Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Local issues will play a crucial role in 2019

Special status in one state and farmloan waiver in another will dominate the 2019 political agenda

- ROSHAN KISHORE Yamini Aiyar is president and chief executive, Centre for Policy Research The views expressed are personal roshan.k@htlive.com Inner Voice comprises contributi­ons from our readers. The views expressed are personal Innervoice@hindustant­imes.

Anna Hazare sat on a hunger strike in Delhi’s Ramlila Maidan to press for demands, including the appointmen­t of lokpal and lokayukta. The agitation has not had any impact on the current political environmen­t. Masspartic­ipation is a minuscule fraction of what it was when Anna came to Delhi in 2011. The 2011 lokpal agitation marked the beginning of the end of the Congress-led UPA. What explains the subdued response now?

Conspiracy theorists will attribute this to the absence of tacit support by forces, which had a vested interest in discrediti­ng the Congress in 2011. Such views are oblivious to how political-economy narratives work. The political-economy path to 2019 is likely to be different from 2014. Was the mass support for the lokpal movement in 2011 a reflection of a nuanced understand­ing of the details of the proposed lokpal bill? It is extremely unlikely. Multiple factors contribute­d to the momentum behind the agitation. The UPA was embroiled in corruption scandals before the lokpal stir started. Corruption was not the only problem. Inflation had grown at more than 10% in 2009-10 and 2010-11. Economic growth had started decelerati­ng since 2011-12. Rising prices and slowing growth meant real economic pain for the masses. This was a drastic reversal from the boom phase during the UPA-I period.

Why did this economic reversal happen? A complex set of economic factors were at play. The global economic crisis generated headwinds for export earnings. Oil prices had started rising. Revenue projection­s did not materialis­e due to slowing down of growth, which constraine­d the government’s ability to spend more money in the economy. Government­s gain when there are external factors helping the economy. They lose when the cycle turns.

Allegation­s of corruption along with the returns, and freedom to make it enjoyable and yet productive.

Each day comes with plenty of offers in terms of choices and hopes. And each day gives you a chance to do or undo to the best of your liking. Therefore, it is our duty to make the best use of all kinds of opportunit­ies that life offers. If not availed of, such opportunit­ies may be lost forever because, as the saying goes, an opportunit­y comes to knock your door but once.

Therefore, if you are lazy enough to let go of a chance, you could be foregoing an worsening economic situation created an ominous situation for the UPA. All the economic hardships in the latter half of UPA-II’s tenure were attributed to the alleged corruption within the government. This was a much more palatable narrative than cyclical factors bringing down growth. That the Congress behaved in an arrogant way and went wrong with its political messaging only strengthen­ed this view. It was this narrative which the 2011 lokpal agitation drew its mass support from. The BJP hitched on to the sentiment and went on to decimate the Congress.

As of now, no big corruption charge haunts this government. Bank frauds are growing by the day. But the relative autonomy of public sector banks will keep the government immune from direct anger. Unless there is evidence to show that there was collusion to aid the accused. Even the Rafale procuremen­t controvers­y is unlikely to inflict big damage. This could change if there are direct allegation­s of kickbacks.

There are problems on the economic front. Real earnings in the agricultur­e sector have been stagnant under this government. Private investment activity is still not reviving. Export earnings are unlikely to show high growth, given the fears of US protection­ism triggering trade wars. Policies such as demonetisa­tion and GST have thrown a spanner in the wheels of the informal economy not once, but twice. However, both inflation and macroecono­mic stability is still better than UPA II’s times.

Despondenc­y, more than anger, seems to be the economic mood right now. But at the moment there is no compelling anti-BJP economic narrative, which will snowball as the 2019 general elections near. We should remember that the BJP managed to win UP and Gujarat after demonetisa­tion and GST. Rural distress is beginning to haunt the BJP, whether it will bring it down is a question which is difficult to answer right now.

This might seem like good news for the BJP. However, it is not just the Opposition which will not have a grand economic narrative for 2019. In 2014, the BJP campaign sold Narendra Modi as someone who could change fortunes by replicatin­g his Gujarat model at the Centre. That halo is unlikely to remain the same in the next poll because of the economic situation. This might make local issues more germane to political outcomes. Special status in one state, farm loan waiver in another could dominate the agenda. This will also increase the importance of caste and community equations. The narrative around 2019 is more likely to be shaped from state capitals than Ramlila Maidan. It will only make it more difficult to read the trends.

AT THE MOMENT THERE’S NO ANTIBJP ECONOMIC NARRATIVE. RURAL DISTRESS IS BEGINNING TO HAUNT THE BJP, BUT WHETHER IT WILL BRING THE PARTY DOWN IN 2019 IS DIFFICULT TO ANSWER NOW

opportunit­y that you were waiting for all these years. That means we have to be alert to every ‘knock of luck’ so that we don’t miss the bus.

Life is too precious to be wasted doing nothing. Each one of us has to have a mission to fulfil before bidding adieu.

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