A Tejas light fighter comes in to land at Uttarlai air base, Rajasthan
By Ajai
Shukla
Business Standard, 27th Dec 14
Parliament’s
Standing Committee on Defence has sharply criticised the meagre allocations of
funds to the Indian Air Force (IAF), given its long shopping list of aircraft
needed for boosting air power.
The government
has allocated the IAF less than half the capital budget the service had
requested for this year, with no funding for purchases like the Rafale fighter
and modernisation of Jaguar fighters and IAF bases.
The
committee notes that “…as per (Defence) Ministry’s own submission the impact of
shortfall in Capital Budget will lead to slowdown of modernization, delay in
induction of new capabilities and resultant asymmetry in capability with respect
to threat perception… This appears to demonstrate a lackadaisical approach of
the Ministry.”
The
parliamentary panel reveals in its “Fourth Report on Demands for Grants
(2014-15)”, which was tabled on December 22, that the IAF had projected a
requirement of Rs 62,408 crore for capital purchases this year. Against that, it
was allocated only Rs 33,711 crore, half its request.
“The
Committee are baffled at such a meagre allocation as Air Force has a long list
of projects planned for induction during the year 2014-15…” the committee
notes, listing out the Rafale fighter; the planned fitment of high-power
engines into the fleet of 100-plus Jaguar fighters; a range of new helicopters,
and an on-going project to modernise all the IAF’s air bases.
While the
IAF’s capital allocation of Rs 33,711 crore amounts to over one-third of the
total defence capital budget, most of this --- Rs 31,056 crore --- is pre-committed
for “Committed Liabilities”, i.e. instalments due on purchases made in earlier
years (many defence buys are paid over a duration of 7-10 years).
For “New
Schemes”, the IAF has been allocated just Rs 2,645 crore, barely one-fifth of
the Rs 12,395 crore that the air force said was required.
The first
instalment of a fresh defence contract, payable at the time of signing, is
usually 15 per cent of the contract value. In projecting a demand of Rs 12,395
crore for “New Schemes”, the IAF was effectively demanding the wherewithal to
sign fresh contracts worth Rs 82,633 crore. That means, with Rs 12,395 crore
paid out this year as the signing amount, liabilities worth Rs 70,238 crore
would be carried forward as “Committed Liabilities” payable from future
budgets.
Instead, by
allocating Rs 2,645 crore for “New Schemes”, the government has allocated the
IAF the funds to sign fresh contracts worth about Rs 17,633 crore. After the
down payment this year, about Rs 15,000 crore would be carried forward to the
coming years.
The
committee is as scathing about the slashing of the IAF’s revenue budget.
Against the IAF’s projection of Rs 27,073 crore, the government allocated just
Rs 20,507 crore, a shortfall of Rs 6,566 crore. Since the government could only
marginally bring down the IAF’s projected payroll of Rs 11,032 crore (by Rs 702
crore), deep cuts came in the non-salary expenditure, which includes cost of
fuel, transport and training. Under this head, the IAF’s request for Rs 16,642
crore was pared by Rs 5,765 crore to Rs 10,877 crore.
Terming the
scenario “dismal”, the Committee recommends that additional revenue funding be
provided, especially for aviation fuel, “since scarcity for fuel will adversely
impact training facilities and the Committee are apprehensive that any
compromise in training will be detrimental for the safety of our pilots. The
Committee wants to be intimated about the same.”
The Committee
has also strongly backed the IAF’s repeated pleas to boost its strength of
fighter squadrons. The IAF has told the panel that, against its sanctioned
strength of 42 squadrons (each is authorised 21 fighter aircraft), there are
just 25 squadrons available today, with another 14 squadrons of MiG-21s and
MiG-27s retiring by 2024.
The report says
the “country’s security requirements are being compromised by ignoring
consistently widening gap between sanctioned and existing strengths. The
Committee desire that concrete and prompt steps be initiated expeditiously to
induct sufficient number of functional platforms and a status report in this
regard be submitted to the Committee.”
The
committee is headed by Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) member and former
Uttarakhand chief minister, Major General BC Khanduri (Retired). In the committee
is an unusually heavyweight set of 21 Lok Sabha and 10 Rajya Sabha members.
These include prominent BJP MPs like Murli Manohar Joshi; Hindutva champions
Vinay Katiyar and Tarun Vijay; pro-military activist, Rajeev Chandrashekhar; former
prime minister HD Deve Gowda; former Congress chief minister Captain Amarinder
Singh and cabinet minister Ambika Soni.
Capital allocations to military
(2014-15)
(all
figures in Rs crore)
Service
|
Projection
|
Allocation
|
Committed
Liability
|
New
Schemes
|
|
|
|
|
|
Army
|
41,936
|
26,533
|
Not known
|
Not known
|
|
|
|
|
|
Navy
|
28,253
|
22,804
|
18,205
|
4,599
|
|
|
|
|
|
Air Force
|
62,408
|
33,711
|
31,056
|
2,645
|
|
|
|
|
|
Reduce the no. of soldiers to 8 lakhs. Just stop recruiting.
ReplyDeleteSir is this all a precursor for doubling the defence budget of the country
ReplyDeleteIncrease the defense budget to a minimum of 5%.
ReplyDeleteThe ineffecient corrupt outdated redundant mod setup be modernised by retiring 18000employees of mod in delhi with all class 3,4and majority of class 2 posts also abolished and reduced and in place have a integrated mod of service and IFS , IAS officersINCLUDING MAJORITY OF SERVICE OFFICERS , BANKERS CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS , SCIENTISTS FROM DRDO , ATOMIC ENERGY , ISRO WITH TOTAL STRENGTH NOT MORE THAN 300 and presided by aquisation and modernisation boards having ex business lumanries of repute
ReplyDelete