March 1998
Hinduism Today
 
 
 
Ethical Economics
How we might cure today's economic woes with a dose of  traditional Hindu 
wisdom
Meenal Pandya, Massachusetts


At the heart of Hindu economics is this: the test of every policy is not  
profit, employment or growth, but how it strengthens family and community,  
individual character and sensitivity, states Romesh Diwan, Professor of  
Economics at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, New York. Diwan,  
Dattopant Thengdi of New Delhi (founder of India's foremost labor union,  
Bhartiya 
Mazdoor Sangh), M.G. Bokare, (a disenchanted Marxist and author  of Hindu 
Economics) and others are advocates of a thoroughly Hindu  revamping of 
today's economic systems. "Many economists wonder how practical  these ideas 
are," 
states Prof. Diwan. "I think, at the core of it, Hindu  economics is very 
practical because it touches all aspects of a human life." In  places such as 
Ralegaon Siddhi [see sidebar], where they have been applied even  on a 
minuscule scale, the results have been impressive and real enough to  support 
Diwan's claim. It is not a system imposed from up down by the  government, 
but, according to Diwan, "The government plays an important role in  Hindu 
economics by defining priorities for large investments and strengthening  local 
economies by decentralizing economic and political power." The idea is not  
to enforce Hindu economics, as communism was enforced upon the people, but 
to  create an environment where these principles become viable. 
Economics has been a topic of discussion for Hindu scripture since the Rig  
Veda. In that ancient scripture are found key concepts such as production,  
exchange, wages, interest, rent, profit and the market. Kautilya's  
Arthashastra, a treatise on statecraft, includes extensive advice on  taxation, 
customs duties, trade and intelligent protection of environmental  resources 
such as forests. The Tamil Tirukural [featured in our Insight  this month, 
page 28] spoke of the right and wrong ways to gather and spend  wealth. The new 
"Hindu economics" advocated by a few pioneers is based in part  on these 
ancient systems, and in part on a practical application of Hindu  philosophy 
to the modern situation. 
The best minds in economics and social sciences, such as Lester Thurow and  
Alvin Toffler, question the viability of the capitalist approach to 
economics.  They are aware that in last two decades the gulf between private 
affluence and  public poverty has widened, the gap between the rich and the 
poor 
has virtually  doubled, the Earth has been polluted and things far more 
precious to  humanity--such as children, families, personal values and clean 
air 
and  water--have been threatened. 
Fundamental questions remain unanswered. What is wealth? Is it accumulation 
 of monetary resources, or should it also take into account the nonmaterial 
 possessions such as friends, family, health and environment? What should 
be the  goal of economics? Should it be maximization of profits or of human 
happiness?  If it is human happiness, then can either of the prevalent 
theories--capitalism  or communism--deliver that? The more the experts try to 
answer these fundamental  questions of economics, the more they turn towards 
the 
Hindu approach. "In terms  of larger ideas such as capitalism and 
socialism, Hindu economics belongs to  spiritualism" says Professor Diwan. 
According to Dattopant Thengdi, Hindu economics is fundamentally  different 
from Western economics. To start with, he says, in the West economics  is 
treated as a separate discipline. But within Hinduism, economics falls under  
artha, one of the four legitimate aims of life: dharma  (righteousness), 
artha (wealth), kama (pleasure) and moksha  (liberation). In Western 
economics, human beings are too often regarded as  essentially economic beings, 
carrying out economic activities, producing goods  and, in turn, consuming 
goods 
to complete the economic cycle. 
It is, of course, an oversimplification to say the Western economic system 
is  totally selfish, for charitable giving is common in the West among both 
poor and  rich--witness the stated intention of Bill Gates, the world's 
richest man, to  eventually give most of his money to charity or Ted Turner's 
recent  billion-dollar gift to the UN. Indeed, American philanthropy has few 
equals. 
In contrast to the mechanical approach of Western economics, Hindu 
philosophy  holds that human beings are not just physical entities to be kept 
happy 
by  producing and consuming. Rather, humans comprise physical, mental and 
