[This is a corporate-sponsored government and its main function
appears to be to assist business, especially big business. In fact,
this is explicit. For instance, improving the “investment climate” is
one of the main objectives of the central government. Business
certainly has a role to play in the Indian economy today. However,
there are large areas of social life where business is not the best
approach. Business is not a good way of organising education, or
health care, or social security, or public transport, or urban
planning, or the protection of the environment, or so many other
things that are crucial for the quality of life. In all these fields,
public action is very important. The government’s single-minded focus
on supporting business leads to a dramatic neglect of constructive
action in these fields.]

http://www.outlookindia.com/article/be-less-worried-about-raising-growth/296140

WEB | DEC 14, 2015

NTERVIEW

“Be Less Worried About Raising Growth”

Kislaya interviews economist Jean Dreze on the Narendra Modi
government’s performance vis-à-vis the economy.
KISLAYA INTERVIEWS JEAN DREZE

India’s economic record is a little confusing. Some observers feel
that the Indian economy is in recession, others that it is booming.
Where does the truth lie?
Around the time of the last Lok Sabha elections, the refrain in the
business media was that the economy is in the doldrums. Today, we are
told that the Indian economy is one of the fastest-growing economies
in the world. That is correct, but it was also true two years ago. The
Indian economy has been growing at about 7.5 per cent per year for the
last twelve years, with minor deviations up or down in specific years.
The latest estimate for 2014-5, 7.3 per cent, is bang on track. So are
the provisional estimates for the first half of 2015-6. So the
statistical record does not justify this change in perceptions of the
Indian economy. The earlier story, about recession, was used to
justify the call for big-bang reforms under the new government.
Today’s story, about economic success, is used to claim that the new
government is doing very well. The real story is that the Indian
economy has been doing very well for a long time, in terms of economic
growth. We should be less worried about raising the growth rate, which
may or may not be possible, than about achieving faster social
progress. That requires not only a reasonable rate of economic growth,
but also effective public action in a wide range of fields - health,
education, nutrition, basic amenities, environmental protection,
social equity, among others.

*Some economists argue that since redistribution is difficult to
achieve, growth is the best development strategy. What do you feel?*

This is a misleading way of posing the problem. Development is not
just a matter of growth and redistribution. Both can certainly help:
growth raises per-capita income, and redistribution increases poor
people’s share of it. But development means more than raising
per-capita income. It is about the quality of life. All sorts of
things can be done to enhance the quality of life without necessarily
involving growth or redistribution. For instance, bringing
accountability in public life can contribute a great deal to the
quality of life, and is an essential part of development in the broad
sense of the term. Similarly, improving the quality of school
education would be a form of development, which does not depend on
growth or redistribution alone. So there is a lot to do, other than
aiming at faster growth or more redistribution. Focusing on economic
growth alone is a very narrow way of thinking about development.

*The Modi government seems to be pursuing a business-driven growth
model. How far is this likely to serve the purpose of development in
this broad sense?*

***This is a corporate-sponsored government and its main function
appears to be to assist business, especially big business. In fact,
this is explicit. For instance, improving the “investment climate” is
one of the main objectives of the central government. Business
certainly has a role to play in the Indian economy today. However,
there are large areas of social life where business is not the best
approach. Business is not a good way of organising education, or
health care, or social security, or public transport, or urban
planning, or the protection of the environment, or so many other
things that are crucial for the quality of life. In all these fields,
public action is very important. The government’s single-minded focus
on supporting business leads to a dramatic neglect of constructive
action in these fields.*** [Emphasis added.]

*The government’s growth strategy also places a lot of emphasis on
physical infrastructure. Is this justified?*

We certainly need better infrastructure. The question is what sort of
infrastructure, what are the priorities. Consider for instance Ranchi,
where I live. The infrastructure is pathetic. There are water
shortages, power cuts, blocked drains, traffic jams, health hazards of
all sorts. A sensible government would strive to improve basic
amenities and public services, not just for a privileged minority but
for everyone. What political leaders actually like, however, is
high-tech corporate-sponsored projects like the proposal to build a
brand-new “smart city” of one square kilometre just outside Ranchi.
This is unlikely to be of much help to the vast majority of Ranchi’s
residents. But it will generate lucrative contracts for private
companies, and perhaps some handsome kickbacks. That seems to be the
real purpose.

*There were large cuts in social expenditure in the last Union Budget.
The central government is justifying this on the grounds that states
are now getting a larger share of the divisible pool of taxes, as
recommended by the Fourteenth Finance Commission. Is this convincing?*

The Commission did not recommend that centrally sponsored schemes
should be trimmed as a counterpart to greater tax devolution. On the
contrary, it stressed the need for continuation of central support in
some critical fields including “education, health, water supply and
sanitation, child nutrition”. The Commission did call for a new
institutional mechanism to oversee these schemes, but that is very
different from abrupt and unilateral budget cuts. Even if some of
these cuts are justified in the medium term, they should not be
imposed on the states without taking any precautions to protect
important schemes. The central government seems to have embarked on an
ill-planned delegation of social policy to the states that is likely
to cause some short-term disruption at the very least.

