The Manmohan Singh government is digging an even bigger hole for itself by claiming there was no loss of revenue from the sweetheart sale of 2G spectrum to favoured corporate houses.
“Milord,” cunning lawyers have argued in countless Hindi movies, “how can there have been a murder when there is no dead body?” I was reminded of this line when I heard Kapil Sibal — who has been performing as an understudy at the Ministry of Communications and Information Technology ever since A. Raja was ousted on corruption charges — bravely defending the legacy of his predecessor at a press conference. By attacking the Comptroller and Auditor General's 2G spectrum scam report and claiming the government lost no revenue despite the fact that “procedural irregularities in the implementation of the first-come first-served policy” may have occurred, Mr. Sibal has done the political equivalent of removing the “dead body” from the crime scene and then declaring his clients innocent. For if the government lost no money through the sale of spectrum in 2008, it stands to reason that the politicians, bureaucrats and businessmen who are today being investigated could not have made any money either. Illegitimate profits cannot be conjured out of thin air — which is what spectrum essentially is. There is no dead body milord.
Sadly for Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Congress president Sonia Gandhi, who no doubt prepped Mr. Sibal to make his ill-advised arguments, the CAG report is full of incriminating corpses. And their ghosts are likely to stick around long enough to haunt the ruling party at the time of the next general election.
The central thrust of Mr. Sibal's argument is that the PAC used flawed logic to arrive at the conclusion that the sale of Universal Access Service licenses by the Department of Telecom in 2008 led to a revenue loss of Rs.1,76,000 crore. But here's what he chose not to say. The CAG itself acknowledged in its concluding chapter that the amount of loss could be debated but “the fact that there has been loss to the national exchequer in the allocation of 2G spectrum cannot be denied.”
Indeed, the CAG made separate calculations based on four different methodologies in order to demonstrate the flawed nature of the licensing system the DoT ran. The figure cited by Mr. Sibal came from using the 3G spectrum auction proceeds as a guide to the revenue the government gave up by not auctioning 2G spectrum. Other methods used were looking at the sale of equity by shell-company licensees Swan Telecom and Unitech. Both of these companies sold a chunk of their otherwise worthless equity to established operators, thereby providing a helpful indication of what the licenses they had bought for a song were truly worth. Extrapolating from those sales figures, the CAG estimated that the government short-changed itself by anywhere from Rs.57,666 crore to Rs.69,626 crore.
The CAG report methodically establishes how the great spectrum robbery of 2008 was essentially a scam within a scam. The original scam was designed to benefit the universe of existing and potential telecom operators by selling them a scarce resource — spectrum — on a first come, first served (FCFS) basis at a seven-year-old price that had no bearing on current market conditions. Given the exponential increase in teledensity between 2001 and 2008 — by some estimates, the number of mobile subscribers had already risen from four million to 300 million and was expected to continue to grow at a rapid clip — the failure to use an efficient price discovery mechanism meant the government was prepared to forsake an enormous amount of revenue in order to benefit operators fortunate enough to get hold of new spectrum.
But having scripted super profits for the lucky telecom companies in the spectrum allocation process, it was inevitable that the politicians and bureaucrats running the show would take the next step. The only way to accumulate rent from companies benefiting from a giveaway that is available to all as a matter of policy is to use one's allocative power to favour some over others. This was the genesis of the second scam in which a handful of applicants — many of whom were completely unqualified to be applying for telecom licenses at all — were cherry-picked by the DoT in an arbitrary subversion of the first come, first served process. The CAG report demonstrates how Swan, in which the Anil Dhirubhai Ambani Group had a key stake, and Unitech were among the beneficiaries of this. Bank drafts and guarantees were prepared in advance by some companies who were unofficially tipped off so that their completed applications for spectrum could be submitted literally within minutes and hours of the official call going out.
Mr. Sibal, who tore into the CAG, was sporting enough to admit there may have been some wrongdoing in the manner in which the FCFS policy was implemented. At the same time, he insisted the policy of charging 2001 prices was correct and that a 2G spectrum auction would have led to an increase in the price of telecom services. What he ignores is the fact that the cost of telecom services emerging from the 2G allocation will be a function not of the absurdly low price at which the government sold spectrum but of the prevailing tariff rate in the market and also the higher resale price at which this precious commodity finally enters the system. To paraphrase an argument first made by Sunil Jain in the Financial Express last year, there was indeed an auction for 2G spectrum whether Mr. Sibal approves of auctioning or not. But this auction was conducted not by the government, as it should have been, but by the companies who benefited from the arbitrary manner in which spectrum ended up getting allocated. They simply turned around and resold what they had received to the highest bidder.