spiritual  aspects, and for the happiness of an individual all three should be 
taken into  consideration. When you apply these fundamental beliefs, the 
kind of economics  you get is very different. For example, in Ralegaon Siddhi, 
the first thing Anna  Hazare began was to earn people's trust by his own 
honesty and integrity. This,  in turn, allowed them to trust each other--a 
significant factor in Hindu  economics. He then persuaded the citizens to make 
their village self-sufficient  by their own cooperative efforts so they were 
not exploited by outsiders. The  environment of nonexploitation convinced 
the people that when they worked hard,  they--not an outside 
person--benefited from the fruits of their own labor. Also  it is important to 
keep in mind 
that there is a fundamental difference between  poverty and frugality. There 
was poverty in Ralegaon Siddhi prior to the  application of ethical 
economic principles. Today, though the level of material  consumption is not 
high, 
the poverty is gone. 
Real-world application of a Hindu economic theory remains in a nascent 
state.  The practical application of its principles on a personal, national or 
global  level, is not clear, but the goal is. As captured by the great 
spiritual teacher  Sri Aurobindo: "The aim of economics would be not to create 
a 
huge engine of  production, whether of the competitive or the cooperative 
kind, but to give to  men and women--not only some men and women but to all, 
each in his highest  possible measure--the joy of work according to their own 
nature and free leisure  to grow inwardly, as well as a simple, rich and 
beautiful life for all." 
Guiding Principles
Sri Dattopant Thengdi's book, Third Way, outlines the dharma of  wealth 
* For all economic activities, dharma must be the  guiding principle and 
svadharma--what comes naturally to you--should play  a fundamental role in 
choosing your economic livelihood. 
* Workers, by contributing their labor to the  business, can become 
shareholders and are thereby given participation in the  ownership of their 
industries. Depending upon the nature of the industry, the  share may differ. 
* Nature is to be respected: milked but not  killed. Ecological factors, 
balance of nature and the requirements of future  generations should never be 
forgotten. 
* Education, ecology, economics and ethics--all  four must be taken into 
consideration in an integrated manner for any economic  activity. 
* Material wealth is to be acquired with the  object of serving the 
society. 
* It is not only the technical "know-how" but also  the technical 
"know-what' (to understand what is good for the society) that  should be given 
consideration. 
* Consumerism is not the ultimate goal of life. In  fact, consumerism is 
not compatible with the spirit of the Hindu culture. 
* The basic needs of life are available to every  citizen. 
Sidebar: Miracle Village
Where Anna Hazare and Hindu economics changed the future 
Welcome to Ralegaon Siddhi--a tiny village near Pune, India--where everyone 
 cares for everyone else's well-being, where villagers who have extra grain 
 harvest, instead of storing it for the next year, deposit it in a grain 
bank  where it can be borrowed by villagers who have nothing to eat, where the 
temple  is the hub of all the activities, where 400,000 trees have been 
planted by the  community, where not a single store sells tobacco and where you 
cannot find a  single liquor still. While neighboring villages await the 
government tanker to  bring drinking water, Ralegaon Siddhi has enough not 
only for everyone in the  village but also for the hundreds who visit. Sounds 
like the almost perfect  community? Yes, now it is. However, if you had 
visited only two decades ago you  would have seen a hamlet that was beyond any 
hope for economic or social  recovery. Droughts were a regular event, the soil 
was poor, there was little  work to be had, about a fifth of the families 
ate only once a day and desperate  denizens had taken to manufacturing 
liquor. Drunkenness, feuds and crimes were  common occurrences. Life in this 
burg 
was pretty bleak. 
Then, Anna Hazare, a retired army truck driver inspired by the teachings of 
 Swami Vivekananda to serve others, set out to change things by putting the 
 ethics back into the economics, and the village. He instituted what is now 
being  called Hindu economics, governed not by profit motives but by 
dharma,  encompassing not just the value of goods, but also of  lives.

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