Thursday, February 28, 2013

Summary of Economic Survey 2013-14

Indian economy is likely to grow between 6.1% to 6.7% in 2013-14 as the downturn is more or less over and the economy is looking up. 
Following the slowdown induced by the global financial crisis in 2008-09, the Indian economy responded strongly to fiscal and monetary stimulus and achieved a growth rate of 8.6 per cent and 9.3 per cent respectively in 2009-10 and 2010-11, but due to a combination of both external and domestic factors, the economy decelerated growing at 6.2% and an estimated 5% in 2011-12 and 2012-13 respectively. 

The Economic Survey 2012-13, presented by the Finance Minister Shri P. Chidambaram in the Lok Sabha predicts that the global economy is also likely to recover in 2013 and various government measures will help in improving the Indian economy’s outlook for 2013-14. While India’s recent slowdown is partly rooted in external causes, domestic causes are also important. 

The slowdown in the rate of growth of services in 2011-12 at 8.2%, and particularly in 2012-13 to 6.6 percent from the double-digit growth of the previous six years, contributed significantly to slowdown in the overall growth of the economy, while some slowdown could also be attributed to the lower growth in agriculture and industrial activities. 

But despite the slowdown, the services sector has shown more resilience to worsening external conditions than agriculture and industry. 

For improved agricultural growth, the survey underlines the need for stable and consistent policies where markets play an appropriate role, private investment in infrastructure is stepped up, food price, food stock management and food distribution improves, and a predictable trade policy is adopted for agriculture. FDI in retail allowed by the government can pave the way for investment in new technology and marketing of agricultural produce in India. Fast agricultural growth remains vital for jobs, incomes and food security.
The survey points out that the priority for the Government will be to fight high inflation by reducing the fiscal impetus to demand as well as by focusing on incentivizing food production through measures other than price supports. But unlike the previous year, when food inflation was mainly driven by higher protein food prices, this year the pressure has been coming mainly from cereals. 

On the Balance of Payments and External Position, the survey highlights that with net exports declining, India’s balance of payments has come under pressure. Moreover, in the current fiscal, foreign exchange reserves have fluctuated between US$ 286 billion and US$ 295.6 billion, while the rupee remained volatile in the range of Rs 53.02 to Rs 54.78 per US dollar during October 2012 to January 2013.

The survey had a special chapter focusing on jobs. The future holds promise for India provided we can seize the “demographic dividend” as nearly half the additions to the Indian labour force over the period 2011-30 will be in the age group 30-49. India is creating jobs in industry but mainly in low productivity construction and not enough formal jobs in manufacturing, which typically are higher productivity. The high productivity service sector is also not creating enough jobs. As the number of people looking for jobs rises, both because of the population dividend and because share of agriculture shrinks, these vulnerabilities will become important. Because good jobs are both the pathway to growth as well as the best form of inclusion, India has to think of ways of enabling their creation.

The survey calls for a widening of the tax base, and prioritization of expenditure as key ingredients of a credible medium term fiscal consolidation plan. This along with demand compression and augmented agricultural production should lead to lower inflation, giving the RBI the requisite flexibility to reduce policy rates. Lower interest rates could provide an additional fillip to investment activity for the industry and services sectors, especially if some of the regulatory, bureaucratic, and financial impediments to investment are eased. On financial sector reform, it takes note of the high level of gross NPAs (non-performing assets) of the banking sector which increased from 2.36 percent of the total credit advanced in March 2011 to 3.57 percent of total credit advanced in September 2012. The survey suggests that revival of growth will help contain NPAs, but more attention will have to be paid to whether projects are adequately capitalized up front given the risks. Expenditure on social services also increased considerably in the 12th Plan, with the education sector accounting for the largest share, followed by health. In the 11th Plan period nearly 7 lakh crore rupees has been spent on the 15 major flagship programmes. A number of legislative steps have also been taken to secure the rights of people, like the RTI, MGNREGA, the Forest Rights Act, AND THE Right to Education. However, the survey notes that there are pressing governance issues like programme leakages and funds not reaching the targeted beneficiaries that need to be addressed. Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT) with the help of the Unique Identification Number (Aadhaar) can help plug some of these leakages. With the 12th Plan’s focus on ‘environmental sustainability’, India is on the right track. However, the challenge for India is to make the key drivers and enablers of growth-be it infrastructure, the transportation sector, housing, or sustainable agriculture-grow sustainably. 
Dr. Raghuram G. Rajan, Chief Economic Adviser, Ministry of Finance writes in an introduction to the Survey that these are difficult times, but India has navigated such times before, and with good policies it will come through stronger. Slowdown is a wake-up call for increasing the pace of actions and reforms. The way out lies in shifting national spending from consumption to investment, removing the bottlenecks to investment, growth, and job creation, in part through structural reforms, combating inflation both through monetary and supply side measures, reducing the costs for borrowers of raising finances and increasing the opportunities for savers to get strong real investment returns.

