With the serial political crisises plaguing the Centre and the States
of India understandably the economy has been ignored, but bureaucrats
like Montek Singh & co who have always been the real hands that steer
the economic horse and carriage were last I remember of a mind with
their western counterparts.

So, is the columnist shilling for India's 1% or even 10% that always
wants more reforms? Or, is there really some strength to the economic
weakness argument?


http://www.telegraphindia.com/1111125/jsp/opinion/story_14793645.jsp

SLEEP WALKING - Economic reform is meaningless without intellectual revolution
By Swapan Dasgupta


In these troubled times for the global economy, it may be worth
narrating a story about the mentality of Indian politicians.

When the Congress returned to power in the summer of 1991 after the
Janata Dal interregnum, the cabinet of Prime Minister P.V. Narasimha
Rao was presented a note by the ministry of finance advocating
dramatic reforms that included the deregulation of the economy. The
note was greeted with predictable scepticism, if not outright
hostility by the cabinet.

Looking for a way out of the logjam, Rao despatched a young aide to
one of Indira Gandhi’s trusted confidants for advice. The hard-nosed
veteran read the finance ministry note and then offered his
suggestion. Wouldn’t it be more advisable, he asked, to preface the
document with appropriate passages from Jawaharlal Nehru, Indira
Gandhi and Rajiv Gandhi? It would, he suggested, definitely enhance
the comfort level of the cabinet to know that the proposed measures
were in conformity with the scriptures.

The wily Rao didn’t hesitate to accept the sage advice. A reworked
cabinet note was circulated and this time, the opposition melted away,
giving the prime minister the mandate to pursue liberalization as the
highest stage of Nehru and Indira’s socialism.

This delightful story may well be true, partially true or plain
apocryphal. What is remarkable, however, is not the revelation that
the Congress party is made up of dinosaurs, but the extent to which
orthodoxy takes hold of the political imagination to resist change.
This is, of course, true of India but it is also a global phenomenon.

In her autobiography, The Path to Power, Margaret Thatcher spelt out
the insidious hold of the post-War consensus on the British political
imagination: “By 1964 British society had entered a sick phase of
liberal conformism passing as individual self-expression. Only
progressive ideas and people were worthy of respect by an increasingly
self-conscious and self-confident media class.” Thatcher may well have
been talking of India.

Nominally, India may have travelled a long way from the days when
inefficiency and sloth were regarded as economic virtues and when
personal rates of taxation for the highest slab touched 97 per cent.
What is significant, however, about the massive economic shifts that
were first brought in by Manmohan Singh’s 1991 budget is the
remarkable extent to which change has been ushered without fanfare
and, more often than not, by stealth.

It required the 1991 balance of payments crisis and the emotional
trauma of the physical mortgaging of some of India’s gold reserves to
begin the assault on the licence-permit-quota raj. Likewise, it
required the Western sanctions against India in the aftermath of the
1998 Pokhran-II blasts to lift many of the curbs on foreign capital
and rid Atal Bihari Vajpayee of his party’s accumulated swadeshi
baggage.

As 2011 draws to a close, India is at a similar crossroads. The
economic downturn in the United States of America and the Eurozone
crisis has left no economy untouched. Complemented by what is called
the ‘governance deficit’, India’s economic indicators have moved
southwards. The gross domestic product projections are down from nine
per cent to seven per cent; the already-large fiscal deficit is
expected to breach the budgeted five per cent level and touch more
than six per cent of the GDP; inflation has been hovering around 10
per cent for nearly a year and shows little sign of coming down
despite 13 interest rate hikes since March 2009; the sensex has lost
22 per cent since January and foreign direct investment inflows have
virtually ceased after touching a record $29 billion in 2010; in the
preceding quarter, the profitability of Indian companies fell by an
average of 30 per cent; and the Indian rupee, now blessed with a
distinctive symbol, has lost some 15 per cent of its value in barely
three months, thereby making imports prohibitive and adding to the
inflationary spiral.

Middle India’s overall comfort level with Prime Minister Manmohan
Singh rested on two beliefs: first, that he was a man of integrity and
innate decency and, second, that he had the requisite skills to manage
the economy. On both these counts, Singh’s reputation is in tatters.
No one accuses the prime minister of being personally dishonest, but
the sheer scale of the corruption charges before the courts have put
question marks on his ability and willingness to tame his roguish
colleagues. Worse still, there is complete consternation at the prime
minister’s inability to ‘fix’ the economy. That he doesn’t possess the
proverbial ‘magic wand’ is conceded by all reasonable Indians. What
strikes them as odd is that the senses of urgency and purpose that
should have accompanied the economic slide are missing. The government
appears to have simply given up. Particularly disturbing is the extent
to which a beleaguered political class seems ready to fall back on the
ideological shibboleths that many imagined had been steadily discarded
since 1991. The approach to the fiscal deficit is a classic example of
a government that seems unconcerned.

There is a stalemate in the US over the failure of the White House and
the Republican-controlled senate to agree on measures to reduce a
trillion dollar deficit, and in both Britain and the Eurozone, the
deficit is at the root of a political and diplomatic stand-off. Yet in
India, fiscal consolidation has been deleted from the vocabulary of
the ruling party and its allies. The hugely expensive and inefficient
Centre-sponsored welfare schemes are not merely regarded as holy cows
but there are moves to expand the net. So whimsical is the sop culture
that last week the commerce ministry announced a Rs 3,844 crore
‘package’ for weavers in eastern Uttar Pradesh because Rahul Gandhi
demanded it. No wonder Mamata Banerjee believes that handouts are her
birthright too. In Europe, it is said that ‘austerity is the new
normal’. In an economically fragile India, fiscal profligacy is the
norm — the preferred Rahul alternative to beggary. India is living
beyond its means but no one seems to care.

In most of the countries gripped by the downturn, the trend is towards
removing as many obstacles to growth as possible. In Britain, for
example, stringent planning norms have been relaxed to facilitate a
growth in housing. In Italy, the new ‘technocrat’ prime minister has
announced a series of measures that include fiscal prudence, welfare
cuts and the dismantling of restrictive practices. In India on the
other hand, there are moves to add a statutory premium on land
acquisition for housing, industry and public utilities. Additionally,
limited progress has been made in enlarging the scope of foreign
investment in insurance and retail because of the government’s failure
to secure agreement within the ruling coalition.

India, it would seem, is sleepwalking its way into an economic
disaster zone. Yet, there are two remarkable features of this death
march. First, there is no widespread realization that the troubles
aren’t confined to inflation and price rise but affect the nerve
centres of economic growth. Second, there is the presumption that
statist intervention and a more rigid regulatory regime (that deters
private sector corruption) is the way out.

Nehru, it must be said, did a remarkably good job in turning
progressivism into common sense. Even two decades after liberalization
transformed India and heralded far wider levels of prosperity, India
has not yet turned its back on the belief structures of the bad old
days. Economic reforms, it would seem, become meaningful only when
accompanied by an intellectual revolution.

The Telegraph, November 25, 2011

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