A flawed model of
development
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By Najeeb
Jung
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AS IT completes three years into its second
term, the UPA government is facing a barrage of criticism. It is
blamed for a series of corruption scandals and a virtual paralysis
in decision making.
It is also said that having ridden a wave of
economic growth in its first term, the government has frittered the
opportunity to carry out second generation economic reforms that
would have sustained the previous decades growth.
In so far as corruption is concerned, it is
not as if the government has not reacted to it. Ministers and civil
servants have been jailed, and a plethora of criminal cases and
continued investigations into different scams are indicative of the
intent to contain dishonesty. The flip side, however, is that
government action to fight corruption is a blip on the numerous
types of corruption that engulf Indian society.
Disparities
The purpose of this piece, however, is not to
focus on corruption but to examine the issue of stalled economic
reforms and question todays fashionable development paradigm. People
of my generation have witnessed the growth of the 50s and 60s. We
have also participated in implementing reforms following the
liberalisation phase introduced by then Prime Minister Narasimha
Rao. We have heard praise of the post 90s progress and criticism of
the Nehruvian period as a time that restricted and restrained
growth.
Since the 90s we have also noted the sharp
increase in liquidity in middle class India, the buying and selling
of cars, white goods, houses etc. The very rich have never had it so
good. Luxury hotels, private hospitals, private airlines, luxury
foreign travel have become the norm of the day. The overarching
impression among rich Indians and often among foreigners has been
that India is marching ahead and may soon catch up with the Peoples
Republic of China.
The problem is that the façade continues to
hide the truth. As Amartya Sen has said, the world in which we live
is both remarkably comfortable and thoroughly miserable. And so in
India, on one side we see enormous wealth and its vulgar display,
but on the other side, there is extreme poverty and the gulf between
the rich and the poor seems only to be increasing. As rich India has
progressed, the bulk of urban and rural India has seen distressing
times. Along with the fashionable hotels, malls and residences,
there is the face of the poor and the voiceless.
Their lives see the other side of existence
with fast vanishing infrastructural support.
Government hospitals are run down, the
doctors are hard pressed and harassed under the sheer weight of
patient load and non- availability of basic wherewithal. Mohallas
fight for electricity and drinking water. Sewage systems in
overcrowded colonies are collapsing under pressure and the residents
are faced with poor health, lack of employment opportunity and over-
population.
Young girls, ill clad and ill fed, perform
acrobatics on roads even as BMWs wait in queues to enter five star
hotels.
Villages face the brunt of all that is wrong.
The traditional revenue administration barely delivers, rural health
systems are in a shambles, schools neither have satisfactory
buildings nor good teachers. A posting in the muffassil is true
punishment, a threat constantly held out to public
servants.
Economy
Unfortunately the debate in the public
domain, in fashionable drawing rooms, in the print and TV media
largely focuses on the slackening of economic and financial reforms.
The belief is that economic reforms and the deepening of financial
markets are the elixir of life and the panacea for all our ills. We
were given to believe that there would be a trickle down effect, and
the benefits of economic growth would slowly but surely reach the
poor. Where are the so- called benefits of the trickle down? How
long do we wait for it to impact? Jawaharlal Nehru said that the
forces in a capitalist society, if left unchecked, tend to make the
rich richer and the poor poorest. This indeed is what we see now.
Avarice and greed is the mantra, and the expression corporate social
responsibility is nothing but fashionable words spoken disdainfully
and rarely respected. We should carefully examine how big businesses
have assiduously exploited India’s resources, often wasting and
losing them, and despite this continue to successfully lay the blame
on the Government and the public sector for all that is
wrong.
Paradigm
Governments over the past five decades have
introduced a plethora of schemes that focus on the rural poor.
Despite complaints of corruption, these schemes do provide periods
of employment. But permanent and sustainable assets are not created.
The poor need better quality and sustainable infrastructure, not
periodic employment with inferior and temporary assets to satisfy a
political constituency.
They need heavy investments in health, food,
roads, education and above all governments that realise that India
lives in rural areas and the bulk of India is entitled to
sensitivity and respect.
The collapse of Soviet Russia made economic
liberalisation the Holy Grail for developing economies. Hopefully
with the problems within the so called successful European economies
coming to the fore, we may understand that the path ahead is not
about an either/ or choice but perhaps a mix between laissez faire
and a controlled economy. Therefore the debate must shift from quick
and further liberalisation to a new structure that will be more
inclusive and sensitive. The people of India have a great deal of
patience, and it is indeed being tested to its fullest. Is it
endless?
The writer is Vice Chancellor, Jamia Millia
Islamia
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Wednesday, 6 June 2012
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