The Financial Express
 
 
 
 

 

 
   LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Saturday, September 01, 2001 

  MPs should be paid more
Many MPs do not deserve any increase in their pay or allowances because they are undisciplined and frequently disrupt parliamentary proceedings. Besides, some MPs have a criminal background. However, it is also true that most of them lead honest lives and deserve to get better pay and allowances, so that they do not fall prey to corrupt practices. In accordance with the legal principle ‘it is better that 10 guilty persons are let free rather than one innocent person be hanged’, the majority should not suffer merely because of the existence of a few black sheep within their fraternity.
However, there should be a reasonable addition to the taxable income of MPs on account of personal perquisites. It is hoped that MPs do their best to improve their image, give a more disciplined performance, and utilise their Rs 2 crore constituency allowance properly.
-- R N Lakhotia, New Delhi


Dire straits
The RBI report mentioning an estimated GDP growth of 5.2 per cent in the year 2000-01, is an indicator of the performance of the government in general and the finance ministry in particular. There is no hope of a 8 per cent annual growth rate as envisaged in the 10th plan. This is not due to world recession, which is a standard epithet of Mr Yashwant Sinha, but is entirely due to the bungling of politicians, officials, businessmen, stock and share brokers, the UTI scam, non-recovery of dues to banks etc.
When the Harshad Mehta scam took place in 1992, the Joint Parliamentary Committee made certain recommendations for preventing such scams. Since these recommendations were not implemented, the Ketan Parekh scam took place. Similarly, the UTI scam also took place and money went into wrong pockets. It is mentioned in the report that gross domestic savings have improved. This is ridiculous as the interest on bank and post office deposits has been reduced. Only black money may have been deposited. These things indicate that a serious fiscal deficit is in the making and a heavy burden will be imposed on the citizens in the next budget. On top of this miserable state of affairs in governance, MPs have cheated the electorate and selfishly accepted a three-fold increase in their remuneration.
-- B S Ganesh, On e-mail

Financial truth
The turmoil on the stock markets (which started in 1992 when Rs 10,200 crore vanished and remained untraced) and the convulsions in 2000 and 2001, have brought home some old financial truths. Among the various lessons learnt, not only in India but globally, five truths stand out : That profits still matter; financing is something to be coveted, and earned; recession can still happen; the old economy isn’t dead and diversification remains crucial.
The invention of infotech ruled the West for a while and now it’s no longer booming. But infotech won’t die out. It will resurge. That said, the brick and mortar industries still have a lot of life left in them. Those who ignore these old financial truths, do so at their peril.
-- B T Dastur, Mumbai

Clarification
The chart “Sources of Growth” carried along with an extract from the RBI’s Annual Report, 2000-01 on the News & Analysis page (FE, August 31) inadvertantly referred to Capital Stock as Capital Market. The error is regretted.
— Editor
 
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