Mr. Sibal also sought to argue that the government policy on spectrum allocation — of underpricing it or even giving it away free — was justified in the name of keeping the cost of basic telephony down. He compared the Rs.17 a minute cost of a mobile phone call a decade back with the 30 paise per minute rate today to prove his point but this is a flawed argument. Most technology-driven consumer goods and services experience a declining price curve over time. I paid $1,000 as a graduate student in New York for my first laptop computer in 1990. It was a no-brand, 386 chip, 40MB hard drive heavyweight monster whose battery lasted about an hour if I was lucky. Today, $1,000 will buy you a powerful notebook and decent variants can be bought for as little as $300. It also cost me $2 a minute to call my parents back home (which is why I rarely did so). The last time I was in the U.S., I could call India for eight cents a minute. The drop in call rates has nothing to do with subsidised spectrum as Mr. Sibal would have us believe, but with competition, increases in productivity and the global ebb and flow of technological change and obsolescence which allowed Indian companies to buy 2G network equipment at a relatively inexpensive cost. In any case, even at the supposedly low call rates in India, telecom operators are making serious money. The last thing they need is a free handout in the form of an FCFS spectrum allocation policy, that too one which is rigged.
The government's argument about keeping mobile call rates low may have had some credibility if the logic was applied consistently. But everything in India is contingent on whose asset is being sold to whom. When a public asset like spectrum is to be sold to a private company like Anil Ambani's Swan Telecom, or to Tata or others, we are told the price must be kept low even if there is a revenue loss. When a public asset like food grain is to be sold to the poor under the proposed Right to Food Act, the same people say prices cannot be kept low because this would lead to a revenue loss. When a public resource like Krishna-Godavari (KG) gas comes into the hands of an industrialist like Mukesh Ambani, the price must be kept high even if this means consumers end up paying a higher price for electricity and fertilizers. From 2G to KG to CWG the system's logic and rules will always be designed to allow maximum profits for those with real connections.
The CAG in its report has demonstrated how “the entire process of allocation of UAS licenses lacked transparency and was undertaken in an arbitrary, unfair and inequitable manner … which gave unfair advantage to certain companies over others.” It was this “unfair advantage” which allowed “certain companies” to earn revenue that rightly belonged to the government. So compelling is the charge of corruption on a massive scale in the spectrum licensing matter that the Supreme Court has said it will monitor the progress of investigations by the CBI.
Public disenchantment with the corrupt ways of our political and business establishment is running so high that Prime Minister Manmohan Singh was forced to promise in his New Year greetings a “course correction” that would “cleanse governance” in India. If Mr. Sibal's arguments are any indication, however, Dr. Singh's New Year resolutions have not lasted very long at all. If the UPA government continues to remain in denial, it will pay a heavy political price. At the time of the next general election, when Congress managers scratch their heads and wonder where on earth the seats to form the next government are going to come from, Mr. Sibal's arithmetic will be remembered as the point where the game which was not going the party's way anyway finally slipped out of its hands.
Keywords: 2G spectrum, A Raja, Kapil Sibal


Comments:
Siddharth Varadarajan must be complimented for a good and logical lead article on this subject.Hindu should be applauded for the bold stand it has taken on the subject.I am still not able to understand about Mr Sibal's various statements in the last few days.When the matter is still under investigation by CBI under the supervision of Supreme court and CAG having an independent enquiry on the Scam and also PAC is going through CAG reports, what is the hurry of Mr Sibal to make this recent statement. Who he is trying to protect? I doubt his intentions?If this is the approach of the Government only PM has to answer to the Parliament and Opposition parties are right for insisting on JPC.
Bulls Eye, Mr Varadarajan!
