Come September
Come
September was the name of a famous hit film from the long
gone sixties (1961), a romantic comedy starring Rock Hudson, Gina Lollobrigida,
Sandra Dee and Bobby Darin. It had a catchy theme tune, universally beloved countrywide,
in the single screen movie halls of those days. It was played before the National
Anthem, with which each screening began, and before the trailers, cartoons and
the Government documentary. And again during the ‘interval’, de riguer for the sale of cigarettes, soft
drinks, peanuts, and the like. It was generally followed by another piece of music
entitled Tequila, but this latter, a latino influenced jazzy instrumental, a dinner joint favorite too, was not from a popular
Hollywood film.
1961 may be shrouded in nostalgia, but the Sixties
were both traumatic and eventful for India: the Chinese invasion in 1962,
Jawarharlal Nehru’s passing in 1964, the war with Pakistan in 1965, and so on.
Cut to the present day. After six months, it will be
September. Budget 2015 has laid a solid
foundation, on which the Government, particularly its infrastructure building
arms, such as the ministries in charge of roads, ports, power, mining, the
Indian Railways etc. will have to raise several multiples in additional
resources, in order to succeed.
Two days after presenting the Union Budget, the
Finance Minister Arun Jaitley, on a private visit to America, said as much in
New York, probably hoping to spur huge American investment.
There is little doubt that additional money from
various sources will be raised. This, alongside a vigorous implementation
programme, to run concurrently, and quell all the criticism. The Railways are
already tapping into domestic monies from insurance behemoth LIC. This is an
example of the creative sources of funding the Government will tap, along with
attractive incentives to make it worth the while of the investor.
Six months completed from now, the efficacy of this
power budget will be evident on the ground, and become, in some measure, undeniable.
It will lead also to a sharp burst of
GDP growth.
Side by side with this economic development, came
the historic alliance Government of J&K, born just one day after the Budget
was presented in the Lok Sabha. And this, on a ‘lucky’, rainy, blustery Sunday,
in Srinagar. It was composed of a saffron and green alliance, which will also
complete six months, come September.
Building upon this great democratic dividend is very
likely. There is great scope to revive and rediscover cultural synergies of the
healing kind. With links India has always had, to the inclusive Sufi influenced
strain of Islam, with some of its traditional roots in Kashmir. It is a benign,
peaceful form, that refuses, despite strenuous efforts by the Pakistani ISI and
its proxies, to let the heartless jihadi
poison take hold.
And it has traditionally been complemented by the
tolerance of moderate Hinduism, though all attitudes, on every side, fallen
into disuse through years of acrimony, will need a bit of dusting off. It will
be greatly helped, if the Pandits, essential to the warp and weft of the
Valley, are reinducted into their homelands once again. With a Hindu Deputy CM,
this might indeed be facilitated.
The Separatists and Wahhabi influenced radical
sections, both domestic and across the border, may be persuaded by the CM, likewise, to see
that the Indian democratic process has much to offer, as epitomised by the
remarkable change-of-heart in BJP’s Sajjad Lone.
This Government,
in the course of its six year tenure, will surely find the solution of the long
festering insurgency and terrorist problem fostered by Pakistan in the Valley.
It will solve it, because the main initiative for it will come from the suave
Mufti Mohamed Sayeed led State Assembly, ably backed by coalition partners BJP,
both in Jammu and Kashmir, and at the Centre.
This collaboration will prove to be politically enabling
for the BJP, because it can change long held ideological positions under its
coalition compulsions, as it has done to achieve a common minimum programme
(CMP), with the PDP. There are already some statements indicating the stalled
bilateral talks with Pakistan are about to resume.
The changes in the big picture are also of great
help. With India drawing closer to both the US and China, Pakistan is likely to
be keen on finding a solution, given its own internal problems with runaway
terrorism and economic pressures growing ever bigger. This, even as American
involvement in Afghanistan reduces, along with its dependence on Pakistan; and
China recalibrates its relationship with India.
Some new movements are expected as early as April
2015, when Modi goes to China on his return state visit. The long-standing
border issues between India and China are also likely to be settled soon,
probably by formalising the LaC into a
border, and thereby forming a template for the LoC with Pakistan also turning
into the pukka border. This will end
the controversy of the historical Indian
claim on PoK, in favor of a necessary realism. This Government has also been
dealing sternly with Pakistan’s cease-fire violations, making them far costlier
than heretofore.
There may also be a UNSC seat for India in the
offing, with both the US and China backing it. Neither were so keen before, but
the geopolitics seems to have changed. India’s relationship with other SAARC
countries has also been revived recently, and continues to get better every day.
An impending membership of APEC will also draw India closer to China.
India, is inexorably
headed into a period of high growth economically, the highest in percentage
terms in the world presently, complemented by a proactive global diplomacy, led
by the Prime Minister himself.
Come September, there will also be little doubt in
the minds of supporters and detractors alike, that the Modi Governent is beginning
to deliver on its economic promises by means of substantial implementation. The
country will be headed towards 8.5% GDP growth in 2016, and on to sustainable
double-digits for years to come, particularly if this Government wins a second
term. And the main reason for being certain of this is because of the massive
emphasis on fresh investment in enabling infrastructure, manufacturing for
jobs, and farm-related modernisation to uplift some 60% of the population.
India is, as old India-hand Ian Jack put it recently
in GRANTA: ‘A country beginning to change fundamentally, preparing to say
goodbye to its old self’. Jack thought it was happening already, 50 years on,
in 1997. But that was just the trailer. Come September 2015, the main movie is going
to start.
For: The Pioneer
(1,091
words)
March
3, 2015
Gautam
Mukherjee
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