Highlights of Union Budget 2013-14


• Chidambaram underlines Fiscal Consolidation Path. Also talks of Kelkar Committee. Worry is Current Account Deficit
• Efforts of #UPA has brought down WPI by around 7% | Food Inflation is Major Concern
Battle against inflation must be fought from all fronts says Chidambaram in his #Budget2013 speech
• We have retrieved some Economic Space - That will be used to serve #UPA's Socio Economic Schemes
• Planned Expendiature in 2013-14 will be 29.4% more than last year
• Rs 41560 cr to Schedule Caste Sub Plan and Rs 21590 cr to Tribal Sub Plan .
• Rs 3511 Cr to Ministry of Minority Affairs.
• Additional Rs 200Cr to Ministry of Women and Child Welfare to Protect Women
• Rs 100Cr to
Department of Disabilities - First Ever in Modern India
• Rs4727Cr for Medical Education and Research
• Rs 169 Cr to Department of #AYUSH Ayurveda
• Provide Rs 65867 Cr to #Education - HRD Ministry Rs 28250 Cr to SSA | Rs 3983 to RMSA
• Reconstruction of #Nalanda University – Govt. Committed to University
• Rs17700 cr to ICDS - Increase of more than 11%
• Multisectoral Programme for #Malnutrition in 100 districts
• Ministry of Rural Development - Rs 80194 Cr , Substantial increase from Rs 55000 Cr Last Year
• Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission - Rs14873 Cr - 10000more buses to Hill States
• Rs. 33,000 cr to be allocated to MNREGA
Minimum Support Price of Every Agri Produce have been increased significantly by UPA Govt
• Rs3415 Cr to Agricultural Research
Green Revolution in Eastern India - Allocation of Rs1000cr to Eastern States
• Rs500Cr to start Crop Diversification to Original Green Revolution States
Watershed Management - Increased Allocation of Integrated Wateshed Programme
• Nutrifarms - Rs200Cr for Pilot Projects for Nutrition Based Crops to fight Maluntrition
• Pilot Scheme to Rejuvenate Coconut Gardens - Now in Entire State of Kerala
• Credit Guarantee fund of Rs 1000 cr for Small Farmers
• Rs372 Cr for
New National LiveStock Mission
• Rs 10000cr Budgetary Allocation to NATIONAL  FOOD SECURITY ACT
• 12th Plan has Rs 55 Lakh Crores for #Infrastructure over the next 5 years
• Infra Debt funds will be encouraged. 4 IDF's registered with SEBI
• Allowing Some Instutiions to issue tax free bonds #Infrastructure
• Building Roads to NE States Connect it to Myanmar
• Rs5000Cr to Available to NABARD for Construction of Silos and Warehouses. Construction of Godowns by Panchayats Now
• Regulatory Authority for #Road Sector to be constituted
• Cabinet Commitee on Investment Set Up to remove bottlenecks - 2 meetings held - Oil/Gas Power Projects Taken up
• A Company investing more than Rs 100Cr will be entitled to deduct 15% of Investment Allowance
• ZERO custom duty to plant machinery for Semi Conductor units
• A person taking a loan for first home upto 25 lakhs- will be entitled a deduction of interest upto Rs 1 Lakh 
• Protecting Savings From Inflation- Inflation Instrument Bonds and Certificates Announced
• Delhi-Mumbai Industrial Corridor- 2 Smart Industrial Cities in Gujarat and Maharashtra to start
Chennai-Bengaluru Industrial Corridor announced
• Transmission Project from Srinagar to Leh 
• 2 New Ports -
Sagar in West Bengal and another at Andhra Pradesh
6th National Waterway in Assam
• Oil and Gas Exploration Policy reviewed - NELP Blocks will be cleared.
• Financial Restructing of DISCOMS - Urge State Govts to sign agreement
• Non Tax Benifits for 3 years to MSME's