Apt Analysis!! Thank you for putting into words so eloquently what all Indians are thinking right now. Kapil Sibal's insolent remarks are indeed unbelievably arrogant. Our so called leaders have forgotten everything about transparency, honesty, good governance, and above all they are very proud to have done so. The poor are getting poorer everyday, not because India lacks resources, but because the government promotes pointed policies to keep them where they are. Because an educated, healthy and well-fed electorate will see through their filthy politics, they want to make sure the people remain as under-privileged and ignorant as possible. But the days of such eye-wash are counted. Kapil Sibal and the entire band of unscrupulous politicians better get their act together by then.
I totally agree. The govt has shot itself in the foot with this. And this is turning into a lawyers' battle. Some random nuanced point being harped on, and then the whole case will be looked at differently, allowing for the guilty to escape from the back door exit. Is the public that ignorant? Thanks to articles like this, I think at least some are being made aware!
It depends. Common man might not understand the complexity of a 1,76,000 Crores loss to exchequer, but when that figure is divided by 545 Lok Sabha seats leading to 300 Crores per constituency, it will start to make sense as to what could have been done for them locally using that money. Right now no one in opposition or media is talking about it that clearly as to make the loss clear enough for voters to judge based on this issue.
Thank you Siddharth for bravely criticising the obviously wrong arguments of The Hon'ble Minister. I wish all other media groups are as straight forward as The Hindu.
The Congress government's State of denial reminds one of the same attitude that Bush's government used when attacking Iraq. No wonder Republican party was routed for its behaviour. The same fate awaits Congress, which has grown more into a dictatorial regime than delivering a truly democratic governance. We Indians can just watch in astonishment the uncanny silence of our Prime Minister when the country is being looted by his own ministers.
A wonderful article especially for citing the less known Krishna-Godavari basin natural gas resources as an example to make the point. Indian democracy is in a transition due to economic and technological advancement. The government is slow in adapting to the modern India as most of the leaders are old. The current leadership is still living in the past where once being elected, they are all powerful and not accountable to any one. Articles like this one, press coverage and Supreme Court making the government be accountable resulting in a fight of my corruption versus your corruption among political parties. This bodes well for the future of Indian democracy.
In trying to pick a hole in the report of CAG, Kapil Sibal not only went overboard but breached the decorum. Despite the fact that CAG is not a political entity, which can be battled with, Mr. Sibal chose this unceremonious path to attack a constitutional body, which shows the lack of common sense in his statement. If it were not for some radical steps and willingness to reform the education sector, Mr. Sibal would have lost all the credibility by attempting to question the intelligence of common people through such a pathetic and brazen cover-up statement.
Good article with facts and figures intact. I only wish that India doesn't go the route of Today's Russia - just finished reading another article on Russian Criminal supported by politicians and government - India is not far from being there, even though its being democratic - deeply rooted corruption to get things done is something that needs to be fought at grassroots level.
The PM is being used. PM Singh's good image was used as a cover and shield by the Congress crooks. These crooks apparently felt that by using PM Singh's good reputation as a front no one will peek behind, and thus they went about on looting spree. I hope PM Singh realize this fact - that he was used as a front by these crooks in his party. If PM Singh continues to defend them, he will lose his spotless reputation and his name will get sullied. The best thing the PM can do now is to stand tall and separate. He must not make the serious mistake of protecting the wrong doers at the cost of his reputation which he built over his life time. The crooks in the party are not worth it, Dear PM. Step to one side and let the sun shine on these criminals.
UPA 2 is a disaster. MMS has shown he has no commitment, holding office not by dint of his own merit but at the pleasure of another who likewise has no commitment since she takes no responsibility. Consequently it is a rudderless government moving from one crisis to another where the coalition partners are free to work on their own interests with a Prime Minister who has the position but no authority. Sibal is only showing how good he is as a lawyer laying his claim to be the trouble shooter in case Pranab wants to retire. UPA 2 has failed but sadly BJP has not risen to the occasion but only indulged in pastimes of small minds.
Thanks to the author for dissecting and defeating Sibal's argument in an easy to understand form. I wish many if not all read this.
There was a movie 'Michale Clayton' where George Clooney said 'I am the Janitor of this system..' Mr. Sibal is also acting like a Janitor of the UPA, cleaning up all the mess left behind by Mr. Raja. We need ministers not Janitors.
