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Criteria for sequencing divestment
The criteria should be to first privatise firms operating in
sectors where markets are well developed and where the relevant
policy regime is liberalised, writes DEVESH KAPUR.
THE VARYING degrees of financial health and locational context of
State owned Enterprises (SOEs) means that a "one-size" approach
to divestment cannot be meaningful. However, an approach that
treats each SOE as sui generis will only mean that the process
will drag on for too long.
In the cases of some sub-categories, such as that of the
Navaratnas, the sale of SOEs is likely to be the trickiest and
may raise the most political hackles. Opposition to the sale will
come less from labour (which will face only moderate
redundancies) than from the Swadeshi Jagran Manch (SJM) and the
left, which will object on the grounds that family silver is
being sold to foreigners for a song. As many of these cases
involve quasi-monopolies and/or are still operating in heavily
regulated markets, there are considerable complexities in
designing the sale. However, the market positions of most of
these firms are slipping, which means that greater the delay, the
greater the erosion in market value.
The criteria for sequencing should be to first privatise firms
operating in sectors where markets are well developed and where
the relevant policy regime is liberalised. This means that sales
in both oil and power should be delayed (other than IBP), given
the considerable problems of their respective policy regimes, as
the markets will only discount their value. In contrast, in
telecommunications, there is little reason why a firm such as
VSNL should not be immediately privatised. The telecom policy
regime is now quite liberal, and delays will only penalise the
Indian informatics industry, which desperately needs faster and
cheaper bandwidth access, as well as erode these firms' market
positions as private sector firms muscle into the market.
Here too, strategy can make the difference between divestment in
a narrow sense and divestment as part of a larger vision of
economic reforms. For instance, the Prime Minister could
skillfully exploit his forthcoming trip to the U.S. and to
Silicon Valley by announcing the privatisation of the VSNL and
then inviting the Indian diaspora in Silicon Valley to bridge the
"digital divide" emerging in rural India. There is little reason
these entrepreneurs could not prove wrong those sceptics who
believe that, with the public sector out, the private sector will
simply "skim the cream" in wiring high value-added urban India.
If done properly, this invitation could well energise the
considerable resources of the overseas Indian community for this
area.
Rapid divestment is similarly critical if the considerable values
of Maruti, IPCL, BHEL, Air-India and Indian Airlines are not to
be eroded. For the most part India would gain considerably if the
privatisation resulted in control rights passing on to foreign
firms. This would ensure that India becomes an integral part of
global production networks, provide large non-debt creating
resources flows, and help gain access to frontier technologies.
However, there are pitfalls to purity. Ensuring that
privatisation results in domestic private capital emerging in
control in a few cases is an entirely appropriate policy
objective. Privatisation has an inherent symbolism, even more so
in India.
There are important substantive reasons as well. For the domestic
private sector to emerge on the world stage, it helps to have a
strong domestic base. Moreover, in these cases, the GOI should
invite two alternative bids. One, an unconditional divestment and
the other a "conditional" divestment - conditional on new (green-
field) investment rather than on the GOI retaining a certain
portion of equity, as is currently the practice. The Government
can be completely transparent about this trade-off and the
weights it assigns to the trade-off, which may well vary from
sector to sector.
There are quite a few SOEs where the best course of action will
be to wind them up as rapidly as possible. No matter how much one
flogs them, they simply cannot be resuscitated. Examples include
the NTC, the HFC, the HEC, and almost all the flotsam and jetsam
of the private sector that was nationalized in the Seventies and
Eighties. The employees are unlikely to find alternative
employment, either because they simply lack the skills (NTC mills
in Mumbai) or because they are located in States where
alternatives are few (e.g. HFC or the engineering firms that are
part of Bharat Yantra Nigam or Bharat Bhari Udyog Nigam whose
factories are in Bengal and Bihar). Opposition to divestment will
come from labour and regional allies (e.g. TMC).
The key asset of these firms is real estate, as many occupy prime
urban land. This offers an unprecedented opportunity to redeploy
this land for imaginative urban development, be it for
educational institutions, convention centres, technology parks,
hotels, housing, or public parks. Most state governments are
eager to use this land and the Centre could offer the States the
land for redevelopment under certain guidelines - such as
insisting that global proposals and global bids be invited to
further the development of these parcels of land. A certain
fraction should be reserved for public purposes, while the
revenues from the rest can be used to set up a pension fund that
would provide security to all laid-off workers.
With such a scheme, it is possible to kill three birds with one
stone: the Centre rids itself of fiscal millstones around its
neck, the States gain from much needed urban revitalisation -
critical given the importance of urban centres as engines of
economic dynamism, and a safety-net is ensured for the workers
that allows liberalisation to move forward without breaking their
backs. The Centre will have to wipe out all the accumulated debt
of these firms as well as forgo any financial gains from sale of
assets such as land. However, the design ensures that key veto
points are largely neutralised.
Yet a third group of SOEs consists of companies with component
units that are attractive and can be revived if injected with new
owners and market incentives. In some cases, their relatively
small size (examples include IDPL, HMT, MECON, HOC, EIL) and the
nature of their activities means that divestment can and should
move rapidly due to relatively muted political opposition and
also to the comparatively simple technical aspects of
privatisation. These firms are for the most part, engaged in
activities where competitive markets exist and complete
divestment through a simple auction procedure should suffice.
The downside risks of making a mistake in the design of the
bidding are unlikely to be significant. Crucially, the signalling
effects of rapid sales will have positive reputational
externalities for other sales - once the markets see that 10-15
firms have been fully sold, the number of potential bidders in
other sales is likely to increase.
Finally, there is a small group of very large firms that also
have component units that are attractive and could be revived if
injected with new owners and market incentives but whose large
size requires major financial and labour restructuring. Steel and
coal are good examples.
These SOEs pose some of the most serious challenges in that the
social implications of closing/restructuring them are
considerable - they are often located in single-company towns
where few labour alternatives exist. A twin strategy of
downsizing, managerial restructuring, and opportunistic sales
(IISCO) is possibly the least worst short-term option with sales
projected for the medium term.
The political costs-to-economic benefits ratio probably implies
that these firms should be placed late in the queue. However, in
the case of such SOEs, the strategic objective of "crowding-in"
investment - the additional investment that a bidder agrees to
bring in over a defined time horizon should have considerable
weight in the bidding.
Divestment in India has unfortunately been viewed as a reluctant
political medicine rather than as something that may actually
offer positive political opportunities. Contrary to popular
belief, greater political imagination and conviction can overcome
the political impediments and technical difficulties that have
plagued reform.
A shift in tactics and strategy offers important possibilities to
both enhance decentralisation and the alleviation of poverty,
goals whose importance for India cannot be overemphasised.
(Concluded)
(The author is Assistant Professor of Government, Harvard
University)
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