In
Concrete Terms, What Has Modi Accomplished In Four Years?
You
and I come by road and rail, but economists travel on infrastructure- Margaret
Thatcher
Build it, goes the Americanism, and they will
come. China’s 10% plus growth through 30 of the Deng Xiaoping years, was
predicated on exports to the US, and massive, impressive, domestic
infrastructure development.
India is playing catch-up, though it is the
domestic market for us, but under Narendra Modi, it means business. Infrastructure
is an article of faith for him. It has worked well in his home state of Gujarat.
Modi is indeed the focal point of this, and
other, new BJP thrusts, because the Party, before he took over the top job, was
of a different kind. It was derisively dubbed the “Brahmin-Bania” party,
propped up by RSS Hindutva, but still unable to will itself into power.
The Vajpayee years, were the only other time
the BJP ruled. They were characterized by a massive coalition of disparate
elements. But it did yield both nuclear weaponisation for India’s security, and
the world-class Golden Quadrilateral system of roads.
Modi has been pushing infrastructure
development relentlessly over the last four years, not least because it was the
surest way to pull India out of the GDP slump it was in.
Infrastructure growth is an objective
imperative too, given India’s gargantuan population grown three-fold and more
since independence. Most of what is on the ground, except in recent years, is
creaky, antiquated, inadequate, engendered by decades of low growth Socialism, or
inherited from the British Raj.
From the late eighties, and certainly the
nineties, infrastructure was identified as an impediment to our ambitions of
rapid growth, with its bottlenecks and high costs. And it became clear that
only double-digit GDP numbers can help us raise over 400 million people from
abject poverty.
While infrastructure development, rather than
the promotion of consumption(which has now also picked up), is indeed Modi’s “suit
boot” side - there is another as well, a Social Democrat face, working in
tandem.
This is distinct, in a teach-a-man-to-fish way,
from the populist freebies of his Socialist and Communist opponents. And this
face has considerably grown the BJP’s voter-base via Amit Shah’s “social
engineering”, as a consequence. The limited reach in the cow belt, has been
transcended by embracing the humblest of the have-nots pan-India, under the
capacious Vikas umbrella.
The Modi
Government is now in the final stretch to general elections in 2019. It is just
as well that the economy is looking up, inclusive of a good monsoon and cheer
in rural India, with a number of State Assembly elections looming nearer.
But what is concrete about the Modi
Government’s achievements after 4 years?
There has been, since May 2014, a palpable growth and development in
Roads, Railways, Metros, as well as laid groundwork for Rapid Transport
Systems, Bullet Trains and Freight Corridors, broad band systems and so on. Ro-ro
systems are being tried out on the coast lines, and inland waterways are being
revived after decades.
The Bharatmala roads of the Modi years will
manifest only in his second term. But when
it’s done, it will establish new benchmarks in connectivity, communication and
possibility in India.
Other road plans under the Act East Policy,
actively under execution, include a new airport terminal at Guwahati just
announced, and road connectivity through Myanmar all the way to Thailand.
Work
done in Afghanistan- a dam, roads, government buildings, and at Chabahar Port
in Iran, again show the inclination towards infrastructure development as
diplomacy too.
At home, completion of stuck road projects
after removing financial, environmental and legal impedimenta, strategic tunnels
and bridges, dams, revived mining, new ports and modernization of old ones,
bypasses, widening of roads, even planting of trees- are palpable.
18,000 villages outside the grid so far, sitting
in the dark all these years- have now
been electrified. Next target is to provide electricity to every home and
business. The 100 Smart Cities are so far manifest in terms of masses of
affordable housing. Plans are afoot to have everyone in a pucca home by 2022.
The nuclear power programmne, long mired in
motivated NGO protests and delivery problems from suppliers, are now also moving
ahead.
There
are new international airports on the anvil at Jewar in UP, in Navi Mumbai, and more airport
terminals at Chennai and Lucknow to cope with present and future demand.
Old WWII airstrips from the Burma campaign have
been refurbished and reopened to meet military and civilian needs of present
times. Ditto the famous Stilwell Road.
Brand new strategic border roads are being
built in remote places of Arunachal Pradesh , Ladakh and Uttarakhand.
Pilgrimage circuits such as the Char Dham in
the Garhwal mountains are being firmed up, with all-weather connectivity and
roads. Other places such as Vaishno Devi have already been rendered more
accessible by a high-tech rail line to Katra.
New railway track is being laid for the first
time in decades connecting the neglected and isolated North East. Recent
launches of ISRO satellites are being used to develop India’s own GPRS System -
for peace, surveillance and war.
Metro systems as a viable mass transit system are extant in almost all the metro cities now,
though much needed expansion is yet to come, and will spread to as many as 38
cities in time.
The Make in India programme has worked well for electronics, particularly the
assembly of cellphones, and automobile assembly/manufacture, ancillaries etc.
but is grinding slowly in Defence- into ship and submarine building, aircraft,
tanks, modern rifles, bullet-proof
vests, night-sight equipment, ammunition, armoured carriers, helicopters etc..
New
techniques of counting employment now hint at crores of new jobs created via
all this infrastructure development after all, and will no doubt provide
ammunition in the election battles coming up. Now, even private sector recovery
is showing up after the government’s four years of heavy lifting.
The Social Democratic face has not been
sleeping either. Many programmes indeed are continuations of what previous
governments have initiated, such as the multiple welfare schemes for the rural
and urban poor. These can, and have been tweaked, expanded, and implemented
with fewer leakages.
But there are spectacular new successes too. These
include tremendous electoral wins that has brought 22 states into the NDA fold.
And major economic reform, like a single unified indirect tax- the GST. The latter,
after a contentious start, has recently breached the Rs. 1 lakh crore mark in
monthly collections for the first time, with signs that it could keep growing
at 3%-5% per month.
Breaking through the decades old logjam for the
Armed Forces pay parity and welfare programme under OROP was another huge
accomplishment.
And then, there are the massive Aadhar linkages
that have eliminated lakhs of fake
subsidy accounts. The significant expansion of the direct tax base is a
new phenomenon after the disruption of the shock demonetisation.
In foreign affairs, there is a new warmth,
cooperation, and respect for India all over the world. The smacking of Pakistan via surgical strikes and standing
up to China at Doklam has not gone unnoticed.
Ordinary people too can obtain passports in
days now.
Many long-standing and intractable subsidies
have been removed though the fuel taxes are decidedly onerous even if the money
is purportedly being used for infrastructure building.
Apex level corruption too has been stamped out
for the very first time. Defaulting businessmen are in the process of having all
their assets confiscated.
Micro loans without collateral have been
provided to lakhs of people running tiny businesses. Muslim women have been shielded from the
ignominy of Triple Talaq for the first time.
Self-attestation of required document copies,
the CBDT dealing with income tax assesses almost exclusively online, are part
of hundreds of such improvements.
80% of all income tax assesses have to pay no
more than 5% tax, or nothing at all, after availing various tax-saving
incentives.
Going beyond welfare handouts, thousands of LPG
gas connections and cylinders have been provided to the poor at subsidized prices.
80% of the population willy-nilly now has a bank account, and despite much derision,
these accounts collectively hold crores of rupees now.
The thing is, administrative reform and welfare
programmes, however plentiful can be twisted and belittled. But how do you deny
the evidence of infrastructure development? There is a reason why nearly a century
later, we still call the seat of power- Lutyen’s Delhi.
For:
The Sunday Guardian
(1,392
words)
May
3, 2018
Gautam
Mukherjee
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