Lovely article! In the age of Radia Gate, its a shame that there are very few journalists left like you. Please continue to do the good work.
Nice article!.. Hope the media keeps the issue alive atleast till next general elections to teach Congress some lesson.
How surprising Mr.Siddharth, that an article devoted to how the system delivers to the rich while denying the poor misses a complete episode in this Telecom license story where irresponsible bidders were given licenses in the first place, and the terms of the license arbitarily changed to allow them to get away without paying up on their commitments. Remember this, the revenue loss due to that arbitrary decision was REAL, the one in the second scam is at best Notional. Yet NO article I read talks about that. Is the Hindu learning to tilt to the right after considering the public mood? Articles like this only provide strength to the DMK's claims that Raja is being targeted for being a Dalit.
Is the CAG not knowledgeable enough to work out the losses or is Mr. Sibal knowledgeable enough to understand the CAG reports? At the end of the day, the common man, who voted trusting that the party would do better, is the sufferer. All these politicians make the money they want in the ruling periods.
I am sorry, but the truth is harsher and that is...our country has gone to the dogs. This loot demonstrates that there are many robbers in the country in the garb of businessmen and state functionaries (all three wings). Since this loot is carried out under the direct supervison of the grand old party, the Congress, and its dynastic family, whose members preach Gandhian values before and after meals three or four times every day, can we call it Gandhian terrorism? Because perpetual poverty and starvation, to which these corrupt deals ultimately seeks to push vast number of our countrymen, is more terrorising than sudden death.
The article is illustrative and factully demolishes the arguments of Kapil Sibal. As a responsible Minister in the Union Govt he should have thought twice before making any sweeping remarks against a Constitutional Authority - the Comptroller & Auditor General. Does Sibal not know that the Comptrollers' office is occupied by highly qualified personnel and they would not have come to the concusion without verifying the facts and figures? Are we to assume that Ministers are so very wise they can pass on any comments without knowing the full facts. Is the entire Media a fool to cry about the loss to the Exchequer? It is a pity that even the Hon'be Prime Minister has allowed one of his Ministers to shoot without understanding the implictions.
It seems Mr Sibal has had tutorials from Hitler's PR team to protect his masters.The Hindu has taken up the issue in right perspective and its action of publishing this factual article which should be an example to the media in giving right opinion in right time.
You hit the nail on the head when you say the prices of technology-driven products are rapidly going down, while the consumable products are skyrocketing. As far as 2G scam is concerned, Kapil Sibal damaged the reputation of UPA more than the good he might have done by criticizing the CAG report and saying that there was no loss at all. How come Raja was forced to resign if there was no loss? With this statement, he is also trying to mislead the CBI which is a puppet in the hands of the Govt. But he must remember that this investigation is monitored by none other than the Supreme Court, so his tantrums would not be tolerated. Shed your ego and constitute a JPC for the sake of the people of India.
Thank you The Hindu and Mr. Siddharth Varadarajan for the analysis of truth. I just was wishing someone publicises these facts. We are in an age where we need to prove Kettles black, else they being so powerful, decree themselves white! Little hope is still left for Indians since there are Supreme Court lords who are beyond doubt harbingers of truth; let us hope process of law itself is sturdy enough not to vitiate their yoemen service. On another count, assuming the Nation did not incur the revenue loss but gained trillions of rupees and 'spent' all that in the 'welfare'projects even then the customary 30%(called commission) would have reached the political coffers anyway. I adore the patience and good behaviour of the about billion indignant Indians who do not take to any Save Democracy Terrorism and truly gun down the corrupt entities as the only option left. Alas we promise to bequeath poverty of many sorts to our progeny by our many such actions and May our nexgen Forgive us if they can still build India from Zero.
Mr.Siddharth Varadarajan had skillfully exposed the faulty statements of the Telecom minister Sibal and it seems he had been planted in the ministry to sabotage the investigation by the supreme court.
