While the promptness with which the decision on disinvestment has been taken is laudable, some larger concerns over the exercise still remain to be addressed.
The National Democratic Alliance government deserves a great deal of credit for moving quickly towards disinvestment of central public-sector enterprises.
The Union Cabinet on Wednesday decided that 10 per cent of the government’s stake in Coal India Ltd would be sold.
Similarly, the sale of five per cent of its stake in ONGC and 11.4 per cent in the hydropower public-sector unit, NHPC, has been cleared.
At a maximum, given current market prices for the PSUs’ shares, this could bring in Rs 45,800 crore (Rs 458 billion), though some estimates put the total likely proceeds at a little lower than that figure.
This will help the government meet its fiscal-deficit target for the current financial year -- the Budget had set aside Rs 39,925 crore (Rs 399.25 billion) as income from disinvestment.
The speed with which the Narendra Modi-led government has moved to put some of the Centre’s PSUs on the market compares favourably with the dilatoriness displayed under the last United Progressive Alliance government.
On that occasion, stake sales were frequently postponed so late in the financial year -- presumably in the hope of a more buoyant market -- and so targets were continually revised downwards, and finally never met.
That is a heritage that the new government is doing well to avoid.
It is, of course, aided in its efforts by a particularly ebullient equity market, just as it would be argued that the last government’s tardiness on this issue was influenced by the stock market’s lacklustre performance.
While the promptness with which the decision on disinvestment has been taken is laudable, some larger concerns over the exercise still remain to be addressed.
Disinvestment should not become a sham exercise, in which its primary purpose is reduced to meeting fiscal-deficit