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| Message in a bottle ... artist Basavaraj poses with a creation showing Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his election rival Rahul Gandhi (AFP Photo/ MANJUNATH KIRAN) |
India's tycoons are playing a pivotal role in the Asian giant's most expensive election ever, from funding campaigns and tacit endorsements to being hot-button issues themselves.
Prime
Minister Narendra Modi's re-election bid has received huge financial backing
from corporate India, raising fears about the integrity of the world's largest
democratic process, experts say.
Meanwhile,
Congress party opponent Rahul Gandhi is trying to exploit a fighter jet deal
involving industrialist Anil Ambani while fugitive tycoons Vijay Mallya and
Nirav Modi loom over the vote from London.
Contesting
polls is getting costlier in India and analysts say parties are becoming more
reliant on donations from anonymous businessmen, leading to a lack of
transparency and worrying conflicts of interest.
"There's
a trend towards plutocracy," Niranjan Sahoo, of the Observer Research
Foundation (ORF) think-tank, told AFP. "Unbridled corporate influence can
have a serious impact on policies," he added.
The New
Delhi-based Centre for Media Studies estimates that around $5 billion was spent
during the 2014 election that swept Modi's Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata
Party (BJP) to power -- up from $2 billion in 2009.
The group
thinks the 2019 contest could top $7 billion, making it one of the priciest
elections globally.
"Elections
are getting more expensive for many structural reasons," Milan Vaishnav, a
senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace think-tank,
told AFP.
"(There
is a) growing population, increasing political competition, voter expectations
of handouts in the form of cash and other inducements, and technological
change, which means greater outlays for media and digital outreach," he
added.
Analysts
say traditional funding streams, such as party memberships, are declining so
parties increasingly rely on wealthy donors to fund campaigns.
Data
compiled by the Association for Democratic Reforms (ADR), an election watchdog,
showed that in financial year 2017-18 corporates and individuals contributed 12
times more to the BJP than to six other national parties, including Congress,
combined.
'Quid pro
quo'
The BJP
received 93 percent of all donations above 20,000 rupees ($290) that year,
according to ADR'S analysis. Modi's BJP banked 4.37 billion rupees ($63.3
million); Congress got just 267 million rupees.
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Factfile on
India, where 900 million eligible voters will get the opportunity
to vote in the 2019 general election from April 11 to May 19. (AFP Photo) |
"There
is a huge funding disparity now. Congress simply doesn't have the money to
fight elections. That should worry people," said the ORF's Sahoo.
Modi's
government says it has cracked down on so-called "black money" in politics
by lowering the amount that can be donated in cash from 20,000 rupees to 2,000
rupees.
Critics,
however, say it is now easier for wealthy entities to donate to political
parties; corporate funding formed 92 percent of the total donations declared by
the BJP in 2017-18, according to ADR.
Detractors
point to the government removing a cap on corporate donations two years ago and
introducing a scheme whereby donors can give anonymously through
"electoral bonds" purchased from a bank.
On Friday
India's supreme court ordered parties to reveal the identity of donors after
activists challenged the bond system, which the government has defended.
"The
lack of transparency allows conflicts of interest and quid pro quos to
flourish", said Vaishnav, who suspects that medium-sized businesses
requiring permits from the government are more of an issue than India's big
oligarchs.
Tycoons do
not explicitly endorse candidates for fear of backing the wrong horse but Modi,
68, is seen to be close to several big tycoons.
In 2014 he
travelled between rallies in a corporate jet and helicopter owned by
billionaire industrialist Gautam Adani, while magnate Ratan Tata praised Modi
for carrying out air strikes in Pakistan.
India's
richest man Mukesh Ambani -- whose personal net worth has soared from $18.6
billion when Modi came to power to $53 billion today, according to Forbes --
has repeatedly called him "our beloved prime minister" in speeches.
'He's not
the messiah...'
"If
you look at the measure that counts, which is how much money do these guys
have, then India's tycoons have done tremendously well under Modi," James
Crabtree, author of "The Billionaire Raj", told AFP.
Ambani's
oil-to-telecoms conglomerate Reliance Industries and the Adani Group did not
respond to requests for comment.
Gandhi, 48,
is trying to score political points by accusing Modi and Anil Ambani, Mukesh's
younger brother, of dodgy dealings related to the purchase of Rafale jets from
France –- allegations both deny.
Congress's
leader is also using liquor-baron Mallya and jeweller Nirav Modi to attack the
BJP. The government accuses them of massive fraud and is trying to extradite
them from Britain.
Modi
pledged to crack down on crony capitalism during his tenure so the duo
represent a sore point for a man who prides himself on being India's
"chowkidar" ("watchman").
"Vijay
Mallya and Nirav Modi have become the symbols of a job half done. Nonetheless
the noose is tightening on these guys," said Crabtree.
India's
business community appears less enthusiastic about Modi this time round after a
shock cancellation of high-value banknotes and poorly implemented new tax
disrupted economic growth.
But they
are set to vote for him overwhelmingly anyway, fearing that a coalition or
Gandhi victory could put a halt to much-needed economic reforms.
"He's
not the messiah we thought he was but without doubt almost everybody wants Modi
to come back with an absolute majority," said a prominent Mumbai-based
businessman who asked not to be named.
"Because
beyond him there is no alternative," he added.


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