Amirullah Khan October 18, 2002
#39 Posted by harimau on October 23, 2002 7:53:09 am
Ref jay #32
[A uniquely indian reality which the run of the mill economists fail to address is the gold stocks held by the people. One estimate puts the gold at 150 billion dollars, on top of that nearly 2 billion dollars worth is imported legally.]
The IMF estimated that India imports 800 tons of gold a year, most of it going into jewellery. That works out to approximately $8 billion a year, not the $2 billion you mentioned.
Some 20 years back when India finally authorized the export of silver from India, the Wall Street Journal said that if all the silver mines in the world were to be shut down, Indian exports from personal holdings alone could supply the silver requirements of the world for 10 years.
Looks like the sultans of Delhi (both the Mughal and the British kind) couldn`t and didn`t get the last rupee out of Indian hands.
[A uniquely indian reality which the run of the mill economists fail to address is the gold stocks held by the people. One estimate puts the gold at 150 billion dollars, on top of that nearly 2 billion dollars worth is imported legally.]
The IMF estimated that India imports 800 tons of gold a year, most of it going into jewellery. That works out to approximately $8 billion a year, not the $2 billion you mentioned.
Some 20 years back when India finally authorized the export of silver from India, the Wall Street Journal said that if all the silver mines in the world were to be shut down, Indian exports from personal holdings alone could supply the silver requirements of the world for 10 years.
Looks like the sultans of Delhi (both the Mughal and the British kind) couldn`t and didn`t get the last rupee out of Indian hands.
#38 Posted by harimau on October 23, 2002 7:53:08 am
Ref dost-mittar #35
[I dont think anyone can separate an Indian woman from her gold, Morarji Desai tried his level best when he was the Finance Minister, and failed.]
Walk along the streets in Hong Kong or Singapore and you can make the same statement about the Chinese and gold. The fact of the matter is gold ornaments along with silver are the only tangible, portable, liquid assets that the war-ravaged Chinese and Indians know. That being the case, you will not be able to separate them from their one source of security in an uncertain world. Paper currencies become worthless during wartimes (remember when Germans used to take wheelbarrows full of marks to buy a loaf of bread during the Weimar Republic?) or when new countries are formed out of old ones (how did Bangladeshis get new takas for their Pakistani rupees and what did the Bangladesh government do with the worthless Pakistani rupees?) and modern coins are no longer made of silver or gold with intrinsic value. So expect all prudent people to hoard gold.
[I dont think anyone can separate an Indian woman from her gold, Morarji Desai tried his level best when he was the Finance Minister, and failed.]
Walk along the streets in Hong Kong or Singapore and you can make the same statement about the Chinese and gold. The fact of the matter is gold ornaments along with silver are the only tangible, portable, liquid assets that the war-ravaged Chinese and Indians know. That being the case, you will not be able to separate them from their one source of security in an uncertain world. Paper currencies become worthless during wartimes (remember when Germans used to take wheelbarrows full of marks to buy a loaf of bread during the Weimar Republic?) or when new countries are formed out of old ones (how did Bangladeshis get new takas for their Pakistani rupees and what did the Bangladesh government do with the worthless Pakistani rupees?) and modern coins are no longer made of silver or gold with intrinsic value. So expect all prudent people to hoard gold.
#37 Posted by khamkhwa on October 22, 2002 10:20:21 pm
[aamdani athanni kharcha rupaiyya..in pakilands case that would mean aamdani chavanni kharcha dedh rupaiyya]
LOL. :)
#36 Posted by arjun_m on October 22, 2002 11:53:50 am
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#34 Posted by arjun_m on October 22, 2002 7:35:53 am
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#33 Posted by jay on October 22, 2002 6:10:32 am
dost-mitter 29,
A uniquely indian reality which the run of the mill economists fail to address is the gold stocks held by the people. One estimate puts the gold at 150 billion dollars, on top of that nearly 2 billion dollars worth is imported legally. Some how this dead resource has to mobilised into some kind of capital asset. May be indexed pension against gold, some innovative secritisation instrument.
I always believed that real progress of india will start only when share certificates are used as disply items at marriage instead of jewellary, when non gold jewellary is more popular thatn the gold one as in the west.
All this precoccupation with FDI and risk rating are mere mimicing of the west, some thing as far as possible every indian academic should resist.
