http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/lead/this-perverse-rage-against-the-poor/article5072339.ece?homepage=true&css=print
This perverse rage against the poorHarish Khare
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The Hinduedit page statecradft 300813
With the economic boom petering out, those who benefitted from it are angry
with the government for the Food Security Bill because it is paying
attention to the needs of the underprivileged for a change

This week’s received wisdom insists that the Indian economy has
irretrievably collapsed because on Monday, the Lok Sabha passed the
National Food Security Bill (NFSB). *The Hindu Business Line* headline
(Aug.28, page 1) said it all: “Re, Sensex sink on fears Food Bill will feed
deficit.” The subtext of the lament appears to be that the rupee decline
was the market’s way of registering a pointed disapproval of the food
security initiative. The Schadenfreude-*wallahs*are as happy as are the
market-reformers that the United Progressive Alliance (UPA) leadership has
been fixed so gloriously for venturing into a “populist” course of action.
The bandwagon routine has acquired a momentum of its own; even Hindi and
other vernacular newspapers have allowed themselves to be mesmerised by the
crisis-mongering on television. This, though, is no time to panic. This is
the time to strike a balance between short-term difficulty and long-term
promises and commitments.

*What wrong signals?*

Once every few decades comes a moment in a Republic’s life when a few
fundamental commitments have to be renewed — or rejected. This is one such
week, a time to test our core beliefs. It is also the time to ask a
fundamental question: since when in this country has a veto been ceded to
the markets and its manipulators, at home and abroad, to decide the issues
of equity, social justice and economic fairness? There is something
inherently perverse in the suggestion that this much-needed welfare measure
would send out the “wrong” signals. Pray to whom? Those half-a-dozen
professional financial manipulators in London?

Indeed, economists can always be relied upon to argue that there is always
a better way to do anything. Some are competing among themselves to declare
that this food security initiative will neither work, nor fetch any votes
for the ruling party. Let us make no mistake. Beyond all these
sophisticated arguments is a certain class prejudice, resentful that so
many resources are being “wasted” for the poor and other socially
disadvantaged people, that in this age of “reforms,” political
considerations and calculations are being allowed to determine the
allocation of societal resources.

This misses the very essence of the concept of political legitimacy in a
democratic arrangement. A democracy survives and prospers only when every
stakeholder gets an abiding sense of participation, partnership and
entitlement. We often seem to keep forgetting that politics is all about
who gets what at whose expense. During these last five years, at least for
most of the time, the corporates and their policy preferences have been
accorded unprecedented acceptance. The time is ripe to strike a new
balance. And the NFSB does just that.

*Reform by stealth*

If we are honest with ourselves, we will have no difficulty in
acknowledging that for 20 years, economic reforms have been operationalised
without a political mandate. Not until recently when the Congress party
held a public meeting to rally opinion behind the Manmohan Singh
government’s FDI policy, did any political party have the courage to
proclaim openly and boldly its commitment to “economic reforms.” Yet, the
“reforms” have been routinely and regularly proclaimed to be
“irreversible,” irrespective of the political colour of the government in
New Delhi. The process has well been summed up in that evocative phrase,
“reform by stealth.”

So now, when we are confronted with a veritable economic meltdown, we are
ill-equipped to attend to the more serious and more debilitating crisis of
our democratic project running out of its popular legitimacy. India’s
democratic arrangements no longer appear to have the requisite social and
political sanctions behind them. And we are unable to deal adequately with
the systemic overload because our public discourse has been hijacked by a
self-serving advocacy crowd and by a professionally disoriented media. For
example, a year ago there was carping all around that the crony capitalists
and the corrupt politicians were robbing the nation of its wealth, and we
staged massive spectacles of resentment at Jantar Mantar; now, a year
later, we are ranting and raving that we are not listening to or heeding
those who rig the stock markets.

If shouting and screaming every evening could produce solutions to
difficult and complex problems, India would have been the most efficacious
and working corner of planet Earth. Despite the obvious disapproval of the
shouting class, the UPA leadership has gone ahead with the Food Security
Bill. Hence, the exaggerated anger.

As social philosopher Roberto Mangabeira Unger points out, a peaceful
social order is in itself not enough; “ [S]ociety must be set up in a
manner capable of justification in the yes of each of its members.” In
political economy terms, each section of society, and every stakeholder
gets to determine: what is in it for me? The Democratic Project is a social
compact, an indefinable construct, but nonetheless one that hinges on a
promise of a fair deal for all. The poor are asking this question with
greater urgency — and in the Maoist-strongholds with arms and blood — as
decades of “economic growth” have produced new inequities and disparities.

Rather than wait for the next round of the “Maoist” violence to jerk us
back to harsh realities, what the Food law does is that at one stroke, it
sends out a message that the Indian state has not turned its back on the
poor, and that the have-nots continue to have a claim on the collective
resources, and that they have not been left to their own devices or to the
market’s curative potency.

This message has to be understood and appreciated in the context of the
growing preference in some quarters for authoritarian solutions — throw out
the encumbering paraphernalia of social equity or fairness, and let the
floodgates of enterprise and business acumen be thrown wide open.

*Resenting interventionism*

A decade of economic prosperity has allowed millions and millions of
middle-class families to realise their upwardly revised aspirations and
life experiences; at the same time, the UPA saw to it that the welfare
state kept expanding the “social agenda,” providing a safety net against
the vagaries of the market.

Now, the good days have seemingly come to an end, and there is anger that
the state remains equally mindful of the welfare poor. We all thought that
the poor have been disappeared from the policy drawing room; and suddenly,
they are back with almost a veto. The narrative-controllers resent that.
Just when they thought they had successfully defanged the Indian state of
its interventionist impulses, here comes the Food Security Bill.

The bill can be seen as the other side of the “stimulus” coin. The
2008-2009 stimulus was used by the super-rich to buy real estate in London
and other European cities. At that time, no one seemed to find anything
inherently wrong at this massive, disproportionate allocation of resources
for so few. None of it was invested here to create jobs; instead, the
super-rich petulantly proclaimed that the government was not sufficiently
attentive to their “sentiment” and hence they would take their ball (Indian
savings and taxpayers) and play in other economies. No one complained;
instead, the government was blamed for the corporate sector’s misplaced
priorities.

If subsidised food can reduce the food spending of the poor, and place some
surplus money in their hands, which would then be spent in India, that may
end up stimulating domestic consumer demand. It would be a kind of stimulus
lite, for the poor.

A ruling party in India is called upon to fulfil its basic obligation to
keep intact the democratic credentials of the “system.” The food security
legislation is a partial response to that obligation and must be applauded.

*(Harish Khare is a senior journalist, political analyst and former media
adviser to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh. He is currently a Jawaharlal
Nehru Fellow.)*


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Peace Is Doable

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