• Technology Upgradation Fund Scheme in Textile Sector Rs 2400 cr for Modernisation of Powerloom Sector
• Handloom Sector - Working Capital and Term Loans & Concessional Rate of 6% - Additional sum of 96Cr for Interest Subvention
• Rs14000Cr Additional Capital in 13 Public Sector Banks
• Women Bank Announced- Employees Women, Serves Women Bank - INDIA'S FIRST PUBLIC SECTOR BANK FOR WOMEN with Rs1000Cr
Rashtriya Swasthya Bima Yojna extended to Rickshaw pullers, Auto Rickshaw drivers, Ragpickers and Sanitation workers
• propose to Follow International - Investor who has a stake of more than 10% is FDI, Less than 10% is FII
• KYC of banks will be sufficient to acquire insurance policies, banks to act as brokers
• Start up Committees and SME's - will be allowed to be listed with conditions
• Scheme to Encourage Municipalities - Waste to Energy Projects - Will use different instruments for incentives
• Generation Based Incentive of Rs800Cr to Wind Energy Segments
• Govt to construct power transmission system from Srinagar to Leh at the cost of Rs 1,840 crore, Rs 226 crore
National Skill Development Corporation - 9Million People to be Skilled in 2013-14
• Rs200Cr to fund Organisations to scale up Innovations in Science and Technology for Common People
National Institute of Sports Coaching at Patiala to be set up
• Proposed to increase the allocation for the defence to Rs 203,672 cr.
• 173 Central Schemes to be reduced to only 70 Schemes
• Rs 1000Cr fund created for Safety of Women
• Skill Trained Youth- Certificate of Rs 10000 to be given after training - Rs 1000Cr for Skill Development
• "
Aapka Paisa, Aapke Haath" #Aadhaar- Direct Benifit Transfer- to be rolled out throughout country during THE TERM OF UPA
• We must redeem our promise by 2016-17 and bring down fiscal deficit to 3% and revenue deficit to 1.5%
• Tax Rates- Personal Income Tax- No Case to Revise Either Slabs or Rates
• Assuming an inflation rate of 10%, propose to provide tax credit of Rs. 2000 to every person who has income above Rs.5 lakh
• Eligibility Conditions for Life Insurance Policies for Disability Relaxed
• Surcharge of 10 pc on those whose taxable income is 1 cr per annum, FM cites Azim Premji
• Donations to
National Children's Fund will be eligible for 100% tax deduction
• 42,800 people in the country who admitted to a taxable income exceeding Rs.1 cr per year
• FM proposes TDS on value of immovable property as transaction on immovable properties are usually undervalued
• TDS of 1% on land deals over Rs 50 lakh, Only Non-Agricultural Deals
• Scope of Annual Information Returns, Extend e-pay, e-filing mandatory in Income Tax Department
• Custom Duty- Environment Friendly Vehicles , Hybrid Vehicled - Exempted.
• Increase duty for Luxury Motor Vehicles from 75% to 100%
• Duty Free Limit - Rs 50000 for male passengers and Rs 100000 for female passengers
• Totally Exempt Handmade Carpets and Choir or Jute Products from Excise Duty
• SUVs occupy more road and parking space and ought to bear higher tax: excise duty rate to be increased from 27% to 30%
• Service Tax on All Airconditioned Restaurants
• Voluntaritly Compliance Scheme for Service Tax Returns
• Centre will form consensus with States to compensate | Rs 9000Cr will be provided by centre to state as Compensation

Key Features of Union Budget 2013-14


The Union Budget for 2013-14 aims at higher growth rate leading to inclusive and 
sustainable development as ‘mool mantra’. 