A uniquely indian reality which the run of the mill economists fail to address is the gold stocks held by the people. One estimate puts the gold at 150 billion dollars, on top of that nearly 2 billion dollars worth is imported legally. Some how this dead resource has to mobilised into some kind of capital asset. May be indexed pension against gold, some innovative secritisation instrument.
I always believed that real progress of india will start only when share certificates are used as disply items at marriage instead of jewellary, when non gold jewellary is more popular thatn the gold one as in the west.
All this precoccupation with FDI and risk rating are mere mimicing of the west, some thing as far as possible every indian academic should resist.
#32 Posted by Faruk on October 22, 2002 6:10:32 am
Pankaj # 30
Neither is DRDO not is the Atomic Energy program funded by the Defense budget. The research and development mentioned in the link you mentioned is probably the three services own research work. Here is the link to the union budget. http://indiabudget.nic.in/ub2002-03/eb/stat02.pdf
We can expect the defense budget to show a sharp increase as we start deploying all the defense systems being developed.
Regards,
Faruk
Neither is DRDO not is the Atomic Energy program funded by the Defense budget. The research and development mentioned in the link you mentioned is probably the three services own research work. Here is the link to the union budget. http://indiabudget.nic.in/ub2002-03/eb/stat02.pdf
We can expect the defense budget to show a sharp increase as we start deploying all the defense systems being developed.
Regards,
Faruk
#31 Posted by harimau on October 21, 2002 3:16:21 pm
Ref Hydra #27
[if Pakistan is 1/7th the size of India even if it spends TWICE the % percentage in Defence they are lees than SEVEN TIMES more percentage % of budget that they should be spending if they wanted parity .]
Why do you want parity?
[Doesnt small percentage of ALRGE number still is bigger number than large % percentage of a small number]
Nobody needs math lessons from you. The question is why Pakistan wants parity with India. Why can`t you guys be happy with less?
[if Pakistan is 1/7th the size of India even if it spends TWICE the % percentage in Defence they are lees than SEVEN TIMES more percentage % of budget that they should be spending if they wanted parity .]
Why do you want parity?
[Doesnt small percentage of ALRGE number still is bigger number than large % percentage of a small number]
Nobody needs math lessons from you. The question is why Pakistan wants parity with India. Why can`t you guys be happy with less?
#30 Posted by Pankaj on October 21, 2002 9:16:06 am
Faruk
Okay I did some search and here are the details for 2000-2001 defense budget of India:
``
http://www.indianembassy.org/policy/defense/india_defense_budget_2000.htm
Projected Defense Expenditure
Rs.58, 5870 million ($13.4 billion)
Percentage of GDP
2.68%
75% of India`s defense budget is to be spent on pay & allowances, training, welfare and exercise.
Research and Development accounts for 5.3 % of overall allocation. The expected expenditure on pensions itself is greater than the total naval budget. ``
I still dont know whether purchase of armaments from ordinance factories is included in the budget. But the budget for DRDO is, I guess, a part of the defense budget under Research and development. It also says that we do end up spending 75% of the budget on salaries and pensions. If the expenditure on RAW and other miscellaneous expenditures are kept outside the defense budget, then the real budget should be larger than $13.4 bn. Also then the ``real percentage`` spending on salaries and pensions as a part of the ``effective budget`` would also come down such that more amount of money is available for maintenance, Research and development and acquisitions. Say 70% of the effective budget of $15 bn is spend on salaries. Then $4.5 bn is available for the aforementioned tasks which seems to be more reasonable than our previous estimate of $2.8 bn.
Okay I did some search and here are the details for 2000-2001 defense budget of India:
``
http://www.indianembassy.org/policy/defense/india_defense_budget_2000.htm
Projected Defense Expenditure
Rs.58, 5870 million ($13.4 billion)
Percentage of GDP
2.68%
75% of India`s defense budget is to be spent on pay & allowances, training, welfare and exercise.
Research and Development accounts for 5.3 % of overall allocation. The expected expenditure on pensions itself is greater than the total naval budget. ``
I still dont know whether purchase of armaments from ordinance factories is included in the budget. But the budget for DRDO is, I guess, a part of the defense budget under Research and development. It also says that we do end up spending 75% of the budget on salaries and pensions. If the expenditure on RAW and other miscellaneous expenditures are kept outside the defense budget, then the real budget should be larger than $13.4 bn. Also then the ``real percentage`` spending on salaries and pensions as a part of the ``effective budget`` would also come down such that more amount of money is available for maintenance, Research and development and acquisitions. Say 70% of the effective budget of $15 bn is spend on salaries. Then $4.5 bn is available for the aforementioned tasks which seems to be more reasonable than our previous estimate of $2.8 bn.
