Hindustan Times (Delhi)

India’s Covid crisis shows complacenc­y, says Rajan

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India’s overwhelmi­ng surge of coronaviru­s infections has revealed complacenc­y after last year’s first wave, as well as a “lack of foresight, a lack of leadership”, according to Raghuram Rajan, former governor of the country’s central bank. “If you were careful, if you were cautious, you had to recognise that it wasn’t done yet,” Rajan said Tuesday in a Bloomberg Television interview.

“Anybody paying attention to what was happening in the rest of the world, in Brazil for example, should have recognised the virus does come back and potentiall­y in more virulent forms.”

India is suffering the world’s worst outbreak of Covid-19 cases, with deaths hitting a record Sunday and new cases above 3,50,000 daily.

After a drop in cases last year, “there was a sense that we had endured the worst the virus could give us and we had come through and it was time to open up, and that complacenc­y hurt us,” said Rajan, a former Inter

CHICAGO:

Anational Monetary Fund chief economist and now a professor of finance at the University of Chicago.

India’s relative success against the first wave of infections also likely led to it not swiftly preparing enough vaccines for its own population, he said. “Some of that may be the sense that we had time. That since we had dealt with the virus we could roll out the vaccinatio­n slowly,” he said, adding that the government is now “getting its act together” and in

“emergency mode”.

Rajan, appointed by the previous government in 2013 to lead the Reserve Bank of India, became an outspoken critic of Modi’s administra­tion after it took office during his tenure, spotlighti­ng growing intoleranc­e within the country as well as differing on the issue of RBI dividends and interest rates. Hindu nationalis­ts, which form a large base of Modi’s support, questioned his allegiance to India and accused him of keeping interest rates too high.

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