Mainstream Weekly

Home > Archives (2006 on) > 2013 > Let’s Go Back to the People

Mainstream, VOL LI, No 34, August 10, 2013

Let’s Go Back to the People

Monday 12 August 2013, by Kuldip Nayar

#socialtags

It was heartening to watch debates on poverty on national television channels, particularly the English ones. Elitist in approach, they seldom deliberate the privations of the common man. Likewise, the English press is reluctant to carry news or write-ups on poverty because it has come to believe that its well-to-do readers do not want to know about the extent of poverty at the breakfast table. The Hindi and other language papers are more sensitive. This is probably the difference between India and Bharat.

Yet the nation cannot run away from the fact that roughly 65 per cent of Indians are poor, 35 per cent of them destitute. After projecting the Planning Commission’s criteria for expenditure as Rs 24 in villages and Rs 33 in urban areas, the government has realised that the amount is too paltry to convince even the most gullible.

Now the average has been placed around Rs 50. This sum is also too meagre. Yet some leading Congressmen have tried to trivialise poverty by proclaiming that one can have a full, hearty meal for Rs 5 at Delhi and Rs 12 at Mumbai. According to the Planning Commission, seldom right, poverty has been reduced to 22 per cent. The Commission, a creature of the ruling Congress, gives credit for this to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s government.

The Planning Commission’s Deputy Chair-man, Montek Singh Ahluwalia, says that the reduction of poverty during the BJP-led coalition was 0.8 per cent while it is going down by 2.5 per cent annually since the Congress takeover. Assuming that the reduction to 22 per cent is correct, still one out of every five Indians is poor. This is a dismal record in the last six-and-a-half decades after independence. If you were to add dimensions other than food, you would end up comparing India with the backward countries in Africa.

The Congress has been ruling for at least 50 years and it is the most to blame for the mess in which the country is today. Poverty and education, both neglected by the British, should have been on top of the party’s agenda. An undertaking given during the independence struggle on social justice remains on paper. So do the provisions on equal opportunities in the Constitution.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, an eminent economist, was expected to bring things in order but he has been a failure. The growth rate in the last two years is less than the proverbial Hindu growth rate of 3.5 to four per cent, although the overall average in the last decade is 5.5 per cent, reportedly next to China, the leader in the world. Manmohan Singh has turned out to be more of a politician than an economist. This is proved by the fact that he has managed to be the Prime Minister for nearly a decade.

India’s poor performance is not due to the global factors, as ascribed by the pro-establish-ment economists, but because of poor gover-nance. The fact is that we are spending more than we are earning. The government has doubled it in the last 10 years. Inflation has been galloping upward. Printing of currency notes, if at all a short-term relief, is not a solution. The paucity of funds is sought to be met with panicky measures.

Take the concessions offered to foreign investors, 49 per cent in insurance and oil and gas. The measures have been compared to opening the floodgates. Instead of self-sufficiency, the cardinal principal after independence, foreign investment has become the mantra. Then foreign investment was welcome in technical or such fields in which we had no know-how. Now any field or method is good enough as long as it attracts foreign investors. Still they want more concessions.

Bureaucrats, more than politicians, must share the responsibility. They too like the Prime Minister have followed the World Bank advice to covert India into crony capitalist state. America has not helped a bit despite high-ranking people from the US visiting the country every other day.

Most Members of Parliament and State Legislatures live in their make-believe world and continue to delude themselves. It is well known that they get subsidised food and many other things. The Central Hall of Parliament where the MPs congregate to rub shoulders with the obliging journalists has a canteen which is run by the Railways and sells food at a ridiculously small price.

The welfare schemes, started with good intention, are starving for funds. The Congress-run government has an eye on the next elections. For unpredictable gains, the Congress has put the entire economic system at stake. The Opposition parties may be shrill in their criticism, but they are right in stating that Manmohan Singh’s rule has been fraught with mismanagement, corruption and a few belated steps to stem the rot. The economic situation has been going from bad to worse.

India is a non-sympathetic society. Over the years, it has deteriorated in values. There is not a semblance of idealism, much less movement, to lift the lower half to lead a viable living. Poverty, unemployment and malnutrition, all signs of a decaying society, are visible on an increasing scale. The bureaucracy has been reduced to an authority merely affixing seal from being the steel-frame that it was till the beginning of the seventies.

Once in a while a courageous official like Durga Shakti Nagpal appears on the scene to evoke optimism. Her attack on the mining of sand mafia in UP was applauded. But then the State Chief Minister, Akhilesh Yadav, was influenced by politicians and she was suspended. Some of these politicians are the owners of trucks she impounded while carrying sand illegally from Yamuna and Hindon river banks. Had the two main political parties, the Congress and BJP, been together in backing measures against corruption in administration, the situation would have been different.

Probably a mid-term poll could have given a fresh start to the country. The new government would have had at least a five-year tenure to formulate policies for that period. It would have renewed trust which is badly needed for investment from within and from abroad. Even now Manmohan Singh should go back to the people. His remaining 10 months in office are a lame-duck rule.

The author is a veteran journalist renowned not only in this country but also in our neighbouring states of Pakistan and Bangladesh where his columns are widely read. His website is www.kuldipnayar.com

ISSN (Mainstream Online) : 2582-7316 | Privacy Policy|
Notice: Mainstream Weekly appears online only.