#28 Posted by Faruk on October 21, 2002 3:12:19 am
Pankaj # 25
Expenditure on DRDO and other research organizations is not included in the defense expenditure. RAW has its own budget. The ordinance factories have their own budget. So this figure of $14 billion is definitely misleading.
We should expect the defense budget to shoot up in the coming five years when the missile systems being developed are deployed. We simply have to get rid of these white elephants to maintain a growth rate above 5%.
Regards,
Faruk
Expenditure on DRDO and other research organizations is not included in the defense expenditure. RAW has its own budget. The ordinance factories have their own budget. So this figure of $14 billion is definitely misleading.
We should expect the defense budget to shoot up in the coming five years when the missile systems being developed are deployed. We simply have to get rid of these white elephants to maintain a growth rate above 5%.
Regards,
Faruk
#26 Posted by Pankaj on October 20, 2002 1:03:34 pm
Stuka
``I know I can get Defence budgets comparatively easily. The figures that interested me was the 80% of the budget component going into salaries and pensions. Do other defence forces have similar manpower wage constraints?
``
I have a general feeling that a large percentage of Indian budget goes to salaries and pensions and other other fringe benefits. However I am sceptical about the figures like ``80%`` generally thrown around without adequete details of what all things they include in that 80%. The reason I am sceptical is because of the following logic:- The per capita expenditure of Indian army is definitely not more than that of Pak Army. At best it can said to be comparable. Now a figure of 80% would imply that $11.2 bn out of $14 bn goes towards meeting salary and pension expenditures which leaves a meagre $2.8 bn for weapon acquisition, armaments, maintenance, purchasing spares, funding DRDO research programs, funding RAW and old equipment upgrade. If you add up typical costs incurred in all of the above it will easily overshoot the figure of $2.8 bn with maintenance, armament purchase and continuous upgrades topping the list. Secondly, the personnel ratio of Indian Army to Pak Army is around 2:1. Assuming similar per capita expenditure, Pak Army should be spending 11.2/2 = $6.1 bn on salaries and pensions. This is clearly at least 70-80% larger than the entire Defense budget of Pakistan what to say of salaries and pensions. This makes me suspicious when they throw around dubious figures such as ``80%``; they should give more details on what all things are they actually including in these figures and it is definitely not the salaries and pensions only. Anyway I am habitually sceptical of people who ``throw around figures`` without proper substantiation. Statistics, they say, is like a mini skirt; it reveals what is interesting but conceals what is significant :-)
``I know I can get Defence budgets comparatively easily. The figures that interested me was the 80% of the budget component going into salaries and pensions. Do other defence forces have similar manpower wage constraints?
``
I have a general feeling that a large percentage of Indian budget goes to salaries and pensions and other other fringe benefits. However I am sceptical about the figures like ``80%`` generally thrown around without adequete details of what all things they include in that 80%. The reason I am sceptical is because of the following logic:- The per capita expenditure of Indian army is definitely not more than that of Pak Army. At best it can said to be comparable. Now a figure of 80% would imply that $11.2 bn out of $14 bn goes towards meeting salary and pension expenditures which leaves a meagre $2.8 bn for weapon acquisition, armaments, maintenance, purchasing spares, funding DRDO research programs, funding RAW and old equipment upgrade. If you add up typical costs incurred in all of the above it will easily overshoot the figure of $2.8 bn with maintenance, armament purchase and continuous upgrades topping the list. Secondly, the personnel ratio of Indian Army to Pak Army is around 2:1. Assuming similar per capita expenditure, Pak Army should be spending 11.2/2 = $6.1 bn on salaries and pensions. This is clearly at least 70-80% larger than the entire Defense budget of Pakistan what to say of salaries and pensions. This makes me suspicious when they throw around dubious figures such as ``80%``; they should give more details on what all things are they actually including in these figures and it is definitely not the salaries and pensions only. Anyway I am habitually sceptical of people who ``throw around figures`` without proper substantiation. Statistics, they say, is like a mini skirt; it reveals what is interesting but conceals what is significant :-)
#25 Posted by meet_taimoor on October 20, 2002 1:03:34 pm
Ref harimau #23
Well... nobody in Pakistan is trying to tell India what to do to improve its condition. They can well understand their own plights and problems. Why to write whole article then? And as far as Muslims cant live with others, May I ask wats going on in Gujrat and incidents in churches some time ago in India. I dont want to blame any religious group for anything. Fanatics have always been hijacking religions. Thanx
Well... nobody in Pakistan is trying to tell India what to do to improve its condition. They can well understand their own plights and problems. Why to write whole article then? And as far as Muslims cant live with others, May I ask wats going on in Gujrat and incidents in churches some time ago in India. I dont want to blame any religious group for anything. Fanatics have always been hijacking religions. Thanx
#24 Posted by stuka on October 20, 2002 10:57:38 am
Pankaj
I know I can get Defence budgets comparatively easily. The figures that interested me was the 80% of the budget component going into salaries and pensions. Do other defence forces have similar manpower wage constraints?
