By Ajai
Shukla
Business Standard, 1st Feb 14
India’s cumbersome
arms procurement procedures and a plodding ministry of defence (MoD) bureaucracy
have long been blamed for shortfalls in combat capability. Now there is another,
more worrying, reason --- a growing crisis of funds, magnified by the lack of
tri-service coordination.
Slowing
economic growth and a weak rupee have left insufficient money for the
military’s ambitious modernisation programme. With no tri-service chief to
coordinate and prioritise the needs of the army, air force and navy, their
15-year “Long Term Integrated Perspective Plan” is just an unaffordable wish
list.
So dire is
the funding shortfall, say senior ministry officials, that negotiations with
vendors are dragged on simply because there is insufficient money for new contracts.
The capital budget (meant for new equipment) goes almost entirely on previous
years’ purchases, for which instalments are paid over 5-10 years. This year
only Rs 2,955 crore of the military’s capital budget of Rs 73,444 crore was available
for new purchases.
Meanwhile,
revenue expenditure rises as the army grows in size, even as pay commissions
increase the cost of manpower. Last month, Rs 7,870 crore was transferred from
the already stressed capital account to meet the burgeoning revenue
expenditure.
In these circumstances,
major acquisitions languish. These include the planned purchase from BAE
Systems of 145 M777 light guns for a mountain strike corps (MSC) on the
Himalayan border. With no order forthcoming, BAE Systems has halted its M777 assembly
line in the USA; the contract cost has risen from $647 million to a potential $885
million. Instead of raising the MSC in five years as planned, it will now be
raised in eight years to spread its Rs 64,700 crore cost.
Also stuck
in the pipeline are contracts with US company, Boeing --- for 22 AH-64 Apache
attack helicopters and 12 CH-47F Chinook multi-mission helicopters, together
worth some $2 billion; and a billion-dollar repeat order for four P-8I maritime
aircraft to supplement the eight already bought. Delay is inevitable in the
purchase of another ten C-17 Globemaster III, worth $4 billion; as also in the
$3 billion purchase of Honeywell engines to extend the service life of the
IAF’s hundred-odd Jaguar fighters.
Seemingly
impossible now is a contract for 126 Rafale medium multi-role combat aircraft
(MMRCA). The IAF would need to fork out Rs 15,000 crore as the 15 per cent
signing amount, even at the lower end of the Rafale’s estimated price band of
$16-20 billion.
Meanwhile,
the weaponry bought this financial year --- like the December 27 purchase of
six C-130J Super Hercules transport aircraft for a billion dollars --- will
swell the “committed liabilities” for coming years, leaving a diminishing
percentage for new purchases. If the Hercules are delivered over four years, the
MoD would need to pre-commit four annual instalments of Rs 1,560 crore each.
The proportion
of pre-committed instalments has risen each year (see Fig 1 below). In 2010-11, the
capital budget allocated Rs 17,278 crore for new contracts and Rs 28,408 for
“committed liabilities”, or instalments due. In 2011-12, there was Rs 9,467 for
new contracts, while Rs 32,995 crore went on committed liabilities. Last year,
the money for new contracts dropped to Rs 5,520 crore, with Rs 54,840 crore pre-allocated
for instalments. This year, there is just Rs 2,955 crore for new contracts,
while Rs 64,680 crore is pre-committed. Next year, without a sharp hike in the
defence budget, there may be nothing for new contracts.
Fig 1: Capital Budget: declining purchasing power
Year
|
Capital Budget
|
Expenditure
| ||
New Contracts
|
Committed Liabilities
|
Total
| ||
2010-11
|
43799
|
17278
|
28408
|
45686
|
2011-12
|
52998
|
9467
|
32995
|
42462
|
2012-13
|
66032
|
5520
|
54839
|
66032
|
2013-14
|
73444
|
2955
|
64680
| |
(Figures include expenditure of army, navy and air force only)
This crisis
has been predictable in the absence of a tri-service commander to coordinate army,
air force and navy spending. Each year, budgetary figures show no correlation
between planning and expenditure (see Fig 2 below). In 2011-12, the military asked for a capital
allocation of Rs 88,680 crore; the government allocated far less, and the
military eventually spent just 59 per cent of what it had projected. Last year,
capital expenditure was just 63 per cent of the Rs 93,828 crore the military
had asked for. This year the military will spend a mere 58 per cent of the
projected requirement of Rs 1,23,911 crore.
Fig 2: Capital Budget: Demands and allocations
Year
|
BE
|
RE
|
Expdr
| |||
Projected
|
Allocated
|
Projected
|
Allocated
| |||
2011-12
|
88680
|
64150
|
72406
|
62199
|
52038
| |
2012-13
|
93828
|
74518
|
80973
|
64535
|
59277
| |
2013-14
|
123911
|
81241
|
---
|
---
|
Likely 72000.00
| |
(Figures include budget for Defence R&D Organisation, Lands & Works, etc)
Former army
vice chief, Lieutenant General Shantanu Chaudhary, says that appointing a
tri-service chief is essential for easing the pressure on military budgets
---both capital and revenue. A permanent chairman of the chiefs of staff
committee (COSC), which the Naresh Chandra Task Force recommended to the prime
minister last year, would rationalise the roles and capabilities of the three
services, many of which are wastefully duplicated today. Expenditure could be reduced
and efficiency increased by getting the army, navy and air force to share
infrastructure, logistics, command systems and even platforms. He cites
multiple examples of needless duplication --- electronic warfare capabilities created
by all three services; complex command, control and intelligence networks that each
service has created separately, instead of a common platform; and separate
surveillance systems that result in thrice the expense and half the efficacy.
