People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol.
XXVII No. 05 February 02, 2003 |
State of the Republic
THE
53rd
anniversary
of
the
Indian
Republic
was
celebrated
with
usual
pomp
and
gaiety.
The
customary
speeches
and
declarations
of
intent
were
all
there.
The
president
of
India,
in
his
maiden
speech
on
such
an
occasion,
drew
upon
his
much
publicised
“Vision
2020”
and
called
for
a
“mega
mission”
to
reach
urban
amenities
to
the
countryside.
This
was
keeping
in
line
with
the
distress
he
expressed
over
the
condition
of
the
rural
poor.
Earlier,
during
the
discussions
on
and
the
release
of
the
tenth
five-year
plan
document,
the
prime
minister
had
projected
India’s
growth
rate
to
be
over
8
per
cent
annually.
This,
he
thundered,
would
catapult
India
into
the
club
of
fastest
growing
economies
in
the
world.
It
is
only
a
matter
of
time,
according
to
him,
when
the
country
will
overflow
with
milk
and
honey.
Such
platitudes
abound.
Is
there
any
basis
for
such
wishful
thinking?
The
current
economic
fundamentals
tell
us
a
different
story.
The
debt
situation
continues
to
worsen.
There
has
been
a
net
capital
outflow
from
the
country.
The
servicing
of
foreign
debt
has
reached
a
stage
where,
for
the
past
few
years,
fresh
loans
are
being
taken
in
order
to
repay
past
loans
and
interest.
The
agricultural
sector
is,
at
best,
stagnant.
Foodgrain
production
has
fallen
below
the
rate
of
population
growth
---
for
the
first
time
since
independence.
Starvation
deaths
and
distress
suicides
continue
to
stalk
rural
India
even
while
60-odd
million
tonnes
of
foodgrains
are
rotting
in
godowns.
Industrial
recovery
is
slow
and
sluggish.
The
possibilities
of
recovery
are
taking
a
beating
with
the
global
economic
recession
continuing
unabated.
Consequently,
the
prospects
for
any
export-led
growth
become
dimmer
by
the
day.
Even
the
much-hyped
growth
in
the
services
sector
has
been
adversely
affected
by
the
global
economic
recession.
In
any
case,
the
growth
of
the
services
sector
is
contingent
upon
healthy
agricultural
and
industrial
sectors.
When
the
later
stagnate
or
decelerate,
it
is
only
a
matter
of
time
before
the
former
follows
suit.
And
that
time
seems
to
have
arrived.
All
this
has
been
imposing
greater
burdens
on
a
vast
majority
of
our
people.
While
the
distress
of
the
rural
poor
required
to
be
highlighted
by
the
president
himself,
the
other
disturbing
fact
is
the
sharp
decline
in
the
overall
employment
growth
in
the
economy.
During
the
decade
of
economic
reforms
---
the
1990s
---
employment
is
estimated
to
have
grown
at
around
1.01
per
cent
per
annum,
compared
to
1.55
per
cent
in
the
eighties
(Report
of
the
Second
National
Labour
Commission).
Large-scale
closure
of
industrial
units,
both
private
and
public,
is
leading
to
massive
retrenchment
and
layoffs.
The
voluntary
retirement
scheme
has
virtually
become
a
compulsory
retirement
scheme
for
thousands
of
workers.
The
loot
of
India's
public
assets
continues
unabated.
After
enacting
some
drama
for
public
consumption,
the
union
cabinet
has
cleared
the
sale
of
two
premier
petroleum
companies
---
HPCL
and
BPCL.
These
blue
chip
profit-making
companies
are
to
be
handed
over
to
foreign
and
domestic
capital,
literally
for
a
song.
Such
is
the
contempt
for
national
assets
that
the
cabinet
specifically
barred
other
public
sector
giants
like
ONGC
from
biding
for
these
companies.
Telecom
privatisation
has
reached
a
stage
where
facilities
and
concessions
are
being
doled
to
the
rich,
at
the
expenses
of
the
common
telephone
user
who
will
have
to
pay
more
for
every
call
that
is
made
from
a
landline.
The
state’s
withdrawal
from
the
fields
of
education,
health,
food
security
etc
has
meant
that
the
common
people
will
have
to
pay
more
for
these
services,
if
not
forego
them
completely.
Already
with
the
privatisation
of
electricity
in
many
parts
of
the
country,
the
common
people
are
being
forced
to
pay
much
more
than
they
did
a
few
years
ago.
The
concessions
to
the
rich,
however,
continue
to
pour
with
new
taxation
reforms
like
the
Kelkar
committee
proposals.
During
the
decade
of
these
economic
reforms,
the
share
of
tax
revenue
in
India’s
GDP
has
been
constantly
declining.
This
is
the
main
reason
why
the
government's
finances
are
in
a
mess;
they
are
declining.
But
this
very
decline
in
revenue
is
being
offered
as
a
justification
for
further
retreat
of
the
state
from
its
social
obligations
to
the
people.
India,
thus,
currently
has
an
economic
dispensation
like
this.
As
far
as
the
people
are
concerned,
the
state
withdraws
from
providing
support
for
their
basic
socio-economic
needs
(which,
constitutionally,
the
central
government
is
obliged
to
undertake).
However,
as
far
as
the
corporate
sector
(both
foreign
and
domestic)
is
concerned,
the
government
steps
up
its
intervention
to
create
conditions
for
generating
greater
super
profits.
With
such
a
dispensation,
the
president’s
wishful
thinking
can
only
remain
a
pipe
dream.
Unless
the
course
of
these
reforms
is
reversed
and
such
reforms
are
put
in
place
as
would
lead
to
economic
empowerment
of
our
vast
millions,
no
rejuvenation
of
the
economy
is
possible.
This
requires
a
massive
public
investment
to
build
the
much-needed
economic
and
social
infrastructure.
This,
in
turn,
needs
a
massive
resource
mobilisation
by
taxing
the
rich
appropriately
and
blocking
the
deliberately
created
avenues
for
sleaze
that
deprive
the
government
of
thousands
of
crores
of
legitimate
revenue.
Above
all,
this
requires
the
need
to
put
an
end
to
the
enormous
loot
of
public
resources
that
takes
place
through
corruption
in
high
places.
But
this
precisely
is
the
culture
of
this
Vajpayee
government.
Political
morality
has
been
deliberately
allowed
to
degenerate
to
its
nadir.
This
is
the
state
of
economic
foundations
of
Indian
Republic
today.
Simultaneously,
the
growing
assaults
on
the
Republic’s
secular
democratic
foundations
converge
to
mount
an
all-round
rapid
undermining
of
the
Republic
itself.
Celebrations
on
an
anniversary
of
the
Republic
must
necessarily
mean
to
redouble
the
resolve
to
protect,
safeguard
and
further
strengthen
the
Republic.
This
resolve
naturally
entails
the
need
to
develop
strong
people’s
movement
against
the
policies
that
are
undermining
the
internal
strength
of
the
Republic.
This,
in
turn,
means
the
need
to
deliver
India
and
its
people
from
the
clutches
of
the
present
government.
Let
us
resolve
to
strengthen
the
people’s
struggles
and
movements
in
the
defence
of
our
Republic.