The Union government allocates approximately 19-20 per cent of official GDP as its annual Budgeted expenditure. About 3-4 per cent of GDP is spent on the defence forces and another 1.5 per cent on central paramilitary forces like the BSF and Assam Rifles. |
This estimate excludes expenditures on local police forces. It excludes SPG security costs. And, it also excludes allocations to intelligence agencies. |
Put it all together and India spends something over 6 per cent of its GDP on security. And, the GoI allocates well over 25 per cent of its total expenditure to security needs. It's actually a far larger allocation than in most countries. |
The need to spend on security obviously exists. It's a different matter that much of this allocation is wasted "" that's true of most government spending. Security is a shibboleth "" despite Bofors, Tehelka and the failure of innumerable R&D programmes for various obscure reasons, it's difficult to pin governments down to justify defence spending. |
The US Defence Department has as murky a record in terms of audited expenditures "" Halliburton and its subsidiary, Kellogg, Root & Brown charged fabulous sums to feed US soldiers in Iraq and it got the contract through an opaque process. |
But at least, private enterprise gets a crack at the US defence pie. It doesn't in India. Even in an era of successful public-private partnerships, private enterprise barely gets a sniff of this particular feeding trough. Large defence contracts go by default to PSUs; or these are farmed out abroad. |
This is insane. It leads to strange outcomes where projects fail for lack of expertise despite the expertise being obviously available locally. |
Recall that Indian auto and auto-component manufacturers are considered amongst the best of breed globally. Think of the famed Indian expertise in IT and IT-enabled services and solutions. |
India also has the some of the best aluminium, steel, copper and forgings companies in the world. It has an awesomely competitive wireless communications sector. |
None of the big names derive significant revenues from defence. The Indian Air force imports its avionics (often from Israeli firms, which sub-contract the work back to India); the defence research establishment fails to design tank engines and armour that works, the army is a decade behind in terms of field communications networks and IT-leveraging; the Light Combat Aircraft is two decades behind schedule. |
If India Inc. got its share of defence contracts, there could be several favourable outcomes. One is that costs would come down and R&D efficiencies rise as best practices were deployed in a competitive environment. |
The second outcome would be that the security environment itself would improve as equipment was developed and deployed quicker. The third favourable outcome: transparency in defence spending would increase since contract values would be reflected on public balance-sheets. |
In terms of leaks, any private company is probably more secure than PSUs because the average private executive is less amenable to bribery. There could however, be one unfavourable outcome because a military-industrial complex could create a stronger lobby in favour of violent solutions to conflicts. |
Things are slowly changing. The army is inducting locally developed handhelds and rolling out WANs. At some stage, India will develop its version of Thiokol, Boeing, Northrop and McDonnell-Douglas; all US corporate giants, which derive huge proportions of their revenues from defence. |