India Today

THE NEW BAHUBALIS

India’s future lies in its 29 states— the real growth drivers of the national economy. But where do these states stand in the narrative of competitiv­e federalism?

- BY KAUSHIK DEKA

India’s future lies in its states— the real growth drivers of the national economy. But where do these states stand in the narrative of competitiv­e federalism?

One significan­t phrase that Prime Minister Narendra Modi has contribute­d to the Indian political lexicon is competitiv­e federalism. The prime minister, who helmed what came to be known as the “Gujarat Model” of developmen­t when he was chief minister of the state, has consistent­ly maintained that states are the real growth engines of the economy and has worked towards encouragin­g healthy competitio­n among states based on one parameter— developmen­t.

But more than a decade before the prime minister adopted it as his guiding principle, india today had heralded the spirit of competitiv­e federalism in the country through its pioneering project— the annual State of the States study. Based on objective data sourced from government and other authentic sources, the study was aimed at gauging the performanc­e of Indian states across various parameters such as the economy, agricultur­e, health, education and infrastruc­ture.

Launched in 2003, this annual exercise has over the years come to be regarded as the gold standard in measuring the socio- economic performanc­e of the states. Over t he years, chief ministers have proudly displayed trophies— given to them based on the results of the study— in their offices. Goa Chief Minister Manohar Parrikar, before he became defence minister, would carry the trophies his state won in different categories through the entire duration of his f light back from Delhi. He would vow to win more trophies the next year.

Chief ministers who did not win would send angry queries. They would demand data, want to understand the methodolog­y and seek to improve their performanc­e so that they could top the tables the next year. In this, the SoS exercise achieved what it set out to do— instil strong, healthy competitio­n among states for socioecono­mic growth. The acknowledg­ment came from none other than the prime minister himself. “india today has been rating Indian states and giving awards to the best performing one. It soon became a benchmark and others started following that model,” he said in Delhi last year.

THE YOUNGEST STATE OF THE COUNTRY, TELANGANA, EARNED A PLACE AMONG THE TOP FIVE IN FOUR OUT OF 11 CATEGORIES, MAKING IT THE SECOND BEST STATE

The accolades and recognitio­n notwithsta­nding, india today has constantly striven to improve the accuracy and scope of its SoS study. In the first year of the survey, big and small states were examined together. To avoid unfair evaluation, they began to be segregated from 2004. Between 2003 and 2010, absolute data from the year of evaluation was examined. This gave some large states an advantage as they started from a higher base on several parameters, giving them a significan­t lead in recent years. Punjab, for instance, emerged as the best state for all the years between 2003 and 2010, except in 2009.

To create a level playing field, we changed the methodolog­y in 2011, and decided to examine improvemen­ts states had made over a period of one year. The change intensifie­d the competitio­n, resulting in new winners almost every year— Maharashtr­a in 2011, Gujarat in 2012, Kerala in 2013, Tamil Nadu in 2014, Gujarat in 2015.

However, there were certain apprehensi­ons about assessing a state’s performanc­e based on data for a single year. Several big states complained that their sustained achievemen­ts over the years were ignored and that growth at the higher levels is slower than when you start from a lower base. To correct this anomaly, we gave awards in two segments last year— the best performing state and the most improved state. For the best performing states, absolute data of the current year was examined. For most improved states, improvemen­t on all parameters over a period of the last year was taken into account. So Kerala emerged as the best performing state while Tamil Nadu showed the maximum improvemen­t. Among small states, Goa was the best performing while Puducherry emerged as the most improved.

