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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Safe House Wellness Retreat - The Facility

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Insouciance



Insouciance


Insouciance is a kind of uncaring nonchalance born of smugness. There is a suggestion of wilful idleness about it, a sense of entitlement, and an assumption that one can get away with not delivering on one’s promises.  

And even some twisted thinking that suggests that doing what one says dangerously raises expectations. And should these be met, it only fuels even higher, unreasonable and unwarranted aspirations amongst essentially undeserving, ignorant people, best not encouraged above their station.

And therefore, it is implicitly better to drown such ambition at birth using ruthless subversion. Of course, you will never catch a politician or factotum saying any of this out loud. On the contrary, the average neta or bureaucratic burra sahib will feign horrified protest against such calumny being heaped on his ilk.

This is all the more remarkable because in a democracy which presumes to promote equality of opportunity, it is a patrician/feudal attitude, papered over with egalitarian and pro-people rhetoric. This is all the more ironic because in recent times, many elected representatives do not exactly come from a background of privilege.

But fact is, our common or garden politician and “steel frame” bureaucrat fits the bill for both insouciance writ large, and nonchalance too, though the latter term has a  Dev Anandish charm about it, found, in this context, to be missing in action.

The lesser accompaniments to these exalted personages, including all manner of secretaries, clerks, “officers” and agents at large, are not so humble that they are incapable of aping their masters.

So, for the supplicating public to be nearly squashed under this mountain of hubris is a very natural thing. That it makes them somewhat angry and full of the malice of schadenfreude, that peculiar but oh so real German notion of deriving pleasure at another’s misfortune, is therefore not surprising.

Particularly since now, you have this former army driver in a Gandhi cap and whites, in possession of a very effective wagging finger, that has lit a fire under all this insulation from reality.

Here was the standard issue politician, state, central, in meaner municipal/local government, or even quango setting, comfortable in the belief that he had to only think about his voter near about an election, and not at all otherwise, sanctimoniousness apart.

And suddenly, the former driver and social activist from Ralegan Siddhi, an obscure backwater in usually placid rural Maharashtra, is jumping all over one’s mind space. Mr. Anna Hazare is not only able to capture the media attention, but quite a bit of the popular imagination as well with his relentless Government bashing. People love an underdog going to war and understand one that talks in comfortable sound bytes.

That Mr. Hazare is simplistic is the true delight of the masses, if truth be told. People are sick of being bamboozled and patronised by insincere men and women, some elected to public office, some in unsackable Government jobs, and yet others in political parties and committees, who wield enormous power without being accountable to very many, let alone the public.

And this challenge to the comfortable politician and bureaucrat has been mounted at a time when the ruling classes are seen to have mismanaged both the economy and the political landscape. And brought it down to the point where not only is there policy formulation and implementation paralysis, but also a rapidly developing dire straits in terms of its rapidly depleting coffers.

The Government has choked the economy in the pursuit of lower inflation to the point where it is almost broke itself. Both direct and indirect taxes have fallen, and the need to borrow to bridge ever widening deficits has grown. Though you wouldn’t necessarily realise it if you looked at the ever expanding subsidy raj we cannot afford being thrust upon mute future generations.

Of course, the Indian Government routinely tends to see the light only when it reaches the end of its dark dank tunnel. It is always a rock bottom moment that brings substantive change to us, in a paradoxical, Through the Looking Glass manner. So expect a cut in interest rates and stimulation of growth afresh in 2012. Looking back to 1991, Mr. Narasimha Rao was able to jettison Nehruvian Socialism once and for all only because we had come perilously close to bankruptcy. And most “reform” of our system since has also been with a gun to our heads. We cannot arrive at a political consensus on any improvement without this coercive aspect, and perhaps it won’t be long before future governance learns how to stage a crisis for the purpose!

But as long as the taps of cheaper credit are turned back on, the reportedly Rs. 150,000 crores worth of Non-Performing-Assets (NPAs), consisting of  loans to stalled power sector companies and moribund infrastructure builders, can all be revived. And quick to forgive Indian industry can put the folly of monetary Stalinism behind itself.

And, once again, the politico and bureaucrat will be saved from the consequences of their sins. If you’re a mere member of the public, all you have to do is wait for it, and survive long enough to see the worm turn.