I know I can get Defence budgets comparatively easily. The figures that interested me was the 80% of the budget component going into salaries and pensions. Do other defence forces have similar manpower wage constraints?
#23 Posted by harimau on October 20, 2002 8:54:33 am
Ref meet_taimoor #19
[Countries like India and Pakistan are facing huge economical problems due to their own stubbornness. If India and Pakistan cut down their defence spendings, I guess, economic management (and life of common man) will become quite easier.]
Pakistan spends twice as much as India does on Defense as a percentage of its total budget.
The Pak Army is twice as big now as it was before Bangladesh was liberated. Twice the army for half the country.
These are facts that Fakhrs in Pakistan do not want to address.
Do not try to tell what India should do to keep its economic house in order.
[But, the hatred in the heart against each other is so deep-rooted, that only a miracle can change the attitude of the two countries. So, lets live with these circumstances.....]
It goes back to your basic TNT, that Muslims cannot live with Hindus. Now it is Muslims cannot live with Christians, they cannot live with Ahmadiyyas, they cannot live with Shias. Soon, it will be, they cannot live with each other.
[Countries like India and Pakistan are facing huge economical problems due to their own stubbornness. If India and Pakistan cut down their defence spendings, I guess, economic management (and life of common man) will become quite easier.]
Pakistan spends twice as much as India does on Defense as a percentage of its total budget.
The Pak Army is twice as big now as it was before Bangladesh was liberated. Twice the army for half the country.
These are facts that Fakhrs in Pakistan do not want to address.
Do not try to tell what India should do to keep its economic house in order.
[But, the hatred in the heart against each other is so deep-rooted, that only a miracle can change the attitude of the two countries. So, lets live with these circumstances.....]
It goes back to your basic TNT, that Muslims cannot live with Hindus. Now it is Muslims cannot live with Christians, they cannot live with Ahmadiyyas, they cannot live with Shias. Soon, it will be, they cannot live with each other.
#22 Posted by jay on October 20, 2002 7:56:50 am
Rating agencies,
In the blind adulations and infalliability of the rating agencies, khan the teacher should include the info that enron and worldcom were rated AAA by these agencies in his lectures. It is pathetic and shameful that people like khan are simply mouthing the views of american with out being able to take into account the ground realities in india. Even more disguecting that he poses as a teacher in india, supposed to have a mind of his own.
In the blind adulations and infalliability of the rating agencies, khan the teacher should include the info that enron and worldcom were rated AAA by these agencies in his lectures. It is pathetic and shameful that people like khan are simply mouthing the views of american with out being able to take into account the ground realities in india. Even more disguecting that he poses as a teacher in india, supposed to have a mind of his own.
#21 Posted by Faruk on October 20, 2002 7:56:50 am
Here is a relevant article
http://hindustantimes.com/news/181_87463,0002.htm
Fiscal deficit ``unacceptably high``: Vajpayee
Reuters
New Delhi, October 19
Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee said on Friday the fiscal deficit of the central and state governments was ``unacceptably high`` and had hurt the country`s economic development.
The combined fiscal deficit of the central and state governments is close to 12 per cent of India`s GDP, leaving little funds for development activities in a country where more than a quarter of the billion-plus people live in poverty.
``The fiscal deficit of the centre and states together is unacceptably high. It has seriously affected our country`s economic and social development,`` Vajpayee told a conference of state chief ministers.
``It (fiscal deficit) has widened the gap between people`s expectations and the system`s ability to fulfil them,`` he said.
Vajpayee`s comments came after international rating agency Standard and Poor`s downgraded the country`s local currency ratings last month to junk status, citing the country`s high deficit levels.