“The three
services essentially look out for themselves. The senior-most service chief,
who is the ex-officio Chairman COSC, naturally looks out for his own service
rather than the tri-service good. Sensible modernisation demands a tri-service
chief, who can prioritise procurement, plan budgeting and slash the duplication
and triplication,” says Chaudhary.
The problem is political, The UPA wants to keep the bills in place, please petty scheme stakeholders, so who gets the axe? The forces! they starve the forces of funds, sit on deals without signing them because they want to keep the deficit in control while pleasing everyone and compromising the national security. How about an article exposing their blunder ajaiji?
ReplyDeleteBasically we are SHORT of 10 Billion Dollars
ReplyDeleteMOD can get the remaining 20 billion that is required from the
Finance Min /RBI as it does every year
We need to take the following steps
1 Get 10 BILLION Dollars worth of GOLD from OUR CITIZENS ;
Our Domestic Gold reserves are around ONE Trillion ie 1000 Billion Dollars
2 Pay them in Rupees ( Tax free Fixed Deposits for five Years ) and
3 SELL the GOLD Abroad and
Buy Rafale and everything else
Wouldn't it be more prudent if we frankly just scrap the MMRCA contract and pour more money into the development of the tejas mk2, 3 and so on ???
ReplyDeleteEven if we get the aircraft 2-3 yrs later we'll have a fighter more suited to our requirements and also the maintainence cost will be less.
Even now they dont expect the 1st rafale built by Dassault to arrive before 2016 and the one manufactured by HAL will take god only knows how long...
And frankly a rafale for 120 million dollars is not worth it
Dear Sir,
ReplyDeleteCould you please shed some light on the figures quoted here ? I'm unable to reconcile the figures between the 2 data tables. Taking 2011-12 as an example:
Figure 1: Combined Capex details (consolidated)
2011-12 DETAILS AMOUNT (INR.CR)
Capital budget (combined): 52998
Capital budget (allocated): 42462
Figure 2:Military capex (extract)
2011-12 DETAILS AMOUNT (INR.CR)
Military asked for: 88680
Government allocated: 64150
Military spent(59% of ask): 52321
Does this mean that as per table 1, the tri-services were allocated a capex of INR 42,462 crores but as per table 2, the military spent INR 52321 crores on capex in the same year? That's a gap of INR 9859 crores between allocation and (military only) spend! Even if I should be looking at the combined figure of INR 52998 crores, that reconciles the military spend but means that the navy and airforce had only the remaining INR 677 crores to work with, which is an absurd conclusion. In summary, the numbers don't tally.
How is this possible, unless a capex "trail" from previous years also included here ? Or is it being "front-loaded"? I'm assuming my reading of the tables is jumbled up somewhere and am happy to be corrected. If not, your assertion that planning and expenditure have no correlation bears serious consideration!
UPA looting and plunder has cost this nation more than anything else. Most of the valuable resources are squandered leaving the armed forces with old retiring junk like MIG21, HDW, Sindhugosh, submarines. We don't require enemies if we have congis. They will ensure the nation is finished before enemies think of attacking.
ReplyDeleteThe CIDS was supposed to plan jointly,. LTPP were to be joint and prioritized.Senior leadership in service HQ has a vision extending to their date of retirement with very little perspective planning. It became obvious on CNN-IBN, where you were the lone voice in asking for a re-look on the manpower strength of the armed forces and need for rationalization. Others do not look at these figures and will like to silence anyone who raises such issues. need is rationalization, may be go for an overhaul and national guard type system. Why cant we embody all BSF and CRPF battalions in times of war. Give them some training and they can be used!! Out of box thinking is the need of hour.
ReplyDeleteCANCEL THE MMRCA...BUY TEJAS...SIMPLE..... 1 billion buys 40 tejas versus < 10 rafales ... put in 10 billion and the numbers debacle is over...sometimes it seems ludicrous that we spend tens of billions buying foreign when our own platforms are available at much lower prices....
ReplyDeleteif a new govt is elected this year then it is likely that defence deals like 126 mmrca would be delayed further.sooner or later lca mk2 would be a reality. iaf should have bought some mirage 2000s a decade ago.besides heavy investments in FGFA project whichis being complained aboutby the iaf the cost of MMRCA deal has already soared. the iaf would be wanting several more fighter aircraft.why not simply buy more sukhoi 30s. several countries have rejected the rafale becuase it is too expensive and preferred other affordable light weight aircraft.
ReplyDeleteBest suggestion- put the Rafale deal on hold for 2 years. Once elections are over and a stable government is formed, Rupee value will again rise, then we can sign it.
ReplyDeleteAlso why we need 13 lakhs and 25 thousand military soldiers? Even USA has only 14 lakhs soldiers. We shall have a highly mobilized and smart army personnel with just 7 lakhs soldiers. We could save a lot of money. What is the use of having 1 lakh horse warriors against a nuclear missile?
We could use our Police and Reserve force by giving them better training at war scenarios.
As you mentioned, a Tri-service chief is necessary to co-ordinate
things.
This UPA government is the worst thing that has happened to India. They never think of bringing money to the Government instead of giving everything to Private companies.