And yet with a report card hovering between failed grades and the bottom most rungs of scraping through, there is no real mea culpa. Instead, there is a pointing of fingers at civil society abrogating to itself the proper functions of our elected representatives. As if it is being done without provocation or cause by a group of misguided and subversive individuals naïve about the functioning and needs of governance.

Let’s face it, there might have been no JP Narayan in his time, launching the political careers of the many towards the bottom of the pyramid then, or Anna Hazare now, gaining traction with the Twitter and Facebook generation many decades his junior, without some due cause.

Of course, as the Lokpal debate proceeds, it becomes more and more difficult to fathom how the wondrous creature is going to function, and be effective, even if, and after, a “strong” bill is enacted into law. A polity free of corruption in the Indian context sounds truly fabulous and unreal.

Of course, a desire to make such a thing come about is laudable. And like the activism of civil society amplified by media coverage, is likely to tone up the functioning of not only Government but the Opposition too, and this not just at the Centre but also in the States.  

As for the economy, even bad cooks cannot totally wreck the effect of good ingredients, despite a chronic laparwai insouciance.

(1,099 words)

27th December 2011
Gautam Mukherjee

Published in The Pioneer on Edit Page as Leader Edit on 29th December 2011 entitled "Wait for the worm to turn". Also online at www.dailypioneer.com and in The Pioneer ePaper. Also archived under Columnists at www.dailypioneer.com 

Thursday, December 15, 2011

Navel Gazing Discontent


Lovely Poonam Kaur

Navel-Gazing Discontent


The current official navel-gazing assessment of our economic situation is stymied by its own in-built limitations. It is now evident that an economy of our modest proportions does not possess the resources to right itself, dependent as it is on investment from the driver economies of the West to do so. This, particularly in the management of our current account deficits, despite our foreign exchange reserves of some $ 300 billion.

We should have realised this before embarking arrogantly on a strict monetarist path, smug in the belief that our growth story was going to survive the abuse to its roots. Instead FDI has dried up, would-be investors domestic and foreign are dismayed, and FII money is leaving in floods, driving the rupee and the stock market down in its wake.

With appalling swiftness, we have gone from an admired BRIC nation that survived the 2008 downturn with finesse, to one in which we have managed to embarrass ourselves to the point of becoming a global disappointment in 2011.

And since some 56% of our economy now consists of the services sector, inclusive of the growth engines of IT; and America happens to consume, or did, some 90% of our IT exports, we are naturally hard hit in that department.  Of course, a lot of this service sector also attends to the domestic market, but the home market has been garrotted in the cause of containing inflation too.

Europe and America  are grappling with an avalanche of debt without growth, even negative growth in some places, that has led it to technical, if undeclared, bankruptcy. They are only staving it off from naked admission by constantly printing more and more notes marked figuratively with an IOU from the future. And of course, the West does have a substantial technological and military dominance and the heft of sheer size that will help it pull through in the end. In past centuries this would have been a good time for them to go to war in order to seize the resources they needed, and some say the military activity in some of the oil and mineral rich regions is precisely that.

Back in our shanty, besides IT, our other brilliant spot consists of small diamonds duly imported, cut and polished, mainly in Surat, before being sent out again. And diamonds, the small and tiny ones which are processed in India, have also been hit hard by the recession in the West.

Other areas, such as commodities, garments and engineering goods, not our strong suit in any case, are caught in the pincers of very low margins and sluggish demand. But the good thing is that the exports area accounts for only about 12% of the total Indian economy. So the implication is - fix the domestic economy and we’ll be alright. However, this seems easier said than done, as attempts to reform it have demonstrated.

This mainly because, despite the grave economic situation, occasionally given frank voice to by our Finance Minister Mr. Pranab Mukherjee, the powers that be are more interested in controlling inflation which affects the voting poor the hardest, rather than managing growth, which is an amorphous reality not easily understood by the illiterate.

So growth be damned has been the mantra of our Government, let’s control food inflation instead. The good news is that food inflation is at last falling noticeably, partly because it is a seasonal demand-supply thing for farm produce, and partly because of the sharp constriction in money supply engendered by over a dozen interest rate hikes imposed by the RBI.

