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ToggleThe Liberalisation, Privatisation, and Globalisation (LPG) reforms of 1991 marked a watershed in India’s economic policy, undertaken to overcome the severe balance of payments crisis. While liberalisation dismantled controls and globalisation integrated India with the world economy, privatisation focused on reducing the role of the state in business and industry.
Through disinvestment of PSUs, opening up of sectors to private investment, and encouraging market-driven efficiency, privatisation under LPG reforms sought to enhance competitiveness, attract capital, and improve productivity, thereby reshaping India’s growth trajectory.
Additional Information
Concepts Clarified
Government policy on Disinvestment
The New Public Sector Enterprise (PSE) Policy for Atma Nirbhar Bharat
The government’s stated objectives have evolved:
Phase | Period | Policy & Approach |
Phase 1: Tentative Beginnings | 1991 – Late 1990s | Minority Disinvestment: Selling small chunks of shares in PSUs via public offers. Aim was primarily to raise revenue, not transfer control. |
Phase 2: First Major Push | 1999-2004 (NDA Govt under Vajpayee) | Strategic Sale: Explicit focus on transferring management control to a strategic buyer. Established the Department of Disinvestment. Example: Modern Foods , Bharat Aluminium Company (BALCO), Hindustan Zinc , IPCL , VSNL . |
Phase 3: Policy Slowdown | 2004-2014 (UPA Govt) | The government promoted the retention of public character in CPSEs in four ways: 1. Calling off strategic sales announced by the previous government; 2. Increasing investments in CPSEs; 3. Reducing the number of disinvestment transactions; and 4. Expanding the list of Navratna and Mini Ratna companies and adding a new category i.e. Maharatna companies. |
Phase 4: Renewed Aggressive Push | 2016-Present (NDA Govt) | Ambitious Strategic Disinvestment: Clear policy with a list of PSUs identified for strategic sale or closure. Example : Air India |
Privatization in India is a necessary but arduous journey from a state-dominated to a market-driven economy. The government has taken significant steps by creating institutions and notching up key successes. The way forward lies in managing the politics as much as the economics, ensuring fairness and transparency, and most importantly, protecting the interests of employees to make the process socially acceptable and sustainable.
Q.Privatisation is not merely about raising revenue for the government, but about redefining its role in a changing economic landscape.Critically examine the evolution, importance, and challenges of privatisation in India.
(15 marks, 250 words)
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