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* Fwd: ‘I was always Leftist. Economic reforms m ade me completely Marxist’ - 
Mani Shankar Aiyar - 1 messages, 1 author
 
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TOPIC: Fwd: ‘I was always Leftist. Economic reforms m ade me completely 
Marxist’ - Mani Shankar Aiyar
http://groups.google.com/group/BM_discussion/browse_thread/thread/7a305c35e51cdfa1?hl=en
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== 1 of 1 ==
Date: Fri, May 4 2007 11:25 am 
From: "Abhijit K"  


Home <http://www.indianexpress.com/> >
Op-Ed<http://www.indianexpress.com/Op-Ed.html>> Story

'I was always Leftist. Economic reforms made me completely Marxist'
Mani Shankar Aiyar Posted online: Tuesday, April 24, 2007 at 0000 hrs In a
speech at a CII meet, Mani Shankar Aiyar argued that policy is hijacked by a
small elite. That the cabinet he belongs to is quite comfortable with this
hijacking. That India's system of governance is such that Rs 650 crore for
village development is considered wasteful but Rs 7,000 crore for the
Commonwealth Games is considered vital. The classes rule all the time, Aiyar
says, the masses get a look-in every five years



** A few weeks ago the newspapers reported that the number of Indian
billionaires had exceeded the number of billionaires in Japan, and there was
a considerable amount of self-congratulation on this. I understand from P.
Sainath that we rank eighth in the world in the number of our millionaires.
And we stand 126th on the Human Development Index. I am glad to report that
last year we were 127th.

At this very fast rate of growth that we are now showing, we moved up from
127th to 126th position. This is the paradigm of our development process. In
a democracy, every five years the masses determine who will rule this
country. And they showed dramatically in the last elections that they knew
how to keep their counsel and show who they wanted. We, my party and I, were
the beneficiaries and we formed the government. Every five years, it is the
masses who determine who will form the government. And in between those five
years the classes determine what that government will do.

In determining what that government will do, the CII has played an extremely
important role. I am not surprised, as that is its job. It represents
industry, and therefore it argues for the interests of the industry.
Industry has been enormously benefited by the processes of economic reform
that we have seen in this country over the last 15 years or so. But the
benefits of these reforms have gone so disproportionately to those who are
the most passionate advocates of reforms that every five years we are given
a slap in the face for having done what the CII regards as self-evidently
the right thing for this country.

It is a sustainable economic proposition, because our numbers are so vast,
that there are perhaps 10 million Indians who are just as rich as the
richest equivalent segment anywhere in the world or in any group of
countries. There are about fifty million Indians who really are
extraordinarily well off. That's the population of the UK.

But if you look at the 700 million Indians who are either not in the market
or barely in the market, then the impact of the economic reforms process,
which is so lauded by the CII, makes virtually no difference to their lives.
That is why there is a complete disjunct between what the democratic
processes are trying for in the short run and what those who have made an
enormous success of our achievements in the last fifteen years deem to be,
at least in the short run, their own requirements.

So when you talk of a nine point two per cent growth rate, it becomes a
statistical abstraction: 0.2 per cent of our people are growing at 9.92 per
cent per annum. But there is a very large number, I don't know how many,
whose growth rate is perhaps down to 0.2 per cent. But certainly, the number
of those who are at the lower end of the growth sector is very much larger
than those who are at the higher end.

Yet what happens when you have the budget? As an absolute ritual every
finance minister (my colleague Chidambaram is no exception) will devote the
first four or five pages of his budget speech to the bulk of India and there
will then be several pages, including whole of part B, which deals perhaps
with one or two per cent of our population. Almost the entire discussion
that takes place at CII or CII-like forums, will be about Part B rather than
Part A.

There are comfort levels that you get from statistics — for instance,
suddenly Arun Shourie, announcing in the NDA government that our poverty
rates have fallen from 35 per cent to 22 per cent. He did it by changing the
basis on which you estimate poverty. You cannot compare apples and oranges.
The next national sample survey has shown that our poverty levels have
actually increased. Are we going to be mesmerised by these statistics or
understand that 700 million of our people are poor?

So we have an Indira Awaas Yojana which will ensure that there will be a
'jhuggi' for every Indian round about the year 2200. We have the PM Gram
Sadak Yojana which was supposed to complete all the gram sadak in seven
years — we are in the eighth year. And where we are told that the education
of 1000 may be covered, who knows only the education of 500 will be covered.
And if you happen to be a tribal in Arunachal, you are told that because of
your social custom you are to live in one hut atop a hill, we can't provide
you a road.

