[A few highlights of the first year:
Green laws and community rights including rights of tribals guaranteed
under the Forest Rights Act repeatedly trampled upon to grant go-ahead
to mega eco-destructive industrial projects, almost as a matter of
routine.
Tarring dissenting NGOs as "anti-national" and launching an open war
to strangulate them, mainly, by choking off  legitimate fund flow on
the basis of trumped up charges.
State inactions, if not worse, in case of numerous attacks on
churches, Ghar Wapsi, Love Jihad, vitriolic hate speeches by leaders,
ministers and legislators from the saffron camp.
Land acquisition bills / ordinances to snatch away peasants' lands to
benefit corporates.
Moves to whittle down labour laws to favour capital.
Move to legalise child labour in specific sectors.
Packing academic bodies with RSS appointees.
Non-appointment of the CIC, CVC, Lokpal etc.
MGNREGA and RTE being starved of funds.
Health and education and other social welfare budgets slashed.
Non-implementation of the Food Security Act.
Military budget hiked.
Concentrating powers in the PMO.]

http://www.hindustantimes.com/analysis/modi-government-one-year-of-dismantling-the-welfare-state/article1-1349116.aspx

Modi government: one year of dismantling the welfare state
Harsh Mander, Hindustan Times | Updated: May 20, 2015

An impoverished girl swings her baby brother in a makeshift hammock in
Bhubaneswar. The first year of Narendra Modi's government has seen
cutbacks in welfare programmes for the poor, say activists. (AP Photo)

A dominant feature of the first year of Narendra Modi's leadership is
the quiet dismantling of India's imperfectly realised framework of
welfare and rights, covertly, by stealth.

A declared pro-corporate agenda, such as the land acquisition
ordinance, proved politically messy and costly. Therefore, the
government resorted instead for an enfeebling of the welfare
architecture of the country through a combination of fiscal
withdrawals, ignoring even legally mandated obligations.

But this attracted barely any attention, although having profound
implications for millions of India's impoverished people.

The National Food Security Act, passed in September 2013, mandated its
full roll-out with a year. The Union government administratively
resorted to three advancements of this deadline without any amendments
to the law, which is illegal.

The budget nominally sustained the food subsidy, but full
implementation of the act required major increases in real terms.

The budget announced a stunning 54% fall in ICDS allocations for
infant, young child and pregnant mother feeding; and a 30% decline in
allocations for school feeding.

The near-universal maternity benefit programme, guaranteeing support
of Rs 6,000 for every pregnant woman in the food law, received almost
no budgetary allocations.

Take again the Right to Free and Compulsory Education Act of 2009. We
find a brutal one-fifth cut in allocations for the flagship vehicle
Sarva Shikha Abhiyan.

The cuts in public health are among the most drastic. India's public
spending on health at 1.2% of GDP is one of the lowest in the world,
but this has been reduced even further, badly stymieing the
possibilities of the National Health Mission to refurbish primary
health services for the urban and rural poor.

This same dismal story repeats in all aspects of social spending,
including pensions, drinking water, sanitation, rural infrastructure
and urban renewal. The government's defence that these cuts will be
offset by greater devolution of funds from the central tax pool to
states in disingenuous, even deceitful.

Because increases in tax devolution have been matched by an almost
equal reduction in central assistance to states, as a result of which
the total funds which are being transferred from the centre to the
states stand almost unchanged.

Even more worrying, the centre has decided to discontinue supporting
expenditures on staff salaries, which constitutes the bulk of expenses
in health and education.

This asphyxiation is also manifest in the wage-guarantee MNREGA, which
Prime Minister Modi sardonically trashed as "living proof of the
Congress's failure in reducing poverty over decades".

Nitin Sethi in Business Standard reported that for January-March 2015,
the government provided 347 million person-days of work, less than
half the work provided to the poor in rural India in the corresponding
period of 2014, and below 60% of the work provided in January-March
2013.

Further, extraordinary delays in transfer of funds to states have
choked wage payments. Last year, the wages of more than 70% workers
were delayed beyond the legal limit of 15 days, effectively
slow-killing the programme.

What are the consequences of this dismantling brick by brick of
India's welfare architecture? Feeding programmes for children will be
starved, impoverished pregnant mothers will be denied the promise of
rest and nutrition through maternity payments.

Budget cuts will ensure even poorer provisioning for state
schools--which are now the preserve only of children of the very poor
and lower-castes--and disgraceful low access to healthcare for
millions of indigent people will plummet further.

Rural workers will no longer be able to rely on MNREGA for wage
survival alternatives to unemployment, hunger, distress migration and
debt bondage.

In two fiercely competing ideas of the good state, one is of a
redistributive state, which defends rights of people of disadvantage.
The alternate is of a state which nurtures globalised markets and
private investment, and trusts markets to enable people to purchase
healthcare, education, nutrition and social security.

Government in the last ten years placed high faith in markets, but its
market-friendly policies were offset by beginning the building of a
rights-based social welfare infrastructure. India still spent too
little for the poor.

But Modi's stewardship of the country in its first year
represents--not just through savage social spending cuts, but labour
and land acquisition reforms--the consolidation of corporate control
over policy-making, and the further extinction of hope that the
indignity and want of India's poor will ebb significantly in the
foreseeable future.

(Harsh Mander is convenor, Aman Biradari. He is the author of Looking
Away: Inequality, Prejudice and Indifference in New India. The views
expressed are personal.)
-- 
Peace Is Doable

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