Business Standard

Good deeds, bad words

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The opinion of the surveyed CEOs about the four years of Narendra Modi regime, as shared in “Govt needs to resolve banking mess: CEOs” (May 26) is quite objective. Even though Modi is being criticised by the Opposition for not fulfilling his electoral promises (knowing that Modi had overcommit­ted himself to win the 2014 Lok Sabha election) CEOs have drawn attention to those failures that affect our industrial progress. Here are some more observatio­ns.

The kind of vision that Modi envisaged and the gusto with which he desired to achieve it required a Cabinet of exceptiona­l talent, particular­ly in key fields like human resource developmen­t, labour and employment, industry, commerce, skill developmen­t, culture, health and MSMEs — right choices in these portfolios would have provided a team to follow a coherent and mutually reinforcin­g direction for the fulfilment of the vision. Instead, he has ministers who are narrow-minded and vociferous about Hindutva that is against the concept of sabka saath, sabka vikas. Similarly, some states such as UP have chief ministers who need to prioritise developmen­t rather than propagatio­n of misunderst­ood Hindutva. When they are given the role of vote winners, doubts about adherence to the ideals of Mahatma Gandhi and Dr B R Ambedkar arise. The result is that the good work done by the government is overshadow­ed by the hatefilled utterances and actions by his party’s leaders about cow protection, beef eating and the like. Modi should convince them about the futility of it. Today people vote for Modi and not his party and his popularity ranking is still the highest — he should use his stature to reform his party and government to win the race next year. Y G Chouksey Pune

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