 In addition, even as Business and Industry have been battered by way of collateral damage by the actions of an unsympathetic and unsupportive Government, observers, at least those that don’t subscribe to endless handouts, are dismayed by the Government’s exploration of more populist measures. These encompass further reckless welfarism aimed at the aam aadmi, such as the pending Food Bill, likely to have very deleterious effects on the finances of the Government.

With indifference writ large on the part of the Government, Indian companies will have to wait to make their own way once the investment climate and confidence improves in the West. We will then stop being buffeted by waves of imported pessimism aggravated by unhelpful domestic policies and circumstances. These include tight money, the Government’s ever growing fiscal deficits, weakening currency values, slowing growth rates, governance paralysis on reforms, chronic political cacophony and weakness and a most disconcerting lack of purpose.

The great hope is in the revival of the much vaunted domestic economy that the whole world also wants a slice of.  Hopefully, what is done is done, and there will be change before we reach the point of no return. In trying to drive out inflationary liquidity over the last 13 months or so, we have lost economic momentum, while succeeding only very slightly in curbing inflation, because a lot of it is automatically imported, via our vast petroleum needs.

So what can we expect next? We do have the wherewithal to ride out this period of distress, as long as we once again pump-prime the domestic economy, reversing the present tight money policies, in an echo of what we did in the aftermath of the Wall Street debacles of 2008. It would have been great to encourage FDI also, but judging from the furore over FDI in multi-brand retail, it may prove to be politically too difficult at present.

But we cannot afford to kill the golden goose entirely. Most analysts of the European and American economic scenario are also casting doubt on their ability to return to prosperity via the rocky road of prolonged austerity. What that would do is assassinate the spirit of all enterprise, and no government can substitute for it, or insinuate anything else to serve in its precious place.

On our part too we need to course correct fast. Perhaps the greater folly has not been the delusion of grandeur occasioned by the navel-gazing.  Nor in the inward looking regard that we were safe as the second fastest growing economy in the world. It is in not recognising our imperatives on how to keep it that way.  We have presumed that the “India story” that we have got used to dining out on, could never slip away.  Now that it is, we must freely admit that our revised self-image of several years now cannot stomach or tolerate being sent back to the third world of basket cases. Let us therefore hope that it is not the covert policy of the Government in a variation of the Communist deification of poverty and privation.

(1,108 words)

15th December 2011
Gautam Mukherjee

Published as Leader Edit in The Pioneer as "Ahead lies disaster" on December 15th, 2011. Also online at www.dailypioneer.com where it is archived under Columnists and in the ePaper of the day. 

Saturday, December 3, 2011

Control and Carpe Diem





Control and Carpe Diem


Control the message and you end up controlling the medium, seems to be the update on Marshall McLuhan’s vision. And this is being practised in a see-saw motion by both the Government and the Opposition.

Witness how Chief Minister of Uttar Pradesh, Ms.Mayawati, has thrown down the gauntlet to the UPA, of which her BSP is also a restive part, by proposing that her state be split into four. UP has long been a grand prize for any political dispensation in its present form, along with Bihar, even after being divested of Jharkhand. UP is vast, ungainly, populous, lawless, backward, communally sensitive, yes, but sends cohorts of MPs to both houses of Parliament. 

But broken up into four states, the political imperatives as well as the arithmetic will change, perhaps unpredictably. For the implied manageability, it is nevertheless a good idea chasing its time. Meanwhile, the proposal, and the timing of its propagation, has managed to set the cat among the pigeons. At a minimum, the resolution, passed swiftly by the UP Assembly, has put paid to the pressure being applied on Ms. Mayawati by the higher reaches of the Congress Party.

The UPA, caught on the back foot, has countered with a stirring of the quota politics cauldron. The new mischief is in terms of an 8% reservation for Muslims within the 27% OBC quota. Not to be outdone, the SP has dusted off its old proposal asking for an additional Muslim quota over and above the OBC 27% . The upper castes and Hindus are no doubt being asked to pay for the sins of their forefathers, a kind of karmic pitri dosh.

But all this is essentially political posturing.  As the numbers in UPA 2 are constituted, to get anything passed at the Centre, the UPA needs both the SP and BSP for its numbers, not to mention the DMK and the TMC as well. Likewise, the BSP with its split-the-state-into-four proposal. And provided Parliament is allowed to function long enough!