• Finance Minister makes three promises: to women, youth and the poor. 
Nirbhaya Fund to empower women and to keep them safe and secure. 
• Proposal to set up India’s first
Women’s Bank as a public sector bank. 
• Rs. 1,000 crore for skill development of ten lakh youth to enhance their 
employability and productivity. 
Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT) Scheme to be rolled out throughout the country 
during the term of UPA Government. 
• Fiscal Deficit for 2013-14 is pegged at 4.8 percent of GDP. The Revenue Deficit 
will be 3.3 percent for the same period. 
• Plan Expenditure placed at Rs. 5,55,322 crore. It is 33.3 percent of the total 
expenditure while Non Plan Expenditure is estimated at Rs. 11,09,975 crore. The 
plan expenditure in 2013-14 will be 29.4 percent more than the RE of the current 
year i.e. 2012-13. 
• Substantial rise in allocation to the social sector.
Allocation for Rural 
Development Ministry raised by 46 percent to Rs. 80,194 crore
. 
• The target for farm credit for 2013-14 has been set at Rs. 7,00,000 crore against 
Rs. 5,75,000 crore during the current year. 
• Rs. 10,000 crore earmarked for
National Food Security towards the incremental 
cost. 
• Education gets Rs. 65,867 crore, an increase of 17 percent over RE for 2012-13. 
• ICDS gets Rs. 17,700 crore. This is 11.7 percent more than the current year. 
Drinking Water and Sanitation will receive Rs. 15,260 crore. Rs. 1,400 crore is 
being provided for setting up water purification plants to cover arsenic and 
fluoride affected rural areas. 
• Health and Family Welfare Ministry has been allotted Rs. 37,330 crore.
National 
Health Mission
will get Rs. 21,239 crore which represents 24.3 percent over the 
RE. 
• The
Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission (JNNURM) will receive 
Rs. 14,873 crore as against RE of Rs. 7,383 crore in the current year. 
• Defence has been allocated Rs. 2,03,672 crore. 
• Rs. 3,511 crore have been earmarked to Minority Affairs Ministry, 60 percent 
higher than RE for 2012-13. 2
• The Government will encourage
Infrastructure Debt Fund (IDF) and allow some 
institutions to raise tax free bonds upto Rs. 50,000 crore which is 100 percent 
more than the current year. 
India Infrastructure Finance Corporation (IIFC), in partnership with ADB will 
help infrastructure companies to access bond market to tap long term funds. 
• Income limit under
Rajiv Gandhi Equity Savings Scheme (RGESS) will be raised from Rs. 10 lakh to Rs. 12 lakh. 
• First home loan from a bank or housing finance corporation upto Rs. 25 lakh 
entitled to additional deduction of interest upto Rs. 1 lakh. 
• Proposal to launch
Inflation Indexed Bonds or Inflation Indexed National Security Certificates to protect savings from inflation. 
• On oil and gas exploration policy, the Budget proposes to move from the present 
profit sharing mechanism to revenue sharing. Natural gas pricing policy will be 
reviewed. 
• On coal, the Budget proposes adoption of a policy of pooled pricing. 
• Benefits or preferences enjoyed by MSME to continue upto three years after they 
grow out of this category. 
• Refinancing capacity of SIDBI raised to Rs. 10,000 crore. 
Technology Upgradation Fund Scheme (TUFS) for textile to continue in 12th Plan with an investment target of Rs. 1,51,000 crore. 
• Rs. 14,000 crore will be provided to public sector banks for capital infusion in 
2013-14. 
• A grant of Rs. 100 crore each has been made to 4 institutions of excellence 
including Aligarh Muslim University, Banaras Hindu University, Tata Institute of 
Social Sciences, Guwahati and Indian National Trust for Art and Cultural 
Heritage (INTACH). 
• New taxes to yield Rs. 18,000 crore. 
• A surcharge of 10 percent on persons (other than companies) whose taxable 
income exceeds Rs.1 crore have been levied. 
• Tobacco products, SUVs and Mobile Phones to cost more. 
• Relief of Rs. 2000 for the tax payers in the first bracket of 2 to 5 lakhs. 
• ‘
Voluntary Compliance Encouragement Scheme’ launched for recovering service tax dues. 