It also blamed a swelling debt burden and vulnerable public finances for the downgrade and said continued big fiscal deficits and a ``languid pace of economic reform would lead to a further ratings downgrade``.
Vajpayee stressed the need for a broader political consensus on crucial developmental and governance reforms to achieve better fiscal discipline and higher economic growth rates.
India undertook economic reforms back in 1991, but the process has lost momentum because of opposition from political parties, trade unions and bureaucratic hurdles.
Parliament has yet to approve several key plans, such as cutting government stakes in state-run banks, labour reforms and proposed legislation to curb the soaring fiscal deficit.
Failed to meet targets
The chief ministers` conference failed to arrive at a consensus to freeze payment of an allowance to government employees to offset inflationary pressures and a bonus which would have translated into a saving of 18 billion rupees annually for the cash-strapped government.
Successive governments have shied away from taking harsh economic decisions for fear of losing mass support in a country where political compulsions often override economic logic.
India has failed to meet its fiscal deficit targets consistently in the past as government spending exceeded revenue receipts, leading to massive borrowings.
The International Monetary Fund has expressed concern over India`s high fiscal deficit which is one of the largest in the world.
The government overshot its target in 2001/02 due to lower-than-expected revenues, ending at 5.7 per cent of GDP but has set a target of 5.3 per cent in the current year.
The government has said it expects the economy to grow at 5.5 per cent in the year to March 2003, putting it among the world`s fastest-growing, but the rate would be still short of double-digit levels needed to cut poverty levels.
While industrial output, exports and revenue receipts have picked up in recent months, India is also reeling under the impact of its worst drought in 15 years.
Analysts say the effect of the drought could lead to a widening of the deficit as the government spends more on rural relief and rehabilitation. It is yet to announce an estimate of the drought damage.
http://hindustantimes.com/news/181_87463,0002.htm
Fiscal deficit ``unacceptably high``: Vajpayee
Reuters
New Delhi, October 19
Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee said on Friday the fiscal deficit of the central and state governments was ``unacceptably high`` and had hurt the country`s economic development.
The combined fiscal deficit of the central and state governments is close to 12 per cent of India`s GDP, leaving little funds for development activities in a country where more than a quarter of the billion-plus people live in poverty.
``The fiscal deficit of the centre and states together is unacceptably high. It has seriously affected our country`s economic and social development,`` Vajpayee told a conference of state chief ministers.
``It (fiscal deficit) has widened the gap between people`s expectations and the system`s ability to fulfil them,`` he said.
Vajpayee`s comments came after international rating agency Standard and Poor`s downgraded the country`s local currency ratings last month to junk status, citing the country`s high deficit levels.
It also blamed a swelling debt burden and vulnerable public finances for the downgrade and said continued big fiscal deficits and a ``languid pace of economic reform would lead to a further ratings downgrade``.
Vajpayee stressed the need for a broader political consensus on crucial developmental and governance reforms to achieve better fiscal discipline and higher economic growth rates.
India undertook economic reforms back in 1991, but the process has lost momentum because of opposition from political parties, trade unions and bureaucratic hurdles.
Parliament has yet to approve several key plans, such as cutting government stakes in state-run banks, labour reforms and proposed legislation to curb the soaring fiscal deficit.
Failed to meet targets
The chief ministers` conference failed to arrive at a consensus to freeze payment of an allowance to government employees to offset inflationary pressures and a bonus which would have translated into a saving of 18 billion rupees annually for the cash-strapped government.
Successive governments have shied away from taking harsh economic decisions for fear of losing mass support in a country where political compulsions often override economic logic.
India has failed to meet its fiscal deficit targets consistently in the past as government spending exceeded revenue receipts, leading to massive borrowings.
The International Monetary Fund has expressed concern over India`s high fiscal deficit which is one of the largest in the world.
The government overshot its target in 2001/02 due to lower-than-expected revenues, ending at 5.7 per cent of GDP but has set a target of 5.3 per cent in the current year.
The government has said it expects the economy to grow at 5.5 per cent in the year to March 2003, putting it among the world`s fastest-growing, but the rate would be still short of double-digit levels needed to cut poverty levels.
While industrial output, exports and revenue receipts have picked up in recent months, India is also reeling under the impact of its worst drought in 15 years.
Analysts say the effect of the drought could lead to a widening of the deficit as the government spends more on rural relief and rehabilitation. It is yet to announce an estimate of the drought damage.
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