2020, A Year Of Reforms During The Unprecedented Coronavirus Crisis

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
It is a fact of economic policy-making in India that bold reforms only take place during difficult moments rather than in ideal conditions
"It is said India reforms only in crisis," former RBI Governor Raghuram Rajan wrote once
In 1991, the economic liberalisation drive by then Finance Minister Dr Manmohan Singh and then Prime Minister Narasimha Rao unleashed the
latent animal spirits in the economy
Many economists say those developments would not have taken place without the debilitating balance-of-payment crisis at the time
Even the Atal Bihari Vajpayee administration's strategic sales of state-run companies such as ITDC and VSNL came at a time when the country
was reeling under severe US sanctions, following the 1998 nuclear tests
India has once again lived up to reputation of using a crisis to reform itself.The black-swan event of coronavirus outbreak pushed the
global economy to its worst slowdown since the great recession of 1929, forcing India to impose a nationwide lockdown between late-March and
May, leading to a huge jump in unemployment, exodus of migrant workers from cities, and collapse in private consumption and investment
demand
Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government used the opportunity to drive wide-ranging reforms.Labour ReformsThe government consolidated 44
labour laws into four codes under the Wage Code Bill, Industrial Relations Code 2020, Occupational Safety, Health - Working Conditions Code
2020 and Social Security Code 2020.The new labour codes will facilitate industrial growth and ease of doing business
Employers will find it easier to get contract workers on board and the new laws make it mandatory for workers to give a 60-day notice to
strike work across all industries, compared to a 4-6 weeks' notice required earlier
In a worker-friendly move, the new labour codes would cover workers across the organised, unorganised and self-employed sector, widen the
social security net of ESIC and EPFO to include all workers and self-employed sector as well.Farm ReformsThe government shouldered landmark
agriculture reforms to end the monopoly of traders and free farmers from restrictions on sale of their agriculture produce
The three laws -- the Farmers' Produce Trade and Commerce (Promotion and Facilitation) Act, the Farmers (Empowerment and Protection)
Agreement on Price Assurance and the Farm Services Act and the Essential Commodities (Amendment) Act -- will allow farmers to sell their
farm produce at a price of their own choosing and even outside their respective states, thereby leading to better rural incomes.The entry of
private players will also bring much-needed private investment into farming.Production-Linked Incentive (PLI) SchemeSensing an unprecedented
opportunity to transform the country into a manufacturing hub, in wake of China's aggression and the resultant desire of western companies
to look beyond China, the Centre has given a renewed impetus to the Make-in-India programme.The government has rolled out the
production-linked incentive (PLI) scheme for 10 sectors, covering a wide gamut of products and technologies, to encourage the domestic
manufacturing sector, promote exports and make the country an integral part of the global supply chain.Foreign Direct Investment ReformsThe
government increased FDI in defence manufacturing under the automatic route from 49 per cent to 74 per cent with the aim of promoting
indigenisation of defence production under its Make-in-India initiative
It also amended existing consolidated FDI policy to restrict opportunistic acquisition of domestic companies.Commercial mining of coalThe
government opened up the mining sector to private players, effectively ending the state-owned Coal India's monopoly over mining and selling
of coal
Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, as part of the fourth set of announcements under the Rs 29.88 lakh-crore stimulus package for the
coronavirus-battered economy, also announced auctioning of 500 mining blocks, including combined auctioning of bauxite and coal mineral
blocks.