• Rs. 9,000 crore earmarked as the first installment of balance of CST 
compensations to different States/UTs.

Budget 2013 - 20 Top Points


Budget 2013 - Youth & Education




Budget 2013 - Food Security & Women




The Finance Minister Sh. P. Chidambaram has set apart an amount of Rs. 10,000 crore, over and above the normal provision for food subsidy, towards the incremental cost that is likely under the National Food Security Act. Presenting the budget of 2013-14 in Lok Sabha today, the Finance Minister hoped that the National Food Security Bill will be passed by Parliament as early as possible as Food Security is as much a basic Human Right as the Right to Education or the Right to Health Care. 



Government has taken a number of initiatives and steps supporting such initiatives being taken by non-government organizations to ensure the dignity and safety of women. In the backdrop of incidences of violence against women which challenges liberal and progressive credentials of our country, the Finance Minister Sh. P. Chidambaram pledged to do everything possible to empower women and to keep them safe and secure.

Presenting the Budget 2013-14 in the Lok Sabha today, the Finance Minister proposed to set-up 
Nirbhaya Fund. Citing the multifarious role a woman plays as a child, a young student, sportswoman, homemaker, working woman and the mother who needs their support
, the Minister announced that the Government will contribute Rs. 1,000/- crores in this Fund. Shri Chidambaram said that Ministry of Women and Child Development and other ministries concerned will work out the details of the structure, scope and the application of the Fund.

Budget 2013 - Rural Development




GM crops claim to increase yields, but the problem is of access and distribution, not production


Speaking at the annual Oxford Farming Conference a few weeks back, the rebel environmentalist Mark Lynas, who went over to the all-powerful GM industry, was quoted as saying: " Research published in the proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences suggests the world will require 100% more food to feed the maximum projected population adequately."

It's not the first time this argument has been used, but considering the emphasis Lynas laid on the capabilities of controversial genetic engineering technology to meet the growing demand for food, a flurry of articles and editorials appeared. The underlying argument is the same. The world needs to produce more for the year 2050, and therefore we need GM crops.

Well, what population projections are we talking of ? The planet today hosts seven billion people, and all estimates point to population growing to nine billion by 2050. According to the 
Food and Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations (FAO), more than 870 million people were chronically undernourished in 2012, with almost 250 million of the world's hungry living in India.

These appalling statistics generate an impression of an acute shortfall in food production. At every conference, the same sets of statistics are flashed to justify the commercialisation of GM crops. But how much food is globally available? Is the world really witnessing a shortfall in food production? Or, for that matter, is there a shortage of food in India? These are the questions that have been very conveniently overlooked.

Let us therefore take a look at the performance of global agriculture in the year 2012. Despite the severe drought in the US and Australia, where wheat production is anticipated to fall by 40%, the
US Department of Agriculture (USDA) estimates that the world still harvested 2239.4 millionmetric tonnes, enough to feed 13 billion people at one pound per day.

In other words, the food being globally produced today can feed twice the existing population. According to the
International Assessment of Agricultural Knowledge, Science and Technology for Development (IAASTD), against the average requirement of about 2,400 calories per capita, what is presently available is 4,600 calories. So where is the crisis on the food production front? The crisis is in food (mis)management, which surprisingly is being ignored.

