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Like all great events which are criticised initially but later on when they bring in unheard of prosperity everybody hails them as great visionary acts post facto. But whether this act is such an act is still in the womb of time. But still it is pertinent to discuss it threadbare
The government has finally shown its resoluteness. The Indian market is now open for the investment in multi brand retail. The immediate reactions of various stakeholders are along expected lines. The left is afraid of the farmers being arm twisted in the long run; the industry is happy; the government basking in the glory of having overcome its “policy paralysis” and the political opponents have reasons to celebrate as they have unique “opt-in” leverage.
Beyond the celebrations by the “pro – FDI in retail camp”, there are huge challenges for the aspiring multinationals like Tesco and Walmart. The fragmented permission to enter only in 10 states poses challenges in any acquisition they might plan of the current multi brand retailers. Therefore, we are likely to witness a policy push by these stakeholders to include the entire nation in the “go-zone” for foreign held multi brand retailing entities.
One hopes that this gives the foreign investors a deeper commitment to fulfill the expectation of the Indian people that have been aroused in the run-up to the liberalisation of investment norms of this sector.
In an earlier article on the issue in Lex Witness, I had submitted that a calibrated approach to opening up this sector ought to be taken and the protagonists of the liberalisation in this sector ought to be made accountable for the representations about the benefits that will accrue as a result of this change in policy.
An evaluation of the FDI policy is not the subject of this article. What I propose here is to reflect on the issue of accountability of the government and the investors in walking all the talk that has preceded Press Notes 4 & 5 of 2012.
It is noteworthy that most justifications given in favour of FDI in multi-brand retail are medium to long-term benefit. The realisation of these benefits justifies that these investments will depend on government’s institutional memory being effective and government’s continued and sustained ability to enforce the commercial commitments of business houses.
Experience suggests that FDI in India has been a story of promises made to the people and broken. Pepsi and Coca Cola are the iconic case studies in this discourse. Frontline magazine has carried an illuminative article on them in its Volume 20, Issue 19 but I do not wish to revisit those.
In the light of experience, therefore, the fears of those who think that investors will not walk the talk are real or at least not unfounded. The national leadership collectively has the obligation to enforce the “conditions and warranties” of the contract at the time, the FDIs are allowed into India.
If we look at Pepsi’s example, one of the key obligation imposed upon them to earn foreign exchange for the country and to make the investment a forex positive investment for India, was relaxed on the ground, inter alia, that the sector had been liberalised per se. Therefore, Pepsi’s argument reportedly was that it was iniquitous for it to be subjected to harsher conditions, when its competitors and other were allowed more liberal terms.
However, what was missed or over worked was the fact that Pepsi enjoyed an earlier entry to Indian market on the basis of those very conditions. Assuming that the reverses would have happened in the policy paradigm, and the government of India would have declared more stringent conditions on future FDIs, had Pepsi not taken up the cudgels for the government? Cases are abound in high courts, where entrepreneur claim that they should be protected from adverse consequences of policy change as their investment was predicated on the favourable policy declarations.
Coal allocation, tax relief and electricity tariff concessions are the key comparable areas that have seen such battles in the courts. If the CBI investigations have any basis, the so called “coal-gate” in part would have turned out into a saga of undertakings given by companies to take benefit from the policy to open up the sector and then delaying and diluting the policy requirement to cash in on the “early movers’ advantage”. So why should FDI entities not be held accountable in a similar manner? It might be helpful to recall that Vodafone threatened international arbitration in the wake of the government’s plan to re-open taxation on its acquisition deal in India.
Now the question that stares us all today is why has successive government failed to hold the foreign investors to the conditions on which they were permitted to enter the giant Indian market whereas, the foreign investors have been able to get around these restrictions with ease, if not impunity.
The immediate thought that comes to one’s mind is that even if the phenomenon might be complex, it is symptomatic of the failure of parliamentary oversight of the executive, the failures of bureaucratic conscience keeping and an inherently selective response mechanism of the judicial institutions.
Let us look at each of the above institutional failures one by one.
Parliamentary oversight appears to be overwhelmed. A comparison of the time and human resources put to use by strategic team of big corporation with that of the standing committees of the Parliament or MPs will give an indication of how resources starved the parliamentary supervision mechanism is. So far as bureaucratic conscience-keeping is concerned, the key strength of any bureaucracy is its institutional memory, institutional reflection and response.
With almost negligible protection of tenure at particular station/post, all of these elements on which bureaucratic conscience-keeping can take roots and be nurtured are themselves threatened.
So far as judicial oversight is concerned, there are two key impediments; one, non intervention in “policy matters” and the reactive framework of justice delivery in our country. The diffuse interests of the common man are left to individual Samaritans and “crusader benches” to raise, argue and settle, in opposition to the might of the industry that can afford the finest talent at the Bar and support them with all expertise, research and materials that are needed. And interestingly judicial decisions that come post facto are dubbed as “damaging market sentiments”.
It is interesting to note that a PIL has been filed by Mr. M L Sharma, advocate, challenging the notifications permitting the FDI in retail and aviation sectors. The matter is fixed for further hearing in November but if one looks at the balance of strength, an individual advocate is pitted against the mighty state and none else than the Attorney General G. E. Vahanvati himself.
So, in the backdrop of this landscape, is there a way forward that can provide greater assurance for safeguard of the public good? Perhaps it is the time to reform in the oversight mechanism, at least in the big ticket reform and “incentive – spurred” investments that can monitor the reality against the rhetoric in a pro-active and transparent manner. I do not propose any definitive answers but do wish to share some thoughts.
Dr. Maurya Vijay Chandra is a practicing Advocate at the Supreme Court. Maurya holds a Masters from the London School of Economics and PhD from the University of London. He has also taught at University of London; NUJS (Kolkata); and UGC Academic Staff College (Ranchi).
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