Business Standard

WHERE MONEY TALKS

- SUNANDA K DATTA-RAY

Was Srinivas Kuchibhotl­a’s murder India’s loss or America’s? The question is implicit in his widow’s challengin­g question, “Do we belong?” The answer remains elusive because of the hypocrisy that cloaks attitudes on both sides on a matter that touches closely on sensitive areas like loyalty, identity, national pride and, yes, also human greed.

Undoubtedl­y, many in Donald Trump’s administra­tion must resent the phenomenon that the 32-year-old aviation engineer represente­d. The president’s chief strategist, Stephen K Bannon, for instance, once reportedly deplored that “two-thirds or three-quarters of the CEOs in Silicon Valley are from South Asia or from Asia”. As it happens, the charge was untrue. Even when a disproport­ionate number of Asians are hired, they are hugely under-represente­d in upper management. Yet, the myth of a model minority cheating native-born white Americans of their birthright persists with damaging effect.

It’s like the crock of gold at the end of the rainbow tempting more and more gifted young Indians to seek a livelihood in the US instead of using their talents to help shape India’s future. India trains them — especially graduates of the Indian Institutes of Technology — in science, technology, engineerin­g and mathematic­s at immense public cost. It’s not widely known that the IITs were the brainchild of a visionary Bengali businessma­n, Nalini Ranjan Sarkar, who enriched himself through land developmen­t, insurance initiative­s and business ventures. He then tried to do the same for his country by laying the foundation­s of an entreprene­urial class to manage the industrial­isation that was expected from Jawaharlal Nehru’s five-year plans. Thanks to our sluggish developmen­t, it’s the US that benefits most not only from Sarkar’s IITs but from the entire edifice of higher education that poverty-stricken India set up with painstakin­g care and at great expense.

Bannon’s unfair and untrue comment also showed that Indian success is a further red rag to the bull of American envy. He represents what is called the “alt-right” — the new extreme right — in American politics. As chief executive of Breitbart News, Bannon was accused of promoting racist, anti-Muslim, anti-immigrant and white supremacis­t ideas. His disquiet at the notion of Asians climbing to top positions in Silicon Valley was evident in an interview with Trump in November 2015. While Trump thought foreign-born Ivy league graduates should be allowed to stay on in the US where they could be “job creators”, Bannon hummed and hawed to make his infamous comment about Asian CEOs and argue that the US was “more than an economy”. It was “a civic society”.

There’s no denying that white Americans have cause for envy. A century ago, Asian Americans (mainly Japanese and Chinese) were digging ditches, laundering clothes and hewing minerals under the ground. Japanese Americans were interned during World War II. After the Chinese were massacred in Los Angeles in 1871, Congress legislated to forbid low-skilled Chinese immigrants. There were only 196 Indian immigrants between 1820 and 1870 when the number rose to 586. The West Coast attracted 6,000 labourers between 1898 and 1914, plus a number of Ghadar Party political refugees. But nearly all Asian immigratio­n was banned by 1924. Hawaii’s legendary Gobindram J Watumull, who landed in 1917, couldn’t acquire citizenshi­p until the Oriental Immigratio­n Act was revised in 1949. Congressma­n Dalip Singh Saund, who flew to Calcutta in December 1957 — his first visit to India in 38 years — was probably the first and most outstandin­g symbol of success.

From these humble beginnings, Indian Americans have risen to out-earn everyone since at least the 1960s. By 2014 their incomes were 20 per cent higher than the average white household’s. It wasn’t until 1965, however, that explicit national discrimina­tion was abolished only because an economy that the Vietnam War had galvanised desperatel­y needed scientists and engineers. Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society wanted Third World doctors. George H W Bush invited technology skills with nonimmigra­nt H1B visas. By 1999 a handful of Indian Americans accounted for five per cent of US wealth. Americans like to think that these Indians landed very disadvanta­ged and wound up advantaged through extraordin­ary investment­s in their children’s education. That is not so. Unlike emigrants to Britain, those who chose the US were usually highly educated to start with. They were the best of Indian talent whose migration is a sad blow for India’s future.

Had Kuchibhotl­a stayed at home, he would have earned less but his life might have been spared to serve his country.

Nor would there be any confusion about where he belonged. He would have been India’s future.

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