hi,
Leading Marxist theorist, the Vice-chairman of Kerala state Planning board
and internationally reputed economist who was part of the UN committte to
evolve strategies to overcome global economic recession cites in this
persuasive article several reasons for the drubbing suffered by CPI(M) led
Left. According to Prabath Patnaik, it is the lack of alternative
development agenda and toeing of neoliberal policy prescriptions that led to
the decline of support amongst in traditional vote-base.

The importance of this article cannot be downplayed. The article was
published (July1,2009), a few days prior to the PB meeting convened to
discuss Kerala matters. In the same article, Prabath Patnaik also "brackets"
PDP-CPM alliance and SNC-Lavalin controversy as "local" reasons for the
failure of ther Left in the Lokasabha elections.





http://www.macroscan.com/cur/jul09/cur010709Reflections.htm
Reflections on the Left

Jul 1st 2009, Prabhat Patnaik

Perhaps the most significant feature of the recent Indian election is the
loss suffered by the Left. The BJP's defeat was more or less anticipated,
except by the psephologists, as was some loss by the Left; but the actual
extent of the Left's loss has been quite staggering. True, its vote share
has fallen only marginally; but in its Bengal base it has majority in only
about a third of the total Assembly segments, and in Kerala even less, which
is a serious setback. This setback is significant because the Left, even
though not a contender for power at the Centre as of now, is a major driving
force behind India's journey towards a modern, secular and democratic
society. It is of course not the only such force: there are large numbers of
progressive social and political movements which also play this role. But it
differs from all of them in one crucial respect, namely that it also has
electoral strength which they lack; and such strength does matter. Any
impairing of such strength therefore portends ill for the progress of
India's democratic revolution.

The media have been full of analysis of the Left's loss and of advice for
its revival, much of which ultimately focuses on just one point: it must
discard its ''phobia'' about ''imperialism''. This is occasionally expressed
directly, such as by Lord Meghnad Desai in an interview to The Hindu, but
usually indirectly. Sometimes it is said that the Left should not have
withdrawn support from the UPA government; but since the withdrawal was
precisely on the question of India's entering into a possible strategic
alliance with U.S. imperialism, this argument amounts to saying that the
Left exaggerates the imperialist threat. Sometimes it is said that the
people's verdict was in favour of ''development'', from which the inference
can be drawn that the Left's electoral loss must be attributed to its lack
of success in ushering in ''development'' (meaning ''development'' within
the neo-liberal paradigm, for which the different states in the country are
vying with one another to attract corporate and MNC investment). This again
amounts to saying that the Left's opposition to the neo-liberal paradigm,
which is linked to its anti-imperialism, is responsible for its
obsolescence, and hence defeat. Sometimes it is argued that there was a
''wave'' in favour of a secular and stable government which worked to the
advantage of the UPA and to the detriment of the Left, since the latter
forged links in the ''third front'' with Parties that had done business with
the BJP earlier. If the conclusion from this claim is that the Left should
have gone into the election alone rather than with ''third front'' allies,
then that at least is compatible with the Left's ideological premises
(though it is unlikely to have made much difference to its electoral
fortune); but if the conclusion is that the Left must always be with those
who would be normally supposed to ride such a ''wave'', then that amounts to
suggesting that it should compromise on its anti-imperialism to become a
permanent fixture of the UPA camp. The commonest advice to the Left in short
is to stop making a fuss over ''imperialism''.

This is hardly surprising. All over the world, in countries where the urban
middle class has escaped as yet the adverse consequences of globalization,
anti-imperialism among the students, the educated youth, and the literati is
at low ebb. On the contrary there is even a desire to welcome closer
integration with the imperialist world as a means of ushering in a secular
and progressive modernity, and of countering phenomena like feudal
patriarchy, religious authoritarianism and communal-fascism. Since Left
ideas typically get nourishment from the literati and the urban intellectual
strata, even though these ideas reach their fruition in the struggles of the
workers and peasants, who are the victims of globalization but are
sociologically distant from the intellectual strata, the Left movement
gathers momentum in situations where the urban middle class has also
suffered from globalization and hence makes common cause with the workers
and the peasants. But it faces problems in situations where the urban middle
class is a beneficiary of globalization. In such cases, the resistance to
imperialism and globalization often gets championed by forces other than the
Left; or, if the Left remains committed to the interests of the ''basic
classes'' and resists globalization, it often suffers through isolation from
the intellectual strata and the urban youth and students. (This loss, though
real, can of course be more than offset by an increase in its support base
among the peasantry through its resistance to globalization).