I was always something of a leftist. But I became a complete Marxist only
after the economic reforms. Because I see the extent to which the most
important conception of Marx — that the relationship of any given class with
the means of production determines the superstructure — holds.

This ugly choice is placed before the government. An unequal choice, because
you have organised yourself to say what you want to say but the others are
only able to organise themselves and that too without speaking to each other
in the fifth year when the elections take place. That is why this expression
anti-incumbency, although the Oxford Dictionary says that it is a word
belonging to the English language, is a peculiarly Indian phenomenon.
Because everything that goes in the name of good governance like the
economic reforms either does not touch the life of people or affect them at
all.

We have seen what happened at Nandigram, we have seen what was happening at
Singur and we have these propositions that say that SEZs are going to come
and lakhs of hectares are going to be utilised for the good of the country.
For what's the syndrome in all this, it's still 'do bigha zameen'. The chap
says that I want my one bigha of zameen to be reinstated, but you offer
double the compensation and "baad mein dekha jayega". You go to Hirakud,
which is where Jawaharlal Nehru actually used the expression modern temples
of India, and you ask what happened to the tribals who were driven out of
there. Absolutely nobody knows.

Coming to the cabinet, you see what happens. The minute suggestions are made
as to what would perhaps benefit the people and what would benefit the
classes, the tendency is to say that our great achievement is 9.2 per cent
growth. Our great achievement is that Indian industrialists are buying
Arcelor and Corus. That Time magazine thinks we are a great power.

In these circumstances, when a proposal came before the government to spend
Rs 648 crore on the Gram Nyaya department, we were solemnly informed by one
of the most influential ministers in the government to remember that we are
a poor country. I was delighted when the next day he was with me in a group
of ministers and I reminded him of his remark and said in that case can we
stop spending the Rs 7000 crore on the Commonwealth Games and he said, "No,
no, that is an international commitment and a matter of national pride."
This national pride will of course blow up if you spend Rs 7000 crore on the
Commonwealth Games. We will be on the cover of Time and Newsweek.

I have always wondered why this rate of growth and economic reforms process
is dated to Manmohan Singh. Because actually it should be dated to L.K.
Jha's book Economic Strategy for the 80s. It is the decade in which we
quickly recovered from agricultural depression and registered a double digit
growth. At the beginning of the decade our biggest import was crude oil and
after that it was edible oil. By the end of the decade we were exporters of
several kinds of edible oil.

Why is it that Nehru became successful with his Hindu rate of growth? The
reason is that the Hindu rate of growth was five times what our pre-Hindu
rate of growth was. From 1914 to 1947, the figures of which are available,
the rate of growth of the Indian economy was 0.72 per cent. And we got the
Hindu rate of growth which was five times that and it made a difference to
the people. The minute you had solid land reforms, the people had their
'zameen'. That is what Mother India was all about. People felt that they
were involved in the process. All the political talk was: gareeb ke liye ham
kya kar sakte hain. Indira Gandhi matched it beautifully when the entire
political spectrum joined hands against her by saying, "Woh kehte hain
Indira hatao, hum kehte hain Garibi hatao."

There is nobody so marginal in a government as the minister of Panchayati
Raj. I count for nothing. Nothing! When I was the minister of petroleum, I
used to walk surrounded by this media. I kept on telling them that petrol
prices can do only three things — go up, go down or remain where they are.
And it was all over the place. But try and get them to write two words about
the 700 million Indians — absolutely impossible. And now with terrestrial
television it is even worse. You have to be quarreling with your
mother-in-law or hitting your daughter-in-law to be able to hit the
headlines. It is impossible to get particularly the pink papers to focus on
issues that affect the bulk of the people. And it is so easy to get them to
focus on issues that are of high relevance to only one or two per cent of
the people.

I believe the CII, if it is serious about the issue, should not be
restricting itself to 25 minutes discussion before lunch but hold
discussions for ten days and maybe something will come out of it.
*Edited extracts from a speech at the CII Northern Region annual meeting
2006-07, New Delhi, April 4*

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Yup, he may be cribbing just because he has no powerful ministry now but
still the facts are true!
 



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