This Article is From Feb 01, 2019

Not Vote On Account But Account For Votes: P Chidambaram

The senior Congress leader claimed that the government had missed the fiscal deficit target, as warned by him earlier.

Not Vote On Account But Account For Votes: P Chidambaram

"It was not a Vote on Account. It was an Account for Votes," Mr Chidambaram tweeted.

New Delhi:

Former Finance Minister and Congress veteran P. Chidambaram on Friday described the Interim Budget as an "Account for Votes" and not a Vote on Account and said the Modi government has further weakened fiscal stability.

"It was not a Vote on Account but an Account for Votes," Mr Chidambaram told the media here.

"It was a full-fledged Budget accompanied by an election campaign speech. By doing so, the government has trampled on time-honoured conventions," he said.

He added that the government had no hope of returning to power and had, therefore, "acted desperately and recklessly, and in violation of the Constitution".

He said the big takeaway was that the present government had "further weakened fiscal stability".

"For the second year in succession, the government has missed the Fiscal Deficit target. The revised estimate shows a slippage from 3.3 per cent to 3.4 per cent. Worse, for 2019-20 too, the government has proposed an FD of 3.4 per cent. The government has thrown the FRBM Act out of the window.

"Similarly, the government will end the year with a Current Account Deficit (CAD) of 2.5 per cent as against the CAD in the previous year of 1.9 per cent," said Mr Chidambaram.

"Both numbers for the current year and the estimate of FD for 2019-20 point to incompetent fiscal management and a disdain for fiscal prudence," he said.

Pointing to the "last-gasp" announcements including a scheme for welfare of cows, a new Department of Fisheries and pension scheme for unorganised workers, he asked: "If these were important and necessary interventions, what was the government doing for five years?"

He also questioned the "measly" farmers' income support.

"The government's desperation is proved by its announcement of the Farmers' Income Support Scheme to provide a measly sum Rs 6,000 per year to every small/medium farmer. The Fiscal Deficit numbers are telling.

"By recklessly breaching fiscal discipline, the government will fund the scheme this year entirely out of borrowed money of Rs 20,000 crore. Next year too, the scheme will be funded entirely out of borrowed money of Rs 75,000 crore.

"While I welcome the support to farmers, I ask what about the non-farmer poor? What about the urban poor," he asked.

He said the new scheme was intended to help the farmer, but in reality it will also help the absentee landlord.

"I would like to ask how the government will reach the money to the tenant-farmer and farm labourer who actually tills the land," he added.



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