Majority govts aren't always good
In a nation like India, which is very diverse, it is often better and wiser to take the cautious, middle path rather than make some bold move.
Hung Parliament” is a phrase that terrifies the stock market. The thinking is that our economy needs strong and decisive leadership that a government formed without a single party’s majority fails to provide. It results in lack of economic direction, accompanied by lower GDP growth. There are too many vested interests inside the Cabinet and regional parties often have a veto on what can and cannot be done by the leadership. This is the basis of the thinking in favour of a majority government and against coalitions. The evidence of recent years does not support this thinking. The five years of the UPA-I coalition (2005-2009) produced an average GDP growth of 8.5 per cent, the highest in any five years in India’s history. It was produced by a government led by the Congress with 145 seats. Some of the best legislation we have had in our country, including the Right to Information, also came during this period. When the same coalition took power again in the next election, the Congress increased its seats to over 200. Ideally, this should have meant a more decisive government with a freer hand. And perhaps this was the case.
However, the GDP numbers did not reflect this. The economy grew at an average of just under seven per cent annually. Though we must take into account that this was also the period when the world was recovering from a financial crisis (which means there was very little external support in achieving higher growth). The weakest period of economic growth in the last 15 years has, in fact, come at a time when we have had a government with an absolute majority and at a time when the global economy is roaring. I do not mean to comment on the performance of the government but to merely illustrate that there appears to be no relation between a government with a majority and GDP growth as the stock market and its analysts seem to fear. The other worry is that coalition governments cannot produce major reforms. However, the biggest economic reforms in India, the ones 1991 onwards, also came under a minority government that was for the entire length of its term susceptible to threats of collapse.
The so-called “dream Budget” of 1998 was presented by a coalition government that was perhaps the smallest in India’s history (being supported by the Congress from the outside). Given this history, it is not easy to figure out why the markets think coalitions are a bad thing for India. Last year, journalist T.N. Ninan compared the World Bank’s Worldwide Governance Indicators for three governments: UPA-I, UPA-II and the NDA of the present times. On control of corruption, India’s percentile rank improved sharply from 37.0 in 2013 to 47.1 in 2016. However, this was not very different from the Manmohan Singh government’s score of 46.8 in 2006. On government effectiveness, India’s rank was 45.2 in 2014 while it was 57.2 in 2016 and 57.3 in 2007 under UPA-I. On regulatory quality, the scores were 35.1 in 2012 and 41.3 in 2016, but higher in 2006 at 45.1. Mr Ninan pointed out that on political stability and absence of violence, India’s rank was poor. The country’s rank was 17.5 in 2005 and 13.8 in 2014. It was 17.1 in 2015 but then fell to 14.3 in 2016.
On rule of law, the country’s rank in 2016 (52.4) was marginally lower than in 2013 (53.1), and significantly lower than in 2006 (58.4). The sixth and final indicator is voice and accountability. On it, India’s ranking fell from 61.5 in 2013 to 58.6 in 2016. The data Mr Ninan presents seems to be quite clear. There is nothing to indicate to us, as the markets and analysts seem to believe, that a “strong and decisive” government delivers anything that a “weak” coalition cannot. It is about the leadership and its direction and not the structure of the Lok Sabha that seem to be the most important factors. When real national interest is being debated, it does not seem to be difficult to bring all parties on board even when there is an absence of a clear majority. I would argue that there are times when a clear majority may not be such a good thing. In a nation like India, which is very diverse, it is often better and wiser to take the cautious, middle path rather than make some bold move that might turn out to be a gamble.
We should accept that some part of this thinking in favour of a one-party government is also based on preconceived notions — for example, that regional parties are all corrupt and will always act in selfish ways or that caste-based parties are not sophisticated enough to be trusted with wise decision making. This is prejudice more than analysis and in our democracy no one party can claim to be higher than the other in any way. The reason I wrote this is that recent events in north India indicate that we may be heading towards a hung Parliament in 2019 or one in which the ruling party does not have a full majority. If it is so and opinion polls begin to predict this later this year, market analysts and business papers will tell us that it is a terrible thing for the economy and for political stability. However, our history says that it is not a problem and many of us even think that a hung Parliament is welcome.