http://www.marxist.com/india-s-darkness.htm

 India’s darkness <http://www.marxist.com/india-s-darkness.htm>
Written by Lal Khan Friday, 10 August 2012
[image: Print] <http://www.marxist.com/india-s-darkness/print.htm#>

*The electricity shutdown that immersed almost half of India into darkness
and brought life to a standstill exposed the stark realities of “shining
India” and the fragile nature of its so-called economic miracle that has
been portrayed to the world. This also lays bare the contrast between the
high growth rates of the market economy in the former colonial countries
and the debilitated conditions of the social and physical infrastructures
in these societies.*

In fact India’s high GDP growth rates were inversely proportional to its
poverty alleviation. In the last decade while the Indian economy grew by
about 9 percent on average, *the number of people living below the poverty
line of less than a dollar a day went up from 770 million to about 860
million.*

After the economic collapse of world capitalism in 2008 most bourgeois
experts were propagating the idea that the so called “emerging” economies,
especially the BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa)
countries would revive the world economy. But more than four years after
the crash all these economies are in crisis themselves.

>Brazil’s growth rate has reached a new low of 1.8 percent. Dilma Rosseuf’s
government is in jeopardy, while violence and social unrest in the country
is escalating. The Russian winter showed the brittle nature of the Mafia
oligarchic capitalism that was installed after the collapse of the Soviet
Union. India’s growth rate has halved and the rupee is depreciating in a
downward spiral.

China’s economic slowdown has triggered open conflicts between different
factions of the ruling elite with the expulsion of Bo Xi Lai and other
leaders of the faction who were striving for a more softened social impact
of the economic growth. There have been more than five hundred major
strikes and occupations in China most of which have remained unreported.
The social and the economic turmoil in South Africa has exasperated in the
recent months.

With the world economy having little or no prospect of seeing a recovery in
the next few years, the future of the Indian economy is bleak to say the
least. With the contraction of consumer consumption in the advanced
countries, Indian exports will inevitably shrivel. Although Indian domestic
consumption is based on a relatively large middle class with varying
socio-economic layers, of about three to four hundred million, with the
economic decline this class is being squeezed and their purchasing capacity
is visibly shrinking. This will have a boomerang effect on the economy,
thus further aggravating the crisis. The depreciation of the rupee will
increase spending on imports.

This will be reflected in the political plane where we are witnessing
perhaps the most turbulent swings ever in Indian politics since partition.
All the political parties that dominate the horizon are in crisis and are
splitting with the raging conflicts of different business interests who use
state power to boost their plunder.

Corruption is one of the important symptoms that elucidate the diseased
condition of Indian capitalism. According to a recent report by a
government commission of India there is more that 500 billion dollars of
capital stashed away just in Swiss banks by some of the Indian capitalists.
The commission called it ‘black money’. But these very capitalists dominate
all the major political parties. They indulge not only in horse trading in
the central and state parliaments, but most ministries are up for bidding
at the formation of a new government and during the cabinet reshuffles.

Although India now has more billionaires than Japan, it has one of the
worst ratios of social disparity. Almost half of the population has been
pushed out of the economic cycle and are forced to live in subhuman
conditions. Health, education and other social sectors are in tatters. An
Al Jazeera report last week revealed that more than half of India’s
population are without toilets and large swathes of the country are open
air lavatories with severe unhygienic conditions. Filth and garbage are not
just piling up in the swarming shanty towns of the Indian cities, but the
rural areas are also suffering from unprecedented pollution and undergoing
an environmental catastrophe.

After sixty five years of Independence, the Indian ruling class has failed
to develop a modern industrialized society. The pattern of social and
economic growth has been of an extremely uneven and combined nature.
Alongside the most advanced technological enterprises and palatial villas
there is excruciating poverty and misery. There are islands of modernity in
a vast ocean of primitiveness.

In fact India is a living museum of historical materialism. The social and
political culture is riven with prejudices of caste, colour, race and
religion. Black magic, superstition and mythological concepts are prevalent
even amongst the modern Indian bourgeoisie. Some of the biggest business
houses have astrologers and charlatans on their boards of directors.
National chauvinism, cricket, Bollywood soaps and the facade of democracy
have been used by the media elite as opium for the masses.

Tribal and nationalist movements are raging in most provinces of India and
have been described by the Indian Prime Minister as the single largest
security challenge in India. Brutal state repression is a daily occurrence
from Kashmir to Assam. Religious hatred and bloodshed are unravelling the
social fabric of the country. The pressures of imperialism on the
politicians in power to carry out even more ‘reforms’ means a further
worsening of the plight of the masses. With the aggravating economic,
social and infrastructural crisis these venal vices will conflagrate in the
period ahead.

The only hope for India lies is the proletariat and the youth. The
strategists of the ruling classes have used deceptive and corrupt tactics
to vent the raging lava swirling amongst the oppressed masses. Anna Hazare
and the so-called civil society movement is no alternative to the present
system. This right-wing demagogue with neo-fascist tendencies is being
propped up to divert and disrupt the class struggle.

The CPI(M) and the mainstream left parties were defeated due to their
capitulation to capitalism in the name of democracy and abandoning the path
of revolutionary socialism. On 28th February this year India witnessed the
largest strike of the proletariat in world history. A hundred million
people took to the streets and struck on a class basis. The Indian working
class has glorious traditions of class struggle to remove the exploitation
and suffering imposed by a cruel and a redundant system. With a
revolutionary Marxist leadership they could change the course of history
and emancipate South Asia.


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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