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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Tuesday, April 04, 2000 |
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It's a disaster for farm sector: Gowda
By Our Special Correspondent
BANGALORE, APRIL 3. The former Prime Minister and President of
the Janata Dal (Secular), Mr. H. D. Deve Gowda, today criticised
the new Exim Policy announced by the Centre on March 31 and said
it was a retrograde step and would hit the agricultural sector
hard.
He told presspersons here that by abolishing the Quantitative
Restrictions (QRs) on the import of a number of food products,
the BJP-led NDA Government at the Centre had dealt a death blow
to the agriculture sector.
He said the Centre, by abolishing the QR on import of as many as
714 items, had only demonstrated that it had buckled under
pressure from the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund.
He said the measure would lead to throttling of the agriculture
sector, severely affect the rural poor and result in economic
chaos. The dwindling employment opportunities and alarming rise
in rural poverty would be disastrous to the fiscal health of the
country.
Mr. Deve Gowda warned that the poor and the neglected in the
country might even revolt against the oppressing economic
situation. The lack of subsidy in the agricultural sector would
further affect the already grim situation in food production. If
more food items were allowed to be imported, it would cause an
irreparable damage to the country's agricultural sector, he
warned.
Mr. Gowda said the economic reforms initiated in 1991 was a
``gift of the Congress(I) Government''. The BJP, which was in the
Opposition then, was very vocal in opposing the economic reforms
saying that it was detrimental to ``Swadeshi economics.'' The
BJP, which was reciting the mantra of Swadeshi, not only opposed
the economic reforms but also staged a dharna in the Lok Sabha
against reforms. The very same party, now in power, was
spearheading the ``Videshi economics'' and freely allowing the
World Bank and the International Monetary Fund to dictate terms,
he added.
Mr. Gowda said the Union Government had, in a sinister manner,
finalised its economic policy at the time of finalising the visit
of the President of the United States, Mr. Bill Clinton, under
pressure from the World Bank and the IMF. It was only a formality
and it had fulfilled its promise to the IMF and WB soon after the
visit of Mr. Clinton, he charged.
Quoting extensively from ``Asian Affairs'', a highly reputed
journal carrying economic analysis of Asian countries, Mr. Deve
Gowda said while the United States Government had formulated its
WTO policy only after obtaining advise from as many as 3,000
experts and after wide public debate, the NDA Government had
taken an important economic policy decision bypassing even
Parliament. It was a deliberate intention to avoid public
exposure, he said.
He said the blanket removal of Quantitative Restrictions on a
number of vital food articles, including milk, milk products,
tea, coffee, wheat, vegetables and nuts, would have disastrous
consequences.
Mr. Gowda said the worst affected in the industrial sector were
small units. While 80 per cent of the small-scale industries had
already been closed, the new Exim Policy would wipe out the
remaining, he added.
He said there was an alarming increase in rural poverty with the
figure reaching 40 per cent and the percentage of unemployment
had shot up from 1.7 to 12 per cent. The only way to check
popular uprising against the ``anti-people economic policy of the
Centre'' was to revive subsidy in the agriculture sector, extend
export incentive to farm produce and set up an Agricultural Price
Stabilisation Fund. The Congress(I) was faced with a ``Catch 22''
situation as while some Congressmen were for economic reforms at
any cost, others were against it, he said.
Referring to the steep increase in prices of foodgrains supplied
through the public distribution system and the State Government's
attitude towards it, Mr. Gowda ridiculed the KPCC(I)'s decision
to organise a protest rally in the city against the increase.
Mr. Gowda said his party would organise protests against the
economic policies of the Centre and mobilise public opinion in
this regard.
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