December 4, 2013


http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/lead/towards-an-economy-of-mutualism/article5418660.ece

*Towards an economy of mutualism*

MADHAV GADGIL



*Modern economy must come to assume a mutualistic, and not a predatory,
role toward the natural resource-based, labour-intensive sector of the
economy*

J.C. Kumarappa, the Gandhian economist who worked with the Planning
Commission in the early years of Indian Independence, favoured
industrialisation but insisted that its pursuit should not lead to the
creation of an economy of violence. Recent disturbances linked to control
over, and fate of, the rich water, mineral, forest and biodiversity
resources of the Western Ghats of Kerala suggest that Kumarappa’s worst
fears of a lopsided development have come true. As Nobel Laureate Joseph
Stiglitz emphasises in his recent book, *The Price of Inequality*, any
nation must aim at a harmonious development of its four capital stocks: not
just man-made capital that GDP highlights, but natural capital, human
capital and social capital as well. A GDP-centric viewpoint focusses
exclusively on economic activity in the organised industries-services
sector.

*Chembanmudy quarries*

Thus, in the case of the controversial Chembanmudy hill stone quarries of
Pathanamthitta district in Kerala, what will count as positive development
gains are not only quarrying, crushing and truck transport, but also the
boosting of sales of anti-cancer and anti-asthmatic drugs as a result of
the ill-health caused by quarrying activities. In the absence of proper
records, other relevant elements of economic activities such as the decline
in agricultural productivity and loss of employment for agricultural labour
that ought to be counted on the debit side will be overlooked. In addition,
the GDP-centric view totally ignores the ongoing grave depletion of natural
capital, human capital and social capital. Thus, in the case of
Chembanmudy, landslips and blockage of streams are adversely impacting
land, water, forest and biodiversity resources. Health, education and
employment are three important components of human capital. In the
Chembanmudy case, health has suffered, with even young children developing
lung cancer. Mothers have petitioned that the unceasing truck traffic does
not permit their children to focus on studies.

As for employment, there is little for local community members. Most of the
small number of labour employed is from tribal tracts of Orissa or
Jharkhand, people whose livelihood has been destroyed by rampant mining in
their own native districts. There are horror stories making rounds of how
this disorganised labour force is ill-treated, with no compensation for
accidental injuries or even death. Indeed, the claim that India’s rapid
economic growth is helping create much-needed employment is dubious; the
annual rate of growth in employment in the organised sector that was 2 per
cent when the GDP was growing at 3 per cent, actually declined to one per
cent as the GDP growth rate soared to 7 per cent. So what we are witnessing
is jobless growth, with accompanying erosion of human and social capital.

Social capital resides in social harmony, cooperation and trust. These too
are suffering under the prevalent economy of violence. This economy is
promoting grabbing and spoiling of land, water, mineral and forest
resources to benefit a few, at the cost of the larger society. This is
being facilitated by lawlessness and social injustice: witness the very
large number of illegal quarries currently operational in Kerala, estimated
at 1,700 out of a total 2,700 functional quarries. The disinformation
campaign focussing first on our Western Ghats Ecology Expert Panel (WGEEP)
report, and now on the Kasturirangan report, and the violence that has been
triggered suggest that social disharmony has become the order of the day.

WGEEP points out that we are currently practising “Development by
Exclusion, accompanied by Conservation by Exclusion.” This is because the
many powerful interests that control decision-making today are not
motivated to pursue development that would create mutually beneficial
relationships among the beneficiaries of the organised industries-services
sector and the bulk of our people dependent for their livelihoods and
well-being on a healthy base of the natural resources. Nor are the
powers-that-be properly informed of the realities at the ground level. This
prevails all over the country, despite our well-entrenched democracy and
the many constitutional and legal provisions to protect the environment and
engage people in decision-making processes that are a result of a
sensitivity towards what the people want.

Of all the States, it is Kerala that has led the country in democratic
devolution and has made considerable progress in ensuring that people can
influence the course of development and protect their environment and
livelihoods. A notable example of this is the Plachimada panchayat in
Palakkad district, where a Coca Cola plant had polluted as well as depleted
groundwater, with consequent drying up of wells, loss of agricultural
productivity and concomitant negative impacts on livelihoods. The people of
Plachimada ensured that there was a proper scientific inquiry into the
losses suffered by them. This provided sound scientific evidence that these
losses amount to a whopping Rs. 260 crore. On the basis of this evidence,
the panchayat rescinded the company’s licence. Notably enough, initially
none of the political parties backed the people’s demands, but came round
when confronted with a groundswell of sentiment. While cancelling the
licence, the panchayat evoked its constitutional rights, arguing that as a
local elected government it had the duty to protect the well-being of its
subjects. So it had the right to cancel — or refuse permission to —
anything that affected its subjects adversely. The company’s
counter-argument was that the panchayat was a subordinate of the State
government and thus could not operate out of its domain, since the State
government had granted the licence for Coca Cola to operate. The High Court
rejected this argument, affirming that people at the grassroots indeed have
the authority to decide on the course of development in their localities.

The powers-that-be today would like to set aside these significant
constitutional provisions empowering the people and helping them protect
their environment. Instead, they are promoting a GDP-centric approach with
little concern for natural, human, social capital. This is reflected in the
rhetorical — and unconstitutional — question posed by the Kasturirangan
panel: “How can local communities have any role in economic
decision-making?” Evidently, the Kasturirangan panel wishes to facilitate
the continuance of the present system of a predatory economy, but was
obliged to prescribe some minimal level of protection for natural
resources. Quite typically, this protection is proposed to be imposed from
above and is not decided upon through a democratic process. But even this
minimal protection is unacceptable to the beneficiaries of the current
system who triggered the recent violence.

*Duty to inform*

Such lopsided development is clearly against broader national interests and
since it is people at the grassroots that are best aware of what is
happening to the natural, human and social capital, their inputs are
critical to arriving at a development strategy that will promote a
harmonious, balanced development. The sole duty of those wielding power
should, therefore, be to inform the populace of all relevant facts and of
the various development-conservation alternatives. Hence, WGEEP has
explicitly stated that “we should attempt to develop a model of
conservation and development compatible with each other … to replace the
prevailing ‘Develop recklessly – conserve thoughtlessly’ pattern with one
of ‘Develop sustainably – conserve thoughtfully’. The fine-tuning of
development-conservation practices to [the] local context that this calls
for would require the full involvement of local communities. It is
therefore quite inappropriate to depend exclusively on government agencies
for the constitution and management of Ecologically Sensitive Zones.
Instead the final demarcation of the Zones and fine tuning of the
regulatory as well as promotional regimes must be based on extensive inputs
from local communities and local bodies.”

An important focus of the development of the Western Ghats tracts of Kerala
should therefore be on properly informing and organising people down to the
grassroots level to exercise their democratic rights. A well-informed and
empowered citizenry will ensure that the environment is properly cared for
even as we continue to industrialise, as has happened in Germany and the
Scandinavian countries. What we need to concentrate on is implementing that
which by all rights must be implemented, namely, the constitutional
provisions for protecting the environment and empowering the people.

Of course, India must continue to develop a vibrant technology-based
economy as well. Inevitably, this will end up employing only a small
proportion of our people. But this modern economy must come to assume a
mutualistic, and not predatory, role towards the natural resource-based,
labour intensive sector of the economy. That is the only route to balanced
and harmonious economic and social development.

*(Madhav Gadgil is Chairman of the Western Ghats Ecology Expert Panel.
[email protected] <[email protected]>)*




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Peace Is Doable

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