Three Years Of Modi’s Systemic Reforms Presage The
Next Seven
There is not a thought that is being thought in
the West or the East that is not active in some Indian mind- EP Thompson
The unprecedented hallmark of the Modi administration at the
three year mark is an almost total absence of corruption and scams in high
places.
This is in sharp contrast to the procession of corruption
charges against senior members of the previous dispensation, and indeed much of
the present Opposition. Charges that are coming home to roost now.
And yet, the BJP in governance is only almost clean. Vestiges
of the mid 1990s Vyapam Scam, still cling to its state of Madhya Pradesh.
Besides, not everything in the domain of the NDA allies,
such as the Shiromani Akali Dal, and Shiv Sena, come up roses.
However, in a relativist world, the Modi Government is
determined to make its zero tolerance for corruption the leit motif .
Not content with running a clean administration, it is going
after black money. Post-demonetisation it has become easier. This plus the mother
lode of benaami property, armed with a revived law, with teeth.
From erstwhile Comptroller & Auditor General (CAG)
charges of crony capitalism, the Modi Government claims governance victories
out of auctioning coal and mineral mining blocks, as well as the
telecommunications spectrum.
Together, these are projected to earn more than Rs. 5 lakh
crores for the Government.
Linking disbursements of Government payments with the
bio-metric AADHAR Card, bolstered by an Act of parliament, has led to an
avoidance of over Rs. 50,000 crores in fraudulent payments.
Many millions of the unbanked poor have been recruited into
the system, well before demonetisation, and its narrative of a cashless economy
in its aftermath.
Demonetisation has not only turned the country far more
digital financially, but has also netted nearly a crore of fat new income tax assessees.
This, even as 96% of the existing assessees, with income
under a taxable Rs. 5 lakhs, have been rendered practically tax free.
The Government also has not shied away from tackling the Rs.
10 lakh crore Non Performing Asset (NPA) mountain.
Using an ordinance for quick activation of the Banking
Regulations Act, it has armed the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) with powers to go
after the bad corporate debtors and
their assets. Another law to seize assets of run-aways and absconders is in the
works.
Apart from a clean administration and its physical clean ups
as in Swacch Bharat, inclusive of its toilet-building push, and the elusive
Ganga Clean Mission, other great themes are also discernible. These are its
beavering away at systemic, enabling, reform.
Juxtaposed with this, is a revamping of India’s foreign
policy, and a raising of its profile. One, that not only acknowledges the
importance of individual Indians in distress abroad for the first time, but is
confident enough to trade favours with other countries. This, more often than
not, on a bilateral basis.
A tinge of militarism, forced upon the policy landscape by
frequent provocations from Pakistan and sly barbs from China, is a departure
from the submissiveness of the previous government.
Combined with a massive buying/manufacturing push in this
area, India is clearly arming to take on both its unfriendly neighbours, if
necessary.
Domestically, Narendra Modi and Amit Shah have shown their
ability, to win elections, at various levels, most of the time.
Collectively, these broad streams presage the progress to
come.
Together they will transform not only our expectations of
national growth/ well-being and our place in the world, but qualitative
skilling, jobs generation, and freedom of choice.
Even those initiatives that have failed for now, such as the
attempt to reform the judiciary, and reform labour laws, show promise.
And those that are working- solar and nuclear power
development, satellites, missiles, space,
are indeed good to behold.
A recent online poll conducted with 40,000 participants from
200 cities around the country, gives Modi a 61% approval rating for meeting
expectations, and a 69% rating of optimism about the future.
The fact that notable reformist legislation, pending for
years, such as the GST has been passed in the face of intense obstruction shows
the determination of this Government.
Compared to the battle for GST, other path-breaking laws
such as the Insolvency & Bankruptcy Code, the Land Acquisition Act, and
RERA, to regulate the real estate space, seem almost facile.
Even the struggle to amalgamate the hearts and minds of the
people in J&K while subduing the insurgency in the Kashmir Valley, is
making dogged progress, much to the anger of those opposed to it.
Mixed results against the Maoists and other insurgents show
that the Government is reluctant to seek a purely military solution against
such internal militants. However, the position, under intense provocation and
many casualties, is hardening.
The old RSS/VHP/SS/BJP promise of
a Ram temple in Ayodhya is inching forward with the Government content to back
the judicial outcome expected to sanction its building.
In a departure from its much
vilified past, the Sangh Parivar, in most of its components, has been
unabashedly admitted into the mainstream.
This, with deserved gratitude for
its contribution towards the success of the NDA at various levels.
Hindutva may not be everybody’s
cup of tea, but it is, under the Modi administration, allowed to contend, along
with the Bishops, Maulanas and the Godless Communists.
No one can accuse this
Government fairly of a lack of tolerance given the virulence of the regular
attacks against its policies and actions.
Foreign Direct Investment (FDI)
has picked up aggregating to $156 billion in the three years with $56 billion
of it coming in 2016-17 alone.
Likewise, Foreign Institutional
Investors (FII) have, along with
Domestic Institutional Investors (DII), taken the stock market to all-time
highs at present.
Defence Manufacturing, just
beginning to operationalise, alone has
the potential to absorb $150 billion in investment per annum.
The Make in India programme has
been most successful so far in the automotive and electronic industries,
accounting for some $56 billion in investment.
FII jumps every time there are
administrative reforms to widen and deepen the debt market in particular and as
our companies at the top end get bigger. DII has grown substantially, and the
mutual fund industry is bigger than it has ever been.
GDP growth will probably return
7.5% for this fiscal, and over 8% in 2018, after GST has contributed its mite.
Inflation, thanks in part to
persistently low oil prices and a strengthening rupee, has halved, falling to
4% from 8%.
The fiscal deficit is now targeting 3.2% with 3% in 2018.
Rural electrification and roads are other success stories.
Every village is slated to be electrified by mid 2018. Two crore poor
households have received LPG.
The Indian Government today, is, above all, is on a massive
infrastructure build-up, to drive GDP growth, provide employment, and boost
modernisation.
It is building city metros for mass transportation, putting
in new-fangled bullet trains, and modernising the long neglected Railways. The
North East of the country is being
inducted into the mainstream. The
aviation sector too has been made more accessible.
Its divestment and privatisation drives have been muted, and
the Modi Government does not seem to be on a particularly strong privatisation
drive in areas other than defence production.
Socially, it is on a drive to reform the narrative of India,
from reservations, quotas and vote-bank based development to its sabka saath,
sabka vikas platform.
This Government appeals not only to India’s youthful voter,
now in a 65% majority at least till 2035, but also to Muslim women, long
suppressed by medieval practices, and the Shia minority, shunted aside quite
often by Sunni, even Salafist majorities.
This is being borne out by rising voting percentages in BJP’s
favour trending towards 40% or even more.
The old “secularist” versus Hindu “communal” divide seems to
have collapsed decisively.
Meanwhile, Modi, supported in this by the Election
Commission (EC) is pressing for simultaneous elections to be held for the
centre and the states. This will also free up more time to concentrate on
governance.
In the end, is the “True North” for electoral politics changing
towards a more inclusive polity? One
composed of those not served by the old order.
If that is so, it is the most hopeful prospect to emerge out
of Narendra Modi’s first 1,000 days.
For: The Sunday
Guardian
(1,384 words)
May 18th, 2017
Gautam Mukherjee
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