The Congress Party’s main achievements were run-ups in both public spending and the fiscal deficit, the latter of which seems likely to run at a rate of about 12% of
gross domestic product (GDP) for the 2009-2010 period - if state deficits are included.
By the 2009 election, Vajpayee had retired, and his successor as BJP leader - L.K. Advani - was both old and associated with the party’s Hindu nationalist wing, so it’s not surprising that the BJP failed to make progress. The collapse of support in the election for the mostly leftist third parties is itself a good sign, making a swing back to the BJP under new leadership more likely whenever the next election occurs, probably in 2014.
In the five intervening years until that happens, India will have to endure a Congress Party government, either under current Prime Minister Singh, or possibly under newcomer Rahul Gandhi - grandson of former Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, which would make him the latest member of the Nehru/Gandhi dynasty to hold that office.
Don’t Expect Reforms
Congress’ claim to reformism becomes especially thin when you look at the party’s allies. For example, West Bengal’s Trinamool Congress led the violent opposition to Tata Motors Ltd.’s (NYSE ADR: TTM) “Nano” automobile plant in that state. Tata had managed to do a deal with Bengal’s Communist state government to produce the revolutionary $2,000 car, but the Trinamool Congress was able to force Tata to relocate the plant to Gujarat at a cost of more than $500 million, delaying the full production of the Nano by more than a year. In the recent elections, Trinamool, in alliance with the national Congress Party, was rewarded with 26 of West Bengal’s 42 parliamentary seats, and its leadership will doubtless be part of the new government.
The new government’s policy is thus unlikely to be very reformist, especially as it rejoices in the support of the egregious Mayawati. In welcoming the election win, Prime Minister Singh indicated further areas where India’s public spending and transfer payments needed to be increased, with no suggestion that privatization or reining back the immense public-sector deficit were a priority.