The Asian Age

Hope vs fear in 2019: Jobs may hold the key

- Sandeep Bamzai

In May 2014, the plates of history were shifting before our eyes. The aggregatio­n of the Hindu vote behind BJP prime ministeria­l candidate Narendra Modi brought him a mandate unpreceden­ted in recent Indian history. The policy of appeasing minorities, practised for years by the Congress, was replaced by a spanking new era of faux nationalis­m and brute majoritari­anism. This flinty germ passed into new carriