Note to Netters:

Please--no need to attack Pankaj Mishra and call 
him names. We have heard them all already! If it 
gives anyone heartburn,just tell us why and where 
or how he is wrong, misinformed, or otherwise 
missing the point.

cm :-)






Op-Ed Contributor
The Myth of the New India

By PANKAJ MISHRA

Published: July 6, 2006


London

INDIA is a roaring capitalist success story." So 
says the latest issue of Foreign Affairs; and 
last week many leading business executives and 
politicians in India celebrated as Lakshmi 
Mittal, the fifth richest man in the world, 
finally succeeded in his hostile takeover of the 
Luxembourgian steel company Arcelor. India's 
leading business newspaper, The Economic Times, 
summed up the general euphoria over the event in 
its regular feature, "The Global Indian 
Takeover": "For India, it is a harbinger of 
things to come - economic superstardom."

This sounds persuasive as long as you don't know 
that Mr. Mittal, who lives in Britain, announced 
his first investment in India only last year. He 
is as much an Indian success story as Sergey 
Brin, the Russian-born co-founder of Google, is 
proof of Russia's imminent economic superstardom.

In recent weeks, India seemed an unlikely 
capitalist success story as communist parties 
decisively won elections to state legislatures, 
and the stock market, which had enjoyed record 
growth in the last two years, fell nearly 20 
percent in two weeks, wiping out some $2.4 
billion in investor wealth in just four days. 
This week India's prime minister, Manmohan Singh, 
made it clear that only a small minority of 
Indians will enjoy "Western standards of living 
and high consumption."

There is, however, no denying many Indians their 
conviction that the 21st century will be the 
Indian Century just as the 20th was American. The 
exuberant self-confidence of a tiny Indian elite 
now increasingly infects the news media and 
foreign policy establishment in the United States.

Encouraged by a powerful lobby of rich 
Indian-Americans who seek to expand their 
political influence within both their home and 
adopted countries, President Bush recently agreed 
to assist India's nuclear program, even at the 
risk of undermining his efforts to check the 
nuclear ambitions of Iran. As if on cue, special 
reports and covers hailing the rise of India in 
Time, Foreign Affairs and The Economist have 
appeared in the last month.

It was not so long ago that India appeared in the 
American press as a poor, backward and often 
violent nation, saddled with an inefficient 
bureaucracy and, though officially nonaligned, 
friendly to the Soviet Union. Suddenly the 
country seems to be not only a "roaring 
capitalist success story" but also, according to 
Foreign Affairs, an "emerging strategic partner 
of the United States." To what extent is this 
wishful thinking rather than an accurate estimate 
of India's strengths?

Looking for new friends and partners in a rapidly 
changing world, the Bush administration clearly 
hopes that India, a fellow democracy, will be a 
reliable counterweight against China as well as 
Iran. But trade and cooperation between India and 
China is growing; and, though grateful for 
American generosity on the nuclear issue, India 
is too dependent on Iran for oil (it is also 
exploring developing a gas pipeline to Iran) to 
wholeheartedly support the United States in its 
efforts to prevent the Islamic Republic from 
acquiring a nuclear weapon. The world, more 
interdependent now than during the cold war, may 
no longer be divided up into strategic blocs and 
alliances.

Nevertheless, there are much better reasons to 
expect that India will in fact vindicate the twin 
American ideals of free markets and democracy 
that neither Latin America nor post-communist 
countries - nor, indeed, Iraq - have fulfilled.

  Since the early 1990's, when the Indian economy 
was liberalized, India has emerged as the world 
leader in information technology and business 
outsourcing, with an average growth of about 6 
percent a year. Growing foreign investment and 
easy credit have fueled a consumer revolution in 
urban areas. With their Starbucks-style coffee 
bars, Blackberry-wielding young professionals, 
and shopping malls selling luxury brand names, 
large parts of Indian cities strive to resemble 
Manhattan.

Indian business tycoons are increasingly trying 
to control marquee names like Taittinger 
Champagne and the Carlyle Hotel in New York. 
"India Everywhere" was the slogan of the Indian 
business leaders at the World Economic Forum in 
Davos, Switzerland, this year.

But the increasingly common, business-centric 
view of India suppresses more facts than it 
reveals. Recent accounts of the alleged rise of 
India barely mention the fact that the country's 
$728 per capita gross domestic product is just 
slightly higher than that of sub-Saharan Africa 
and that, as the 2005 United Nations Human 
Development Report puts it, even if it sustains 
its current high growth rates, India will not 
catch up with high-income countries until 2106.

Nor is India rising very fast on the report's 
Human Development index, where it ranks 127, just 
two rungs above Myanmar and more than 70 below 
Cuba and Mexico. Despite a recent reduction in 
poverty levels, nearly 380 million Indians still 
live on less than a dollar a day.

Malnutrition affects half of all children in 
India, and there is little sign that they are 
being helped by the country's market reforms, 
which have focused on creating private wealth 
rather than expanding access to health care and 
education. Despite the country's growing economy, 
2.5 million Indian children die annually, 
accounting for one out of every five child deaths 
worldwide; and facilities for primary education 
have collapsed in large parts of the country (the 
official literacy rate of 61 percent includes 
many who can barely write their names). In the 
countryside, where 70 percent of India's 
population lives, the government has reported 
that about 100,000 farmers committed suicide 
between 1993 and 2003.

Feeding on the resentment of those left behind by 
the urban-oriented economic growth, communist 
insurgencies (unrelated to India's parliamentary 
communist parties) have erupted in some of the 
most populous and poorest parts of north and 
central India. The Indian government no longer 
effectively controls many of the districts where 
communists battle landlords and police, imposing 
a harsh form of justice on a largely hapless 
rural population.

The potential for conflict - among castes as well 
as classes - also grows in urban areas, where 
India's cruel social and economic disparities are 
as evident as its new prosperity. The main reason 
for this is that India's economic growth has been 
largely jobless. Only 1.3 million out of a 
working population of 400 million are employed in 
the information technology and business 
processing industries that make up the so-called 
new economy.

No labor-intensive manufacturing boom of the kind 
that powered the economic growth of almost every 
developed and developing country in the world has 
yet occurred in India. Unlike China, India still 
imports more than it exports. This means that as 
70 million more people enter the work force in 
the next five years, most of them without the 
skills required for the new economy, unemployment 
and inequality could provoke even more social 
instability than they have already.

For decades now, India's underprivileged have 
used elections to register their protests against 
joblessness, inequality and corruption. In the 
2004 general elections, they voted out a central 
government that claimed that India was "shining," 
bewildering not only most foreign journalists but 
also those in India who had predicted an easy 
victory for the ruling coalition.

Among the politicians whom voters rejected was 
Chandrababu Naidu, the technocratic chief 
minister of one of India's poorest states, whose 
forward-sounding policies, like providing 
Internet access to villages, prompted Time 
magazine to declare him "South Asian of The Year" 
and a "beacon of hope."

But the anti-India insurgency in Kashmir, which 
has claimed some 80,000 lives in the last decade 
and a half, and the strength of violent communist 
militants across India, hint that regular 
elections may not be enough to contain the 
frustration and rage of millions of have-nots, or 
to shield them from the temptations of religious 
and ideological extremism.

Many serious problems confront India. They are 
unlikely to be solved as long as the wealthy, 
both inside and outside the country, choose to 
believe their own complacent myths.

Pankaj Mishra is the author of "Temptations of 
the West: How to Be Modern in India, Pakistan, 
Tibet and Beyond."

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