http://blogs.business-standard.com/sunil/2009/03/27/caste-discrimination-and-other-bogus-concepts/

Caste discrimination and other bogus concepts

 March 27th, 2009 Sunil Jain
Now that election season is upon us, we’re going to be subjected to
the usual rhetoric on caste discrimination – we’ve already heard the
great Varun Gandhi’s vitriol on the other religious kind of rhetoric
(it’s a moot point whether the BJP which is desperately looking for
allies would pushed into supporting Varun only because the Election
Commission’s actions made him a national hero). So, while getting in
her Brahmins, Mayawati will go on about how she will get the Dalits a
better deal; Lalu Prasad will do the same for the OBCs; and so on.

But how real is the discrimination and, to that extent, how much has
electoral representation helped alleviate this? That is, are the OBCs
in Bihar any better for having had Lalu and family in charge of the
state? There is the argument that Lalu being in power gave the OBCs a
‘voice’ – they can now go and report a crime against them in the
police station, for instance – and ditto for the Dalits and Mayawati,
but I’m not sure how far you can live on ‘voice’ if it doesn’t get
followed up quickly enough with some income. If it did, Digvijay Singh
would never have got voted out in Madhya Pradesh.

Unfortunately, the data on political representation is too scanty to
arrive at a firm conclusion – we know, for instance, that Mayawati is
a Dalit leader but if 50 per cent, say, of her MPs/MLAs are Brahmins,
we can hardly put that down as Dalit representation, can we? Apart
from the reserved SC/ST seats, there is no data on what proportion of
MPs/MLAs are from different castes. That’s clearly the subject of a
PhD thesis or two, given that it can’t be too difficult to figure out
the castes of a few thousand MLAs/MPs based on their surnames. On the
face of it, though, the evidence is likely to show that political
representation doesn’t make more than an iota of a difference. The
average income of OBC households across the country is around Rs
60,000 (I’ll come to how I know that in a minute) while that in Bihar
is just two thirds of that at Rs 41,000. Assuming, and I’d appreciate
it if political scientists gave me more information on this, that most
of Lalu’s MLAs were OBCs, this is as clear a rejection of the
political-representation-helps’ thesis.

Take the other argument made, while talking of the need for OBC
reservations a few years ago – OBCs are 33 per cent of the population
(in later NSS surveys, more castes were added to the OBC list and so
the proportion of population shot up to over 40 per cent) but they’re
just 24 per cent or so of what are called ‘professional’ jobs. Clear
evidence of ‘discrimination’. Economist Surjit Bhalla looked at the
data from the government’s own National Sample Survey (I wrote up the
stories in this newspaper) and it turned out there was no
discrimination. Here’s why: OBCs were 32 per cent of the population,
but they were just 26 per cent of those who’d passed high school … the
rest of the numbers pretty much flow from this one – the OBCs were 24
per cent of those who were enrolled in colleges and 24 per cent of
those in professional jobs. So, if there’s a problem, it lies in the
proportion of OBCs passing out of schools, it is not in reservation in
colleges or in jobs.

My friend Rajesh Shukla who is the Chief Statistician of the National
Council of Applied Economic Research (the only organisation in the
country to do a large annual income survey) and I are, in fact,
working on a data-based book on income/expenditure/savings patterns of
various castes in the country – hopefully, we’ll be done in a couple
of months. While it’s early days yet, what’s interesting is that for
most areas – income/expenditure/etc – the caste factor is a lot less
important than others.

A sneak-peak at one or two sub-heads in the book will give you some
idea of what I’m saying. Take the income levels of those working in
agriculture. SC/ST families here have income levels that are around
half those of the upper-caste Hindus, but break this up into
land-ownership, and you’ll find this is what accounts for much of the
difference. If you’re still not convinced, look at the income levels
of those employed in the modern services sector – the income levels of
SC/STs is broadly similar to that of the upper castes! I could go on,
but you get the picture – the SC/STs in modern services are as
educated as the upper castes are, and this is what is primarily
determining salary/income levels.

So, if you’re interested in reading about this kind of stuff, do write
in, book your copy now, and that kind of stuff!


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