I have just one simple question. What is difference between 2G and 3G? Does Mr Siddharth Varadarajan know this? His basic point is that those who bought in FCFS basis, auctioned it and the Govt itself could have done the same earning the revenue for itself. 2G spectrum was not meant FOR PROFIT. That is the central point that Kapil Sibal said. If the issue is 'resale', then it could have been prescribed as a condition. For example, a condition like 'Spectrum bought cannot be transferred to anyone'! This is 'procedural irregularities' by not having a fool-proof clause in spectrum policy. In fact, one can argue that rice bought at PDS shops for Rs.1/- per kg can be sold in market for say Rs.10/- per kg and there is a presumptive loss of the biggest scam amount that India has ever heard of!
Excellent analysis. The minister used his typical professional skills to confuse the gullible wihout realising that this will bounce back from all sides - PAC,CAG,SC and the opposition. It appears that ruling parties are least concerned with propriety, etc.etc. and they are becoming victims of their own exploits and excesses. The party will find it tough to defend itself before the electorate.
The true cost of an SMS is close to zero (for GSM). Pricing for 31st December 2010 and 1st January has been upped to Re 1 (local) and Rs. 1.5-2 (STD). A rough calculation shows that the telecom companies would have made a minimum of Rs. ~4.7 billion (471 crores) revenue over two days (31 Dec and 1 Jan) ONLY from SMS'.: 1) Only 1/3 of the 707 million subscribers will send text messages. 2) They will send them to only 20 people each. 3) They will send only local SMS' (costing Re. 1) instead of the long distance SMS' which are more expensive. Mr. Sibal is fooling himself by trying to pull the wool over Indians' eyes.
I just do not understand one thing. Crores are lost in scam still our venerated PM is beyond doubt, million tons of grains were rotting as were the poor begging to fill their burning stomach. The issue was written off stating it was not possible to identify the poor and distribute, yet he stands an untarnished image. Indians are no more fools to believe established statements. We need more eyeopeners of the sort brought out by Siddharth to uproot our corrupt system,
An excellent article. This shows how the politicians are misguiding the public. People of India won't believe Sibal's statements. They know the truth.
Milord! I must say something fishy is cooked by our politicians, bureaucrats and corporate honchos. Journalists like Siddharth Varadarajan who by his apt analysis is not only just acting as an eye-opener but asking all educated people of India why we are allowing such rampant corruption and why again we should elect such politicians for ruling our country? But like 'Damini' movie, there will be tarik pe tarik and tarik pe tarik (Date after date and date after date)till new corruption case opens.
The image of UPA is already being dented when various magnified charges being resurface against them. mr. sibal is like VISHAVKARMA of UPA govt. who want to show a different India to people of India and want to see India from his perspective. Diluting the institution of CAG is to whitewash its own party image from various grave charges of corruption. What a loquacious minister he is! Sonia Gandhi placed right person for the right job to whitewash the scam and to crack down on opposition. Mr Sibal's remarks are erroneous when Supreme Court has ordered an inquiry into the scam; Prime Minster Manmohan Singh's call to catch 'big fish' has cast a shadow on its own party.
Thank you so much Mr. Siddharth, you cleared up everything for me. Keep up the Good work. Hindu showed us a light of hope where all the media trying to cover up or keeps mum.
Kapil Sibal is a lawyer and not an economist.He has obviously unsuspectingly swallowed all the nonsense that his aides have fed him.Wish he had consulted his Prime minister who is a qualified economist before airing his views on the matter
Excellent article. One of the best, bold and outspoken ones I have read in recent times. Thanks to Siddharth, and special thanks to Hindu for having published it. I hope Congress can come out of the pressures of coalition politics and take stern action to cleanup their governance. Thinking a step ahead, let's say the guilty are punished. What next? What happens to the opportunity loss in 2G spectrum allocation? Should the Union Government revoke all 2G licenses and conduct a fresh auction?
Nice article by Siddharth Varadarajan. Will the 2G scam be alive till the next Assembly elections in Tamil Nadu and other states. The people should teach the culprits a lesson by casting their votes against them.
A wonderful article. I have read it four time now! I think what is more saddening than the scam itself is that no one in the opposition, both at the state level or at the national level has the moral right to question this issue properly.
Kapil Sibal could not have made those comments without the PM's approval. The PM cannot continue to hide behind a facade of 'personal integrity' - created and exploited by the Congress party. History will not spare the PM if he continues to remain silent and does not take an unequivocal stance against corruption. If he feels that he is helpless,it is time he resigns.
One of the best articles on governance. Keep up the good work.