Some of these trial balloons will be adjudged as too complicated to grab the voter’s imagination, and other ideas will peak too soon. A case in point is the rage about the Land Acquisition norms, wherein what Mr. Rahul Gandhi proposed, post his visits to Bhatta-Parsaul, has been defused by quick political and administrative action as well as by the Allahabad High Court giving out a number of sagacious decisions on the matter.

This land acquisition topic did indeed help Ms. Mamta Bannerjee ride to power in Paschim Banga. But now she’s grappling (ironically) with her former pals, the Maoists, and out-retrograding the Communists by stoutly opposing FDI in retail. For Ms. Bannerjee now, it is a battle for credibility with the much pampered if nearly destitute grass-root voter, whatever the illogic.

Ms. Jayalalithaa, Chief Minister from Tamil Nadu, joins her in the chorus against FDI  in retail from Chennai, for good measure probably, and to avoid any labels of elitism from the watchful and active DMK, smarting from being thrown out of power in the state.

Chief Minister of Delhi, Madame Dikshit’s attempt to control the messaging is less effective. Her big idea is to try and tame the BJP dominated MCD by trifurcating it. The BJP, taken aback at first, has now waded into the fray armed with codicils and amendments. Mrs. Dikshit is carrying on regardless, but with consensus likely to elude her, she has moved on to testing the waters for full statehood for Delhi.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, besieged on all sides by corruption scandals, stubborn inflation, persistent terrorism from Maoists/Islamists, bullying from China, artful dodging from Pakistan, a slowing economy, governance paralysis, indiscipline, populism, a clamouring Opposition, global economic meltdown, high commodity prices, etc., has also had his eureka moment. Dr. Singh does tend to get one big idea per term of office that he tenaciously adheres to- remember the civil nuclear power deal from UPA 1?

This time, it has come in the form of a redemptive Cabinet decision to push through majority or wholly-owned FDI in multi-brand and single-brand retail with little or no restrictions, including the kind of babu-bred detailing that makes even a good idea a non-starter.

Suddenly, the 2G scam is old hat, the Opposition stands out-manoeuvred on black money and inflation, and anti-corruption Tsar Anna Hazare is scrambling to get his share of media space. Mr. Hazare may be growing desperate at being upstaged, if his ever more bizarre pronouncements about flogging alcoholics, slapping Mr. Pawar, more fasting, and a resurrected East India Company, is anything to go by.

The fact is, liberalising the retail space is going to benefit millions of farmers to get more for their produce. It already has in Punjab and Haryana, as pointed out by the farmers’ lobby, where the efforts of the desi retailers such as Reliance Fresh have delivered. It will also open up a lot of jobs and other supply opportunities all along the delivery chain and make for a degree of first world sophistication, instead of the waste, unhygienic conditions, sloppy management and general inefficiency that dogs our present efforts.

The Opposition, and various Luddites in the ruling party, are essentially defending, and that too with unnecessary paranoia, an outdated set of ideas. The consumer will also benefit from better prices and a surfeit of choice, as in much else since 1991. Not one Kirana store need necessarily shut down if it wants to work for a living in competition with the big chains. It is competition that has put India on the economic map since liberalisation began, and not protection and barriers to global free trade.

In 1991, Mr. Rahul Bajaj was a leading light of the “Bombay Club” lobbying relentlessly to prevent foreign competition with talk of an “even playing field”. Now the same Mr. Bajaj suggested Kingfisher Airlines should be allowed to die if it could not compete. And India, flagging in its growth story and lagging in its Reforms Programme, can certainly do with the dollar billions in FDI investment and the modernisation it will bring.

A similar defensiveness was evident when Mr. Rajiv Gandhi, first started to put computers in to improve the workings of the Government, Nationalised Banks and PSUs in the Eighties. Then too, there were a firestorm of flag-waving and slogan-shouting morchas, all hysterically yelling fear and saying the machines would end up taking those secure Government jobs.  

But remembering that silliness today makes one fairly confident that FDI in single and multi-brand retail cannot be stymied after all, despite the no-holds barred kabbadi match going on at present.

(1,102 words)

4th December 2011
Gautam Mukherjee