Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

INDIA@70: WHERE DO WE GO FROM HERE?

- Interact with the author @rajeshmaha­patra

Seventy years is not really a long time for an ancient civilisati­on. But for a young nation, seven decades of memory, experience and events are more than enough to contrast India’s present with its immediate past. This comparison, however, would be unhelpful if we reduce it to a simple stock-taking exercise. Today’s India has become faster and better in so many ways that it would be unfair to compare and contrast over material advancemen­ts.

Rather, reflecting on 70 years of Independen­t India should be about understand­ing the many imaginatio­ns around her future. Especially, amongst those who are increasing­ly becoming louder, voluble and clearer as the days go by. And here is where India is becoming more surprising, more curious and more intriguing by the day.

Notably, the past few years have seen a spurt in agitations and massive stirrings by ‘backward caste’ farming communitie­s, who urban India believed had gained much from commercial agricultur­e, green revolution technologi­es, subsidies and the expansion of primary commodity markets. A layer of rural India that became so “well off” that they were referred to seen as the “rurban” — beyond rural, but not entirely urban.

The festering Jat protests in Haryana have, however, put more than a pause on our views of today’s rural India. How and why should such an eruption occur in a state which has the highest per capita income (about ₹1.5 lakh a year, at 2013-14 prices)? Does more developmen­t cause even more unmanageab­le aspiration­s? The recent patidar ‘revolt’ in Gujarat has added more fat to this fire. The western Indian state is witness to a patidar ferment despite being one of India’s most industrial­ised and fastest growing states over the past two decades. Shouldn’t rapid industrial­isation have spurred the rural sector — attracting its youth for jobs, making demands on agricultur­al produce and inspiring ancillary industries? And lastly, just for us to emphasise the point, witness the case of the humongous Maratha silent protests in the state of Maharashtr­a, which is the nation’s financial powerhouse. Why is the mix of Mumbai and Bollywood not enough for the Marathas?

Economists and political analysts have pointed out that much of this discontent, alongside the desperatio­n and violence by these farming communitie­s, is no great mystery. Ever since agricultur­al commodity prices have dipped and input costs have risen, this otherwise dynamic segment in rural India, despite their material and social clout, has experience­d palpable economic distress. Simply put, farming does not pay like it used to, which is why, for some TV channels, it is now only Jai Jawan.

While we thus do know the sources of India’s current rural crises, what is most intriguing is how these farming communitie­s are arguing and protesting a way out for themselves. Their demands are clear: They want government jobs and modern education through quotas and the time-tested belief in reservatio­ns. Their quest for a new future, in effect, is more about India’s past rather than its present.

While for India’s successful urban children, a permanent government job is seen to be stifling and “totally uncool” even as a financial aspiration, the reverse seems to hold as one moves out of the city. Are large social chunks of India, in effect, still seeing the Nehruvian mixed economy and the Ambedkerit­e social inclusion model as viable pathways for meaningful futures?

One must emphasise, here, that if anything, the agitations by these middle castes tell us that they are not the start-up, stand-up, risk-taking entreprene­urial individual­s. Instead, they seem to consider the community as the basic social bloc for economic movement. And their discontent and anger appears to be growing amidst statistica­lly successful developed states.

If the argument is that imaginatio­ns about the future help shape and define aspiration­s, then India’s 70 years is still an open ideologica­l debate. The idea about what comprises progress cannot be taken for granted, or assumed.

FARMERS IN DISTRESS ARE ARGUING A WAY OUT FOR THEMSELVES. THEIR QUEST FOR A NEW FUTURE, IN EFFECT, IS MORE ABOUT INDIA’S PAST RATHER THAN ITS PRESENT

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