The current anti-imperialist upsurge in Latin America, which has brought
Left or Left-oriented governments to power over much of that continent, is a
consequence of the long years of crises that hurt, and hence radicalized,
the urban youth, students and intellectuals. On the other hand, in much of
central Asia, and now Iran, where the urban youth has not directly
experienced the adversity inflicted by globalization, imperialism still
retains the capacity to mobilize, or at least claim the sympathy of, vast
numbers of the urban population in so-called ''orange'', ''tulip'' and
''velvet'' ''revolutions'' that are supposed to bring in modernity and
democracy together with neo-liberalism. In India, since the adversity of
workers, peasants, agricultural labourers and petty producers, under
globalization, has been accompanied by high growth rates, and rapid
increases in incomes and opportunities for the urban middle class, a degree
of pro-imperialism among this class which includes intellectuals, media
persons and professionals, and hence a degree of exasperation with the
Left's continued adherence to old ''anti-imperialist shibboleths'', is
hardly surprising.

The Left's error that accounts for its loss in the recent elections can be
located here. As long as the urban middle class in India is not hit by the
adverse consequences of globalization, it will continue to remain
sympathetically disposed towards imperialism. Anti-imperialist ideological
appeals alone, though they must continue to be made, will not sway it much.
Two additional factors that will contribute towards this sympathy for
imperialism are, first, the assumption of US Presidency by Barack Obama who
represents ''imperialism with a human face'', and, second, the strong
opposition to imperialism coming at present from the Islamist movements with
which broad sections of the Indian urban middle class have little affinity.
As long as the Indian Left remains true to its ideology and the interests of
its class base, the pro-imperialist sympathies of the Indian urban middle
class will necessarily entail some estrangement of this class from the Left.
This is a phenomenon that will haunt the Left for as long as the current
conjuncture continues. In the recent elections, it follows that a certain
loss of urban support for the Left became unavoidable when it broke with the
UPA because of its anti-imperialism. (In Kerala, such alienation from the
Left was compounded by certain specific local factors: the secular segments
of the electorate could not accept the Left's relationship with the PDP, and
the Left's stand on the SNC-Lavalin Deal carried little credibility.)

If the Left had managed to increase its support among the workers, peasants,
petty producers and the rural poor, then it could have offset this loss
among the urban middle class; even if it had managed to retain its support
among the former, its overall loss would have still remained limited. But,
notwithstanding its opposition to imperialism, it did not have an
alternative policy on development, different from what the neo-liberal
paradigm dictated. In West Bengal, the government led by it pursued policies
of ''development'' similar to what the other states were following and in
competition with them, which, being part of the neo-liberal paradigm,
necessarily brought with them the threat of ''primitive accumulation of
capital'' (in the form specifically of expropriation of peasants' land).
These policies, though subsequently reversed in several instances, had an
adverse impact on the ''basic classes'' and caused a crucial erosion of the
class base of the Left.

While some loss of peasant support on account of Singur and Nandigram was
anticipated in West Bengal, it was thought that the Opposition's thwarting
of ''development'' would make the urban middle class switch to the Left as
the preferred alternative (because of which pictures of the Nano car were
posted all over the state as part of the CPI(M)'s campaign to remind the
electorate of the Opposition's intransigence in thwarting
''industrialization''). As a matter of fact, however, the Left lost votes
both among the urban middle class and among the peasants and the rural poor.
It lost votes among the urban middle class because this segment could not
stomach the Left's anti-imperialism and its fallout in the form of a
distancing from the UPA; it lost votes among the peasants and the rural poor
because the Left's anti-imperialism was insufficient, in the sense that it
did not extend to the formulation of an alternative economic policy. True,
the scope for a state government to produce such an alternative economic
policy is limited; but no effort in this direction was discernible.The Left,
it follows, cannot pursue its resistance to imperialism unless it also
evolves an alternative approach to ''development'', different from the
neo-liberal one which is promoted by imperialist agencies everywhere. The
central feature of such an approach must be the defence of the interests of
the class base of the Left. Development must be defined in the context of
the carrying forward of the democratic revolution, as a phenomenon
contributing to an improvement in the economic conditions of the ''basic
classes'', and hence to an accretion to their class-strength. It must be
seen as having a class dimension and not just referring to the augmentation
of a mass of ''things''. A supra-class notion of development, such as the
augmentation of a mass of ''things'' or the mere growth of GDP, is a form of
commodity-fetishism, and a part, therefore, of the ideology of imperialism.
Hence any ''development'' that entails primitive accumulation of capital
(which includes primitive accumulation through the state budget via the
doling out of massive subsidies to capitalists for undertaking investment),
that entails a reduction in workers' wage-rates, rights, and security,
cannot form part of the Left's agenda. If, in the context of the competition
between different states, private investment refuses to come into Left-ruled
states because of their development agenda being different, then alternative
ways of undertaking investment (e.g. through public or cooperative sector
investment) have to be explored; and of course whatever relief can possibly
be given to the ''basic classes'' against the onslaught of the neo-liberal
policies must be provided.