In the
US, Canada and Europe, 40% food is wasted. For example, Americans waste $165 billion worth of food every year, which could very well meet the entire requirement of sub-Saharan Africa. Food wasted in Italy, if saved, can feed the entire population of the hungry in Ethiopia. According to the UK Institution of Mechanical Engineers, almost half the food produced globally is allowed to go waste. Studies show that 50% of fruits and vegetables stocked by supermarkets in US actually rot. If all the food wastage was to be appreciably reduced, hunger and malnutrition can easily become history.

In India too, it is not a crisis in food production.
On Jan 1, India had 66 million tonnes of food stocks. As someone has said, if you were to stack all those bags of grain one over the other, you could climb up to the moon and back. That's the quantity of food that has been available almost every year since 2001.

While visuals of food rotting in godowns are fresh in the memory, the government has been merrily exporting the surplus rather than feeding its hungry millions. This fiscal,
wheat exports are expected to touch 9.5 million tonnes; rice exports have already crossed nine million tonnes in 2011-12. Instead of propping up food procurement and distribution, the food ministry is actually toying with the idea of withdrawing from procurement operations and using surplus stocks in futures trading, leaving the hungry to be fed by the markets.

Meanwhile, GM crops are being promoted as the answer to growing food needs. In reality, there is no GM crop in the world that actually increases crop productivity. In fact, the yields of GM corn and GM soybean, if USDA is to be believed, are actually less than the non-GM varieties.

Nor has the promise of a drastic reduction in the usage of harmful pesticides proved to be correct. Charles Benbrook of the 
Washington State University has conclusively shown that between 1996 and 2011, the overall pesticides use in US has risen by a whopping 144 million kg. In addition, as much as 14.5 million acres is afflicted with 'super-weeds' — weeds that are very difficult to control. And such has been the contamination that 23 weeds now fall in the category of 'super-weeds'.

Regarding safety, a few months back the revelations by Giles-Eric Seralini, a molecular biologist at the University of Caen in France, shocked the world when for the first time he demonstrated long-term studies involving rats fed for two years with Monsanto's Roundup-Ready GM maize. The rats had developed huge kidney and mammary gland tumours, had problems with their body organs and showed increased mortalities.

Against the usual practice of such studies involving feeding rats with GM foods for 90 days, Seralini had for the first time ever experimented with rats for two years, which corresponds to the entire human lifespan. As expected, the shocking results, peer-reviewed and published in a respected scientific journal, have already created quite a furore internationally.

I therefore don't understand the need to take a huge risk with human health and environment when there is food available in abundance. The greater challenge is to curb wastage, provide adequate access and ensure judicious distribution of food.

( Devendra Sharma : The writer is a food and agriculture analyst. )

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

SARAL


The Satellite with ARGOS and ALTIKA (SARAL) is a joint Indo-French satellite mission for Oceanographic Studies launched on Feb. 25 , 2013 . SARAL will perform altimetric measurements designed to study ocean circulation and sea surface elevation. The payloads of SARAL are: 

Ka band Altimeter, ALTIKA- built by the French National Space Agency CNES. The payload is intended for oceanographic applications, operates at 35.75 Giga Hertz.

ARGOS Data Collection System- built by the French National Space Agency CNES. ARGOS contributes to the development and operational implementation of the global ARGOS Data Collection System. It will collect a variety of data from ocean buoys to transmit the same to the ARGOS Ground Segment for subsequent processing and distribution. 

Solid State C-band Transponder (SCBT) is from ISRO and intended for ground RADAR calibration. It is a continuation of such suppport provided by C-Band Transponders flown in the earlier IRS-P3 and IRS-P5 missions. 

The payloads of SARAL are accommodated in the Indian Mini Satellite-2 bus, which is built by ISRO.
SARAL Appilcations
SARAL data products will be useful for operational as well as research user communities in many fields like 

  • Marine meteorology and sea state forecasting
  • Operational oceanography
  • Seasonal forecasting
  • Climate monitoring
  • Ocean, earth system and climate research
  • Continental ice studies
  • Protection of biodiversity
  • Managment and protection of marine ecosystem
  • Environmental monitoring
  • Improvement of maritime security