Looking at the ongoing world-wide economic crisis and serious attempts at 
exploring ways and means to overcome it now and prevent it from recurring in 
the future, the return of Nehruvian approach seems to be a strong probability. 
Jawaharlal Nehru's return from exile after more than a quarter of a century has 
been forecast by none other than the greatest living historian Eric J. Hobsbawm 
in an article ‘Socialism has failed. Now capitalism is bankrupt. So what comes 
next?' (The Guardian, April 10).

It will be interesting to note that it is the same Jawaharlal Nehru, the 
process of whose banishment was begun by the first non-Congress government, 
headed by Morarji Desai and joined by Charan Singh, the self-appointed guardian 
of Indian peasantry besides all sorts of Nehru baiters from the followers of 
Dr. Lohia to the RSS, in addition to some frustrated ex-Congressmen. This 
process got accelerated during the regime of P. V. Narasimha Rao when India 
embarked on economic reforms, inspired by the ten points of the Washington 
consensus, reached between the 15th and 19th streets of Washington, DC and 
formulated by John Williamson. A horde of economists and propagandists 
descended from America on India, especially New Delhi and Mumbai with their 
baggage of received wisdom. Some could manage entry into the corridors of 
policy-making process while others began spreading their wisdom through the 
media.

The collapse and disintegration of the Soviet Union, the virtual death of NAM 
and withering away of Congress Socialist Forum besides financial bankruptcy of 
the country, brought about by the V.P. Singh-Chandrashekhar governments had so 
demoralized the intelligentsia that, rightly or wrongly, it came to believe 
that there was no alternative to what was being done in the name of reforms. 
People like Gurcharan Das, a former sales executive of the US multinational, 
Procter and Gamble, arrived with his book India Unbound, blaming Nehru and his 
policies for all the economic ills of India. The book was showered with praises 
by protagonists of the Washington consensus, but eminent economists like 
Amartya Sen and Dani Rodrik pointed out the absurdities in Das's claims. 
Sociologist Dipankar Gupta logically countered the formulations and conclusions 
of Das by publishing his forceful book Mistaken Modernity. Yet the 
corporate-controlled media went on applauding him. The grapevine has it that he 
is soon coming up with a new book which is said to have traced the roots of the 
Washington consensus to the Mahabharata. One may recall that a former chief of 
the RSS had written a piece that was included by the then BJP government of 
Rajasthan in a school text book. It had asserted that nuclear weapons existed 
in ancient times in India and there was a non-proliferation treaty whereby only 
Brahmins and Kshatriyas were allowed to use them. As ill luck would have it, 
there was a big uproar in Parliament and this "great discovery" was deleted.

Let us turn our attention to Eric Hobsbawm. He says, even though we are living 
in the 21st century, we are still in the grip of the basic ideas that are no 
longer credible. In fact they have "patently disappeared down the plughole of 
history." We have made two practical attempts to realize our ideal 
socio-economic formation in their pure forms. They were "the centrally 
state-planned economies of the Soviet type and the totally unrestricted and 
uncontrolled free-market capitalist economy. The first broke down in the 1980s, 
and the European communist political systems with it. The second is breaking 
down before our eyes in the greatest crisis of global capitalism since the 
1930s. In some ways it is a greater crisis than in the 1930s, because the 
globalization of the economy was then not as far advanced as it is today, and 
the crisis did not affect the planned economy of the Soviet Union. We don't yet 
know how grave and lasting the consequences of the present world crisis will 
be, but they certainly mark the end of the sort of free-market capitalism that 
captured the world and its governments in the years since Margaret Thatcher and 
President Reagan.

"Impotence therefore faces both those who believe in what amounts to a pure, 
stateless, market capitalism, a sort of international bourgeois anarchism, and 
those who believe in a planned socialism uncontaminated by private 
profit-seeking. Both are bankrupt. The future, like the present and the past, 
belongs to mixed economies in which public and private are braided together in 
one way or another. But how? That is the problem for everybody today, but 
especially for people on the left."

The "pure, stateless, market capitalism" had different names in different 
countries. New Labour in Britain believed that socialism was irrelevant because 
the new strategy would generate more wealth and social-democrats had to see 
that it was equitably distributed. In India, the 10 points of the Washington 
consensus were dished out in the garb of economic reforms. Consequently, 
jobless growth became prominent, regional disparities and social inequalities 
increased rapidly. Vulgar display of wealth and ostentatious living styles 
became the norm. All these led to increase in corruption, crimes, kidnappings 
for ransom, terrorist activities and regional chauvinism.

Anand Giridhardas in International Herald Tribune (April 10, 2009) observes in 
the context of the ongoing economic crisis: "I worry far more for the 
developing world, for places like India, which has been mimicking the American 
superstructure without building an equivalent foundation, pursuing the effect 
without the cause.

"India seems, on the surface, to have arrived. There are the requisite global 
luxury boutiques; restaurants that serve sophisticated food in tiny portions 
with something called coulis drizzled across the plate; Indian firms that make 
multi-billion dollar acquisitions; software companies that write code for the 
world; songs that win Oscars and hearts many thousands of miles away.

"But perhaps it has all come too quickly, and served to crowd out the hard slog 
of constructing a modern society in more than name alone. Yes, India has Louis 
Vuitton, but how easy is it to be gay there? Yes, its companies have dazzled 
the world, but why do their workers complain still about the hierarchical, 
soul-draining work culture? Yes, it won an Olympic gold medal last year, but 
why has it been so hard to recast servants as people paid, not born, to serve?"

We have to ponder over the economic strategy we have pursued since 1991, after 
banishing Nehru. If we want a prosperous India for all, we have no alternative 
but to give up the belief that private profit-making enterprise is always 
better, more efficient way of doing things. We have to, in the words of 
Hobsbawm, "return to the conviction that economic growth and the affluence it 
brings is a means and not an end. The end is what it does to the lives, 
life-chances and hopes of people.... The test of a progressive policy is not 
private but public, not just rising income and consumption for individuals, but 
widening the opportunities and what Amartya Sen calls the "capabilities" of all 
through collective action. But that means, it must mean, public non-profit 
initiative, even if only in redistributing public accumulation. Public 
decisions aimed at collective social improvement from which all human lives 
should gain. That is the basis of progressive policy - not maximizing economic 
growth and personal incomes."

Prof. Amit Bhaduri in a recent article "A Failed World View" in Economic and 
Political Weekly (January 31, 2009) has very convincingly argued that the very 
basis - the Washington consensus - of our economic reforms and strategy is 
flawed and is not going to satisfy the masses of this country who look towards 
the Congress-led UPA for eradication of poverty, rapid increase in 
job-opportunities, lessening of regional imbalances and inequalities in the 
distribution of income and wealth. Liberalisation, privatization and unbridled 
profit motive cannot fulfill their aspirations. Planning and public sector have 
to be revived and state has to intervene effectively in the removal of regional 
disparities in development.

It is high time that Nehru is brought back and the Washington consensus and 
their votaries are given a goodbye. All those experts roaming in the corridors 
of power and advocating full convertibility of rupee on capital account and 
privatization of public sector commercial banks should be politely told to go 
back. The G-20 summit on April 2 in so many words underlined the irrelevance of 
the Washington consensus and asserted the increased role of state in economic 
affairs. Now with elections over and a popular government in the saddle one 
expects a statement that Nehruvian strategy is indispensable in the present 
circumstances.

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