Accepting the advice given to it to overcome its ''outdated'' opposition to
imperialism and to the neo-liberal policies promoted by it will amount to
self-annihilation by the Left and to its incorporation into the structures
of bourgeois hegemony; it would entail a transformation of the Left into a
''Blairite'' entity. The argument may be made that a temporary acceptance of
bourgeois hegemony will quicken the capitalist transformation of our society
and hence bring the question of the transcendence of capitalism that much
faster on to the agenda. This argument is not just similar to, but actually
identical with, the bourgeois argument that the imposition of absolute
deprivation on workers, peasants and petty producers in the process of
capitalist development is of no great moment since such deprivation is only
temporary and will be more than made good in due course. (The argument
advanced, even by as sensitive an economist as Amartya Sen, during the
Singur and Nandigram agitations, that building London and Manchester must
also have meant the dispossession of some peasants of the time, suggesting
that such losses are eventually more than compensated, is of this genre).

This is a flawed argument on several counts, of which the most obvious one
is the following: capitalist transformation in societies like ours, even as
it erodes pre-capitalist and non-capitalist structures, cannot absorb the
producers displaced by such erosion into the fold of the capitalist sector
itself, since the level of technology on the basis of which this
transformation is undertaken, and the rate of its change, are such that its
capacity to generate employment is negligible. (The context in which London
and Manchester were built was altogether different: inter alia large-scale
emigration was possible at that time from the capitalist Centre to the
temperate regions which were opened up through colonialism for white
settlement). Capitalist transformation in societies like ours is altogether
different: it gives rise to a process of sheer pauperization but not of
proletarianization of petty producers, for reasons quite different from
those adduced by the Sixth Congress of the Communist International that had
first cognized this phenomenon in colonial and third world societies.

The Sixth Congress had attributed this phenomenon to the fetters put on
capitalist transformation in these societies by their integration into the
world economy, under imperialist hegemony, which trapped them in a certain
pattern of international division of labour. But the phenomenon today would
arise not from the fact of such fetters, which obviously are quite loose in
the case of an economy like India: it can apparently break out of this
international division of labour and experience rapid capitalist
transformation within a neo-liberal dispensation. The phenomenon arises
today from the contemporary technological basis of such capitalist
transformation.

It follows that if the Left fell prey to this argument, of first seeking to
usher in capitalist transformation in the hope of working for its
transcendence later, and hence proceeded today along a ''Blairite'' path,
then it would remain a Blairite entity forever. The moment of that passage
from capitalist transformation to the transcendence of capitalism will never
come as some natural historical break; and if there is no such discontinuity
then this entire distinction between two phases becomes invalid.

Accepting the advice to eschew its opposition to imperialism will not only
erode the existing class base of the Left, without ever creating the
conditions for a revival of revolutionary resistance later on a new basis;
it will not only fritter away the Left's class base built through decades of
struggles in exchange, not for a later rebirth as a revolutionary force but
for an incorporation in a Blairite fashion into the structures of bourgeois
and imperialist hegemony; but it will also push the ''basic classes'' into
the arms of extremist ideologies, ranging from ''Maoism'' to Islamist
anti-imperialism, which not just unleash violence and restrict mass
political action, but, for this very reason, are also ''unproductive'', in
the sense of being intrinsically incapable of achieving even the
intermediate goals they set for themselves, let alone achieving a society
that emancipates people. Anti-imperialism is not a product of the Left's
imagination; it arises from the objective conditions faced by the people. If
the Left abandons it, then others, no matter how incapable of overcoming
these objective conditions, will step in to fill the vacuum, and the people
will be left to their mercy.

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