‘North India’s backwardness is a political question’
NEWDELHI: One of the strongest voices advocating greater federalism, Kerala’s finance minister Thomas Isaac speaks to
on the course ahead for Kerala and how the Communist Party of India (Marxist) looks at the 2019 Lok Sabha polls. Excerpts:
Manoj Ramachandran
Firstly, allow the Finance Commission to function independently. Don’t micromanage it by fixing terms of reference which tie its hands. The revenue deficit grant is a Constitutional provision, the terms of reference wants to do away with it. The Finance Commission can’t decide on what are populist measures. Secondly, the GST has to be made flexible. States should be allowed to tweak their SGST component. We should decide on how federal flexibility can be brought into the GST system. Thirdly, the National Development Council and the Industry Council need to be rejuvenated. We were critical of the Planning Commission, which has made way for the Niti Aayog, which in turn has no teeth. system — these are historical headaches. But 70 years is enough time to overcome disparities. However, north India has failed in providing basic healthcare, education and conditions to lead life with human dignity. This is the biggest lesson Kerala has given, Tamil Nadu is following this path now, and Andhra Pradesh and Telangana also seem poised to follow this model. Redistributive politics and policies have been absent in north India. The backwardness of the region is ultimately a political question. This is the challenge that the north faces.
Despite their backwardness, north India has a huge amount of unspent capital deposited in Government of India securities. Over
₹1,50,000 crore of various states’ money is lying in Government of India’s 14-day securities, earning 3-4% interest. Why keep it there? Spend it on education and healthcare. Kerala with 3% of the country’s population accounts for 50% of claims under the Rashtriya Swasthya Bima Yojana (RSBY). Kerala now needs ₹6,000 crores for repair and compensation and ₹25,000 crores in capital expenditure to rebuild. Like all states, we are allowed to borrow 3% of our GST bill. What is happening in Kerala now is an economic crisis worse than 2009. Our ties with the UAE run deep. We want the right to borrow for reconstruction work. We have begun crowd-funding in developmental work. Criticism is an integral part of a democracy. But on the contrary, the work done by the state government will ensure a win. The overwhelming impression within and outside Kerala is one of positivity towards the state government. The calamity has been dealt with most effectively... The government’s prestige is at its highest in its current tenure. The BJP’S rule in Delhi has definitely given them respectability but they have been able to make inroads only in Karnataka. With the Congress and JD(S) coming together, the BJP stands no chance. It is going to be a near washout for the BJP in the south. The BJP’S political outreach is inimical to the socio-political commentary of the south. Social reformation and renaissance has put the southern narrative on a different level. We believe in the ideal propagated by Sri Narayana Guru, who said, “Caste and religion don’t matter if one is a good human being.” A north Indian party that says one has to be a Hindu to be a good human being just doesn’t find a place in our narrative. The BJP stands isolated in south India and will become a liability to any party that will associate themselves with them.