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IPA Special

Working Class Feeling Let Down By Modi’s Interim Budget

By
Nitya Chakraborty

The central trade unions representing
both organised and unorganized workers of the country are seething with anger
at the step motherly treatment to the entire working class of India in the
interim budget of the Modi government presented on February 1. Only the BMS
belonging to the BJP hailed in a limited manner the budget proposals but the
overwhelming opinion among the trade unions was that the budget has been a
disaster for the struggling workers who have been worst hit in the recent years
due to the policies of the NDA regime.

The AITUC in a statement said that the
BJP led NDA government has once again attempted to throw jumlas on the face of
suffering people of India through its vote on accounts (interim budget). The
announcements made are with forthcoming elections in mind, just throwing
statistics without any basis. On one hand side it is a cruel joke on the
marginal farmers who hold land up to 2 hectares which number about 86  % of total farmers in the country offering
rupees 17 per family per day. The rural landless poor who work in the fields
and related agricultural activities have been offered nothing.

According to AITUC, there is nothing
in the budget statement to address unemployment which has reached highest in
last 45 years. Nothing offered for job creation, no steps announced to fill up
the already sanctioned central and state government posts. Hence the youth is
once again cheated. Further, those who should be covered in EPF in India should
be about 10   crore workers which actually
are yet not fully registered and hence all of them not been covered for
pension. It is those registered only who are already being covered for pension
that the pronouncement in this budget to be benefiting with pension of rupees
three thousand where as demand of these workers is for pension not less than
7500.

There is nothing in the budget for
about 35 crore of unorganized sector workers other than the 10 crore workers
who are covered under EPF. The working class is also betrayed contrary to the
claims being made by the prime minister and the finance minister in regard to
providing dignity to the workers. Nothing announced about the demand of Rs
18000 minimum wage to workers about 45 crore of them who were hoping against
hope.

The false claim of control on price
rise is another insult on the people who are finding it too difficult to run
their kitchens in the face of steep rise in the prices of every day essential
items, AITUC said.

The Centre of Indian Trade Unions
(CITU) termed the 2019 interim budget presented by finance minister Piyush
Goyal misleading and “a fraudulent exercise before elections”. The statement by
CITU came hours after Goyal announced a slew of populist measures in his budget
speech, including tax rebates, a minimum income scheme for farmers and a
monthly pension scheme for labourers above the age of 60 who are employed in
the unorganised sector.

CITU has called the pension scheme an
‘exercise in deceit’. “The allocation of a meager Rs 500 crore itself is an
indication of the lack of seriousness and honesty in covering the more than 40
crore unorganised workers in the country. And they will receive this pension
only by contributing continuously up to the age of 60, which most of them
cannot do,” CITU president Hemalata said in a statement.

“The real fraudulent intention behind
announcement of this programme becomes clear when the cow-protection receives a
bigger allocation of Rs 750 crore,” the statement said.

The strongly worded statement accused
the Modi government of “feigning sleep” and said it forgot the workers and
peasants who had created wealth for the country. CITU added that the government
was “busy aggressively implementing the so called ‘reforms’ to serve their
corporate master, domestic and foreign, and fill their kitty looting the people
and national resources.”

The budget, which was expected to be a
vote on account, or an interim one, saw the government come out with sops for
farmers, labourers, middle class and even cows. Opposition parties have called
the budget an attempt to woo voters ahead of Lok Sabha elections. Former
finance minister and Congress leader P Chidambaram said, “Instead of being a
vote on account, it’s an account for votes.”

CITU also called the budget a
“desperate bid to attract votes when defeat in the ensuing Parliament elections
is staring at its face.”

The statement noted that the budget
did not address the topic of unemployment and sagging economy at all. A
Business Standard report citing leaked National Sample Survey Office (NSSO)
data said on Thursday that unemployment had reached a 45-year high in India.
According to the report, unemployment stood at 6.1 per cent in 2017-18. Hours
later on Thursday evening, NITI Aayog Vice Chairman Rajiv Kumar and CEO Amitabh
Kant called a press conference and proceeded to defend the government over the
jobs report by saying the leaked data was ‘not verified’.

“There is no concrete proposal except
the rhetoric of ‘job seekers becoming job providers,” the CITU statement said,
adding that the interim budget had done nothing to improve wages of workers and
incomes of peasants and ignored the demand for loan waivers.

CITU also criticised the Pradhan
Mantri Kisan Samman Nidhi scheme, which guarantees Rs 6,000 yearly payment to
farmers with less than two hectares of land holding, by calling it ‘cruel’
towards farmers. “There is no intention to address the agrarian crisis in a
meaningful way,” CITU said.(IPA Service)

The post Working Class Feeling Let Down By Modi’s Interim Budget appeared first on Newspack by India Press Agency.

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