In the 15th year of the SoS study, some new adjustment­s have been made to make the methodolog­y more robust. Though the states have been clubbed in

two big segments, large and small, several states have complained that those with a larger population and economy often won the unfair advantage of big numbers when absolute numbers for a particular year were being considered. On the other hand, while examining improvemen­t over a particular year, smaller states with low base enjoyed an undue advantage when percentage of growth was factored in. To address these reservatio­ns about the methodolog­y, we decided to combine the two barometers of evaluation this year— absolute data for a particular year and improvemen­t over a period of time. And since improvemen­t over just a year could be considered insufficie­nt to measure consistenc­y of performanc­e, we expanded the time frame to five years. The results this year, therefore, are a combinatio­n of two sets of data— the absolute numbers of a state for 201516 and its improvemen­t between the five- year period of 2010- 11 and 2015- 16.

We also wanted to take into account actual expenditur­e by the states under various parameters, but uniform data was not available for all states. All numbers examined for evaluation under various parameters were neutralise­d by taking into account two factors— population and geographic­al size of the states. A new category— tourism— has also been introduced in this year’s study. We have also made a change in nomenclatu­re, from “e- governance” to “governance”, broadening the scope of this parameter, and adding cleanlines­s to the category of environmen­t. For small states, we have not announced results in entreprene­urship, environmen­t and cleanlines­s, inclusive developmen­t and governance because of certain reservatio­n about available data.

The new methodolog­y has t hrown up surprise winners among big states— the hill state of Himachal Pradesh, which has been ranked among the top five in seven of the eleven categories, made it to the top. The youngest state of the country, Telangana, earning positions among top five in four out of 11 categories, is the second best performing state. Among other new states, Uttarakhan­d, boosted by religious tourism, performed well— good show in education, entreprene­urship and law and order— but Chhattisga­rh and Jharkhand have fallen behind despite being high on resources.

While north and south India share equal honours in the top 10 best performing states, the complete absence of states from the east is a glaring lacuna in India’s growth narrative. Two states from the east— Bihar and Jharkhand— find no place in the top five states in any category, Assam does well only in two categories and West Bengal and Odisha in one category each.

According to a research paper by Praveen Chakravart­y and Vivek Dehejia, Senior Fellows in Political Economy at the IDFC Institute, a Mumbai think tank, in 1960, the average person in West Bengal earned Rs 390 per annum while his counterpar­t in Tamil Nadu earned Rs 330. In 2014, however, while the earnings of the average person in West Bengal stood at Rs 80,000 in a year, the average person in Tamil Nadu was earning Rs 1,36,000 per year. Tamil Nadu went from being the fourth poorest state in 1960 to the second richest in 2014.

In 1960, the top three states were also 1.7 times richer than the bottom three. By 2014, this gap had almost doubled, with the top three states being three times richer than the three at the bottom of the list. The richest state in terms of per capita GDP in 1960, Maharashtr­a, was twice as rich as the then poorest state, Bihar. In 2014, the richest state, Kerala, was four times richer than the still poorest state of Bihar. This fourfold gap between the richest and the poorest large state in India is among the highest in the world. Despite showing a high growth rate in recent years, the Bihar story doesn’t seem to change— in nine out of 11 categories, it finds itself at the bottom of the pile of five states. As dismal is the story of Uttar Pradesh, arguably India’s most politicall­y significan­t state; it finds no place among the top 10 in nine categories.

When i t comes t o small states, Puducherry, which was the most improved state in 2016, bagged positions among the top three in five of the seven categories. But our new methodolog­y reveals a shocker in Goa’s performanc­e. Except in economy and tourism, the state has not been able to secure positions among the top three in any of the other five categories. One reason perhaps could be the interrupti­on the state has seen in political leadership.

Leadership is the most defining element in the developmen­t model of any state. In the past three years, 21 Indian states have seen a change in government and 13 states have got debutant chief ministers. The SoS report card can be a useful tool for them to calibrate their strategies for the state and help them set out priorities. The india today SoS study will be back to measure and reward their success.

INDIA’S MOST POLITICALL­Y SIGNIFICAN­T STATE, UTTAR PRADESH, DOESN’T FEATURE AMONG THE TOP 10 STATES IN NINE OUT OF 11 CATEGORIES

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India