[Speculations are rife that the 56" somehow managed an invite to Wuhan to
petition Xi not to humiliate India militarily, before the next Lok Sabha
poll.

《Expecting China to accept India as a permanent member of the UN Security
Council would be too much, but Modi’s failure to gain entry even to the
Nuclear Suppliers Group suggests he has not adequately used the leverage at
his disposal, notably the massive market for Chinese-made products in
India. Perhaps he will pull the NSG rabbit out of his hat just before next
year’s general election for maximum political impact. Certainly, the
impression created by his China trip was of a prime minister seeking to
ward off bad news in an election year rather than one advancing the cause
of his nation.
...
...The Bharatiya Janata Party proclaimed through front page advertisements
in national dailies that April 28, 2018 was momentous, for it was the day
India achieved full electrification of its villages. In cornering the
glory, the party acted like a batsman who comes to the crease with three
required for victory and takes full credit for the win after scoring those
final runs. Around 97% of India’s villages fulfilled the definition of
being electrified when Modi came to power; he scored just 3% of the runs.》]

https://scroll.in/article/877590/modi-was-elected-to-get-india-sprinting-but-all-hes-doing-is-screen-the-movie-in-fast-motion

Modi was elected to get India sprinting, but all he’s doing is screen the
movie in fast motion
The government’s claims on full electrification of India’s villages follow
a familiar script.

Modi was elected to get India sprinting, but all he’s doing is screen the
movie in fast motion
PTI file photo

6 hours ago

Girish Shahane

Following the trend described in my previous column, Narendra Modi
continued to under-deliver in international affairs, returning from his
heart-to-heart in Wuhan with Xi Jinping with little concrete to offer. The
Indian government had contained expectations ahead of the meeting, framing
it as a wide ranging philosophical discussion, but the absence of any real
progress stood out at the summit’s conclusion. Expecting China to accept
India as a permanent member of the UN Security Council would be too much,
but Modi’s failure to gain entry even to the Nuclear Suppliers Group
suggests he has not adequately used the leverage at his disposal, notably
the massive market for Chinese-made products in India. Perhaps he will pull
the NSG rabbit out of his hat just before next year’s general election for
maximum political impact. Certainly, the impression created by his China
trip was of a prime minister seeking to ward off bad news in an election
year rather than one advancing the cause of his nation.

Taking all credit
If Modi’s NSG failure is instructive, so is the manner in which his party
presents domestic success. The Bharatiya Janata Party proclaimed through
front page advertisements in national dailies that April 28, 2018 was
momentous, for it was the day India achieved full electrification of its
villages. In cornering the glory, the party acted like a batsman who comes
to the crease with three required for victory and takes full credit for the
win after scoring those final runs. Around 97% of India’s villages
fulfilled the definition of being electrified when Modi came to power; he
scored just 3% of the runs.

Sharing credit for the process that led to the watershed moment would be
anathema for Modi and Amit Shah. They prefer an us-versus-them,
take-no-prisoners approach in which the decades of Congress rule are viewed
as a long era of darkness and corruption bereft of redeeming qualities.
They paint the Indian National Congress as a malevolent entity to be
extirpated rather than what it is, a democratic opposition party with a
nearly identical economic programme and a significantly different social
policy. Modi and Shah claim to bring radical change while pursuing the same
incremental reform that characterised the Congress-led United Progressive
Alliance rule.

India’s record in most areas of economic development over the four Modi
years is very similar to that of the previous 10. Take power generation,
which is relevant to the discussion about rural electrification. The
government’s figures indicate that the years of UPA II produced an average
annual growth rate of 6.06%, and the figure has dropped slightly to 5.68%
under the BJP-led National Democratic Alliance rule. The tiny difference
between the two is less significant than the fact that India today can
produce far more power than it can sell. Growth of demand has lagged the
tremendous augmentation of installed capacity. Utilisation of capacity in
both private and public sector thermal power plants has plummeted in the
last decade, from around 80% to less than 60%. This has contributed
substantially to the crisis of bad loans threatening India’s banks.

No easy solution
State Distribution Companies (Discoms), the intermediaries between
producers and consumers, are plagued by losses, and don’t have the
resources to buy power, leaving citizens, even those who can afford the
bill, to cope with power cuts. Successive administrations have tried to
solve the Discom problem. The NDA under Atal Behari Vajpayee introduced the
Accelerated Power Development Programme in 2001, and modified it the
following year. UPA I further altered that plan before coming up with a new
one in 2012 called the Financial Restructuring Plan. The idea was to have
state governments absorb half the liabilities of the Discoms, giving them
breathing room to cut transmission losses, theft and under-recoveries.
Under Modi, the Power Minister Piyush Goyal introduced the Ujjwal Discom
Assurance Yojana or UDAY scheme, which had state governments take over 75%
of the Discoms’ debt while banks restructured the rest.

The success of all these schemes, which were animated by similar ideas,
depended on electricity providers being able to clean up their act in the
face of populist pressure. The news with respect to UDAY’s success is
mixed. Only seven of the 31 states and union territories that signed on to
the plan reported meeting their 2017 targets to pare losses. Meanwhile,
shifting the debt burden is merely kicking the can down the road, as states
will be forced to cut investment to pay interest on debt they have
inherited from the Discoms. It is a mess with no easy solution, as Arun
Jaitley admitted in a rare moment of public introspection at a 2017 meeting
of the BRICS Economic Forum.

None of this means India is going backwards. Each year, more people get
access to power and more people can afford to pay for it. The slow pace of
change is what can seem depressing. A village is considered electrified if
at least 10% of the households within it have access to power. That’s a
very low threshold, and crossing it can only be cause for muted
celebration. What India really looks forward to is a time when every
citizen will not only have access to power, but actually use it to light
rooms, cool homes, play television, and charge mobile phones and computers.
That is no pipe dream, but a privilege residents of dozens of countries
enjoy today. We began 70 years ago by crawling towards that target, and 25
years ago began to walk. Narendra Modi was elected on the promise of
getting India sprinting, but all he’s doing is screen the movie in fast
motion.

-- 
Peace Is Doable

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