analysis/the-perils-of-montek-aiyar-economic-policies
No comments:
Post a Comment