*Despite some ambivalence towards the social sector on the part of the
central government, many states are still trying to expand and improve
their social policies. Do you feel that there is any future in these
efforts?*

Indeed, there are vast possibilities for more extensive and effective
social policies in India. If India’s GDP continues to grow at around
7.5 per cent per year or so for another twenty years, and if the share
of social spending in GDP rises by 50 per cent over the same period,
there will be five times as much money for the social sector in twenty
years’ time as there is today, in real per-capita terms. If good use
is made of these resources, building on what has been learnt in recent
years, the average Indian twenty years from now could enjoy even
better public services and basic amenities than the residents of
Kerala or Tamil Nadu enjoy today.

*What needs to be done to make better use of these resources?*

Making good use of social spending requires, first and foremost, a
better work culture in schools, health centres, Gram Panchayat
offices, and the public sector in general. This may sound like a
pipedream, but it can also be seen as a natural development in a
country with a modicum of democracy. Public-sector absenteeism,
exploitation and corruption thrive on the disempowerment of the public
and the submissive acceptance of practices that are, in fact, totally
unacceptable. As democratic engagement gains strength and the public
becomes more articulate and vigilant, these practices often become
harder to sustain, and the corresponding social norms tend to evolve.
Of course, one should not rely on this process alone to achieve more
responsibility in the public sector – better incentives and
accountability measures are also required. But these measures are best
seen as part of the larger need to change the public work culture
through democratic practice.

*In recent work, you have shown that Bihar is catching up with other
states in some important fields, such as child development. Do you
think that the outcome of recent elections in Bihar has anything to do
with this record?*

I tend to be sceptical of anyone who claims to understand why people
vote one way or another. However, it seems clear that the people of
Bihar give some credit to the previous government for its development
record. This appreciation is not misplaced: there is growing evidence
that Bihar has made rapid progress in many important fields in recent
years. For instance, female literacy in the age group of 10-14 years
increased from 51 to 81 per cent between 2001 and 2011, and the
proportion of children who are fully immunized shot up from 33 per
cent in 2005-6 to 60 per cent in 2013-4. For a state that used to be
thought incapable of running proper public services, this is a real
step forward. Let us not forget, however, that in spite of recent
improvements Bihar is still one of India’s worst-governed states. The
living conditions of poor people there are dreadful. Bihar has shown
an ability to change, but radical change is yet to happen.

*What about Jharkhand?*

Change will come to Jharkhand sooner or later. The corruption,
violence, crime and exploitation that we are seeing there today cannot
endure forever in a society with democratic institutions. How that
change will come about, however, is hard to predict. Political change
happens in all sorts of unexpected ways.

*You were prevented from attending the recent Economics Conclave in
Delhi last month, after receiving a warm invitation from the Finance
Ministry. Do you feel that growing intolerance is spreading to
academic circles?*

I don't think that we have reached the stage of serious attacks on
academic freedom, though there have been some skirmishes, like the
forced recalling of Wendy Doniger's book The Hindus. Artists and
writers are far more vulnerable to harassment. That's because their
work tends to be more subversive than academic research. If recent
trends continue, however, it is only a matter of time until
irrationality and fanaticism also affect academic work.

*What do you think is the reason for this surge in irrationality, and
for recent attacks on rationalists?*

Rationalist thought is threatening for those whose dominance is based
on indoctrination and superstition. Consider for instance the caste
system. The dominance of the upper castes depends on perpetuating a
whole system of irrational beliefs about the abilities and rights of
people who are born in different castes. The spread of education,
enlightenment and democracy threaten this system of dominance.
Naturally, those who stand to gain from the system have a tendency to
suppress this spread of rationalism and reaffirm the old, irrational
dogmas. That, I believe, is one possible reason for recent attacks on
rationality, though there may be others too.

*Is rising intolerance a threat to India’s onward economic march?*

Tolerance is a value in its own right, we don't have to justify it by
arguing that it has economic returns. Still, I think that Raghuram
Rajan had a point when he said that open debate and enquiry foster
economic progress. This is not primarily because investors are put off
by intolerance - investors care about profits, not communal harmony
and that sort of thing. It is because economic progress depends on
human creativity, innovation and initiative, all of which benefit from
freedom of thought and expression. All this, of course, is a little
speculative, and that's another reason for valuing tolerance for its
own sake rather than as an economic asset.

*Earlier this year, you spent ten days with the Jan Adhikar Yatra that
went from village to village in Jharkhand to mobilise people against
growing attacks on their social and economic rights. Can you share
some of your memories from the Yatra?*

The strongest impression I retain from the Yatra is how so many people
in rural Jharkhand are still struggling with very basic survival
issues – how to save their land, where to find water, how to feed
their children. It is really a humanitarian emergency, but we are so
used to it that we don’t feel any urgent need for action. Once in a
while, during the Yatra, I checked the news on the internet, and it
was shocking to see how public debates are dominated by trivial issues
– who should be allowed to eat beef, how a street in Delhi should be
renamed, where the Saraswati river used to flow, and so on. Basically,
poor people count for very little. This makes you realise how far we
still are from democracy in the real sense of the term.

This interview was first published in Newswing and has been extracted
with permission.


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Peace Is Doable

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