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Friday, July 25, 2008

Global economy, national problems, petty politicians

 
 
"Power will go to the hands of rascals, rogues and freebooters. All
Indian leaders will be of low calibre and men of straw." -- Winston
Churchill on the eve of Indian Independence

The recent happenings, in the run up to the confidence vote and in
Parliament, exposed the soft underbelly of Indian democracy. Perhaps
no other democracy anywhere else in the world at any point in history
is witness to such bizarre events. Surely, Winston Churchill's ghost
continues to haunt us. Often one wonders whether he was a mystic, for
who else could be so prophetic?

First, let us seek to understand the overall picture of the nation.
Indian economy is fast emerging as the new shining star, as it
increasingly gets integrated with the global economy. Never in the
recorded history of mankind has a democracy of India's size and
complexity consistently grown in excess of over 6 per cent per annum
for so long.

This is indeed possible thanks to the sustained hard work of Indian
entrepreneurs, the genius of Indian businessmen and the overarching
discipline of Indian families. It is our democracy and the complete
reliance on domestic capital that makes India's growth story that much
more spectacular when compared to that of China or any other country.

But what stands out till date despite the brouhaha over the
liberalisation policies of the government is that this growth has been
sustained by the economy in spite of our governments, not because of
them. In effect governments, both at the state and the Centre,
continue to interfere in business when they shouldn't; charge
exorbitant taxes and collect them in a Draconian manner only to render
abysmal standards of governance.

Paradoxical as it may seem, despite its modest success story, India
continues to be plagued by age-old problems. These are pan-Indian
issues that remain fossilised in time. It would seem that nothing has
changed in India with regard to some of the fundamental indices of the
human development index -- especially with regard to issues concerning
literacy, health, infrastructure, water and malnutrition.

While smaller and less-endowed countries, especially in Asia, have
dramatically improved the living standards of their citizens and are
now seen as developed countries, India continues to sport the
'developing' tag. And it is here that the role of a strong polity with
good governance comes into play, especially in the global context.

What accentuates these national problems is that for the past two
decades or so Indian polity has seen a spectacular rise of the
regional and sub-regional parties. Thanks to a lax Constitutional
mechanism, these regional and sub-regional parties have been allowed
not only to dominate electoral politics at the regional level, they
have come to occupy national centrestage too.

While on first brush it did empower the hitherto unrepresented castes
and communities, it exposed the serious flaws in our Constitution, so
much so that one suspects the Constitution is under siege by its own
liberal approach. What ideally begins as a call for getting increasing
representation by such leaders claiming to represent a caste or
community invariably seems to end up sustaining one man and one
family.

Naturally, the idea is to become the leader of a caste or a community
having presence perhaps in three or four districts of a state. That
enables you to have three or four MPs (or 10-20 MLAs) --
euphemistically called auto-rickshaw parties. In a scenario where no
party is able to get more than one-fourth of the total seats in
Parliament, it provides an ideal situation to these parties to hijack
democracy lock, stock and barrel.

So the picture is complete: a resurgent India continues to be
bedevilled by age-old problems and by a polity that, instead of
providing solutions, is primarily engrossed in the loot of public
resources.

It churns my innards that we have inadvertently proved Churchill fully
correct, all in a matter of sixty years. That explains the sense of
despair despite impressive economic gains in the country.

'We vote our castes, not cast our votes'

The former Election Commissioner T N Seshan is credited for coining
this colourful statement. In the process he has captured the entire
paradigm succinctly. Most of our regional parties have perfected the
art of playing on the emotions of our people by sharpening the fault
lines on the basis of language, caste, community, race, religion or
anything that could be use to divide people.

Elections after elections have proved that only those who are
shriller, more vociferous and abusive continue to have electoral
successes. And a cursory glance at those regional parties that have
survived ten years in electoral politics has clearly demonstrated that
such parties invariably get dominated by one individual, one family.

And why not? Readers may well know that only 50-60 per cent of the
voters turn up to exercise their franchise. Most candidates get
elected by getting a mere 30-35 per cent of the popular vote. In
effect, a person getting a positive acceptance of a mere 18-20 per
cent of the voters can entertain chances of winning.

No wonder, the inclination to appeal to the lower denomination rather
than the higher. What better way of doing that than by appealing to
one's own caste or community? Remember, one has to target a mere 20
per cent of the voters in a constituency to get elected. Once elected,
the perks of office, the momentum sustained through pelf and nepotism,
carry one through his term in office.

In the interregnum, should there be any danger to the leader of the
party, the standard operating procedure is to raise the same issues
once more, with one small exception -- make it even more shrill,
titillating and provocative. In the process, these leaders have
perfected the art of converting every crisis into an electoral
advantage.

But what is the solution?

DMK, PMK, Akali Dal, BJD, RJD, JD(S), Samajwadi Party, Lok Dal, Telugu
Desam, JMM, NC, PDP, etc are examples that easily come to mind where
it is a case of one individual, one family. In the case of the AIADMK,
TC and BSP, it is the case of one individual alone. Yet it is such
parties that are controlling the levers of power.

Written in the aftermath of the Independence movement, the framers of
our Constitution surely would not have envisaged this ugly situation
wherein Indian democracy is hostage to a few families and individuals.
The obvious answer is to re-look at the Constitution to ensure precise
balance between rights of smaller groups as well supreme national
interests.

What is the relevance, say, of the nuclear deal or capital account
convertibility to the MDMK or the PDP or the AGP, except to leverage
their power to the maximum? God forbid, what would be the attitude of
these parties if India becomes a permanent member of the United
Nations and confronts some tough international choices?

It is in this connection that scholars, sociologists and
Constitutional experts have suggested that a presidential form of
government, with appropriate checks and balances, is far better suited
to the Indian conditions. According to these experts, a presidential
form of government would encourage candidates to appeal to a wider
canvas of voters than from the narrow confines of caste of community.

But the presidential form of government is merely illustrative.
Another idea that has gained currency is that only political parties
with an aggregate vote share beyond a prescribed limit in the state
elections must be allowed to contest for the Lok Sabha.

Much as these parties swear by democracy, any talk of revisiting some
of the provisions of the Constitution is frowned upon by these vested
interests..

The middle class comprising ordinary Indians, who are the source of
India's strength, has been a victim of all this. For too long it has
concentrated on economics hoping that things will take care of
themselves on the political front. In fact, it hopes that it is the
polity that would be the harbinger of such change.

Thanks to the vested interest embedded in the system, it would be
juvenile to believe that our political parties would themselves
initiate the change.

But we have reached a point that any further economic progress will
invariably depend on reforms -- not in our economic policies but in
our political process. Else we run the risk of doing away with all the
gains of six decades after Independence.

And it is the Indian middle class that needs to become the instrument
of change. Remember it is we, the ordinary people, who have the
responsibility of proving Churchill wrong. The political parties have
already proved him right.

 


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