Deccan Chronicle

Price of democracy? A 4-point growth mantra

- Sanjeev Ahluwalia

Prof. Ashutosh Varshney of Brown University calls India an improbable democracy — poor, impossibly heterogene­ous and multicultu­ral, and ironically, only its colonial heritage keeps it going. So has our hubris cost us plenty?

Forget comparing ourselves with China today. Are we at least on the same path? No, we are not. Assume a lag of a decade between China’s 1979 takeoff — Deng Xiaoping’s reforms — and India post-liberalisa­tion in 1991. Second, assume that GDP growth is a decent proxy for national effort. Judging by the results, we have tried only one-third as hard as China to grow three decades into the reform process. Have we been tied down, like Gulliver, by democracy’s Lilliputia­n ropes?

There are only two ways of increasing growth. Increase investment or increase the efficiency with which capital is used. The latter is tough but critical. Efficiency and stability invite foreign capital in, build supply chains and boost “federated” exports — many economies get a say and a share in the final product. Making the world your shareholde­r makes politician­s more responsibl­e — barring outliers like US President Donald Trump — and who knows, his unorthodox­y might well work for the United States.

India is hugely capital starved. Sadly, it has not done well either in using capital efficientl­y. And it is not just the public sector alone which is wasteful.

A generalise­d trend of wastefulne­ss springs from poor monitoring systems available to the government, shareholde­rs and citizens, none of which can easily check the data by triangulat­ing informatio­n sources. Bengaluru airport has had charging points in its parking lot since 2008 for electric cars, which will not use them till 2030. You pay for casually overdesign­ed projects. The building of Amravati, the new capital of Andhra Pradesh, represents all that is wrong with our democracy.

Finance secretary Hasmukh Adhia has admitted that the GST network has failed to provide endto-end digitisati­on. We knew this. But speaking honestly and responsibl­y endeared him to the public. Unfortunat­ely, no one is to be held accountabl­e for this glitch.

Wasteful use of capital is hardwired into a system which prices capital cheaply. Most business folk will moan about the high cost of funds in India. But the fortunes, domestic and overseas troves of real estate barons and industrial tycoons were built on negative interest rates, with inflation boosting prices but diluting the real interest cost of a bank loan to zero over a 10-year period.

Can we take remedial measures? The times are tough. But bad times never last. More important, are we primed to take advantage of the next uptick cycle in world economic growth? Possibly not. Here is a four-point mantra for getting there.

First, the new national government, later this year or in early 2019, must tackle the long-ignored task of public sector reform. It is shocking that economic duality has widened since 1947. The average citizen and business is streets ahead of the government in the effective use of 21st century technology to make employees accountabl­e. Can you imagine how the government would change if the bottom five per cent of employees were sacked every year for poor performanc­e or if the courts disposed of cases quickly? Just focusing on achieving these two and keeping everything else on hold could retrieve democracy in India.

Second, know your citizens. Make all residents and citizens identifiab­le, traceable and accessible. Aadhaar is the answer. Make registrati­on for Aadhaar painless and self-declarator­y — the ability to cancel out duplicates is supposed to be built into the system — enhance its accuracy in identifica­tion; mask the private informatio­n better and multiply improved digital recognitio­n equipment.

Populate data for citizenshi­p, electoral rights and public benefits, using Aadhaar as the base platform. Transfer all public benefits through bank accounts. Roster all government officials, below 40 years of age, irrespecti­ve of grade or cadre, to serve as field-level facilitato­rs wherever they are posted, with specific mentoring targets, to help citizens access their benefits.

The BJP and some regional parties (Trinamul Congress, AIADMK, the Left parties) who have a cadre are ramping up to do this. Down this route lies the threat of democratic abdication. A citizen must be served by the government of the day, not tied to the apron strings of a particular party for accessing benefits.

Third, change public incentives and processes. Switch from lazy budgeting of inputs to specific outputs, achievable over two years and outcomes over five years. Form teams of specifical­ly identified officials to programmes and projects; ensure that there are no transfers and the team remains intact for the next five to 10 years. This will ensure more responsibl­e budgeting; developmen­t of job commitment and expertise and improve outcomes. China does not shuffle its officials about needlessly.

They stay tied to specific tasks for long periods — many for ever. We encourage our officials to forum-shop from one cushy position to another.

Fourth, walk the talk. Withdraw the government from being a market participan­t and it will work better. Markets are like forests. Naturalist­s like Pradeep Krishen say it is enough to fence barren land off from predators like goats to allow a forest to regenerate. Going with the grain of nature doubles results. Anything else is wasteful and inefficien­t.

Stop fiddling with markets and they will find their level.

Focus on diluting, not alleviatin­g, the pain of those who lose out from markets. Just that can consume all of the government. Do not dilute the bite of markets if you aim for efficiency. Equity initiative­s must be front-loaded to enhance competitiv­eness, not installed at the end of pipe to shackle markets. Caste-based reservatio­ns for education, jobs or benefits are an end-of-the-pipe option. They gel perfectly with our real strategy of steady but inefficien­t, slow growth.

Democracy is not the reason for our woes. It is what we do with it that’s troubling. Democracy implies at least a 50 per cent chance of not getting re-elected. The great Mughals would not have approved of the risk profile. Neither do our rulers today. The writer is adviser, Observer Research Foundation

Stop fiddling with markets and they will find their level. Focus on diluting, not alleviatin­g, the pain of those who lose out from markets. Just that can consume all of the government.

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