By Ajai Shukla
Business Standard, 13th Oct 16
Last month’s terrorist strike in Uri and
India’s retaliatory strikes across the Line of Control (LoC) show how quickly
military tensions can flare up in South Asia. Yet India’s military remains
worryingly unprepared for serious escalation, especially when faced with the
obvious threat from a more assertive and expansive China. As things stand, over
85 per cent of the defence capital budget is spent on pre-committed items and
there is little money left to buy anything new.
This at a time when the military is facing serious
shortfalls in combat aircraft, warships and submarines, air defence units and
even basic combat kit like helmets, boots and bulletproof jackets. Specifically
for the army, India needs night vision equipment, a modern rifle for the
infantry, new howitzers for the artillery and light tanks for the armoured
corps. Not to mention that the ammunition stockpiles are insufficient for
prolonged hostilities. A report last year by the Parliament’s Consultative
Committee on Defence unequivocally demanded more money, stating that defence
allocations were insufficient for running the military (revenue budget) as well
as buying new weaponry (capital budget).
Yet, India’s defence allocations remain
disconcertingly stagnant. Comparing defence budgets year-to-year has been made
difficult by this year’s change in accounting methodology. Even so, comparing
on an apples-for-apples basis, this year’s defence allocations as a percentage
of the gross domestic product (GDP) are the lowest since 1962. That year, after
the military’s humiliating defeat at the hands of China, the defence budget had
to be revised mid-year.
India’s shopping list for weaponry for the
15-year period from 2012-2027 is clearly spelt out in the Long Term Integrated
Perspective Plan (LTIPP). Yet capital allocations seem not to budget for the money
required. This year’s capital allocation of Rs 86,340 crore is about the same
level as the past two years’ capital budget. And, like in those years, it has
about 90 per cent pre-committed towards instalments on purchases made during
preceding years. The amount earmarked for new purchases is so low that it has
been exhausted on just one purchase alone --- the Rafale fighter, whose 15 per
cent signing advance amounts to Rs 8,700 crore.
Additional allocations are now required for
fresh acquisitions over the remaining half of 2016-17. At present, defence
allocation amounts to Rs 3,41 lakh crore this year, or 2.26 per cent of GDP.
With additional allocations inevitable, the revised estimates should officially
raise defence spending to 2.5 per cent of GDP. This should be raised next year
to 2.75 per cent and to three per cent in 2018-19, which should be the level
thereafter.
But merely throwing money at the problem will
not boost defence readiness. In previous years, a significant chunk of the
capital budget has been surrendered unspent. To avoid this, the defence
ministry must iron out its planning and acquisition processes. This would
require the ministry to be staffed by specialists in security administration. To
be sure, there are other issues for the government to look at. For instance,
defence production units such as Mazagon Dock must learn to deliver on
schedule; China builds a destroyer in three years while India takes eight to 10
years. India also needs more private sector participation in defence production
as this will help make more weapons components in India. Lastly, the weapons acquisition
process must be radically shortened; as an example, formal tendering to buy two
Rafale fighter squadrons has taken so long that deliveries will begin in 2019,
15 years after the initial request for information went out to manufacturers.
In this regard, the military too needs to develop expertise in equipment
planning and procurement, especially in activities like drawing up specifications
--- currently framed so expansively that most vendors are unable to fulfil the
requirements.
Ajai sir,
ReplyDeleteEarlier this year during budget month, you talked about India's defense expenditure as percentage of total budget expenditure. That is a more correct way to understand a government's commitment towards it's armed forces. Military expenditure comes solely from union government. No state government or pvt sector company contributes to any country's defense budget. But GDP consists of both private and public expenditure, that too of both state and union government. So defense budget as percentage of GDP is just a figure and it tells us nothing.
For eg. Consider China in 2014.
Military budget = $131 bn officially or may be $200 bn unofficially
GDP = $10 Trillion
Total Budget expenditure = $2.4 Trillion
Defense budget as % of GDP = 1.3% (Official) and 2% (unofficial)
Defense budget as % Total budget = 5.4% (Official) to 8.33% (Unofficial)
Similarly for USA in 2014
Defense budget = $614 bn
GDP = $17 trillion
Total Budget exp = $3.7 trillion
Defense budget as % of GDP = 3.6 % of GDP
Defense budget as % Total budget = 16.5% to 17%
Now you already know data for India which is
Defense budget = Around 1.7 % of GDP
But Defense budget = Around 18% of total budget exp .
Further if you look at data of many European countries i.e their defense budget as percentage of total budget exp, range is always 5-8 % only. But India spends 18% which is more than twice of CHina and is even higher than that of USA.
Again my point is this only that a government's commitment for military is better reflected by defense budget as percentage of total budget and NOT by defense budget as percentage of GDP. Therefore the ceiling you gave for defense budget 3% of GDP should be modified and given as % of total exp.
To conclude, I can only say that even though Indian military faces shortages and wages related issue, to expect that defense budget would be increased significantly is simply unrealistic, as India already spends way more than most of the other countries.
Why do we see it as combat aircraft, warships and submarines, air defence units and even then basic combat kit items like helmets, boots and bulletproof jackets. Why is not the other way around; initially buy basic combat kit like BPJs, boots, helmets, night vision etc ... the stress seems to be on big ticket items and these will all rot on the shelf of deterrence ... the other LowBudget items on the other hand get used day in day out 365 days. These need to procured in double time .... Rafael Jets will be a waste if not used to strike back!!
ReplyDeleteExpecting the MOD to do ANYTHING to be of help to the armed forces is worse than wishful thinking. It is stubborn refusal to acknowledge what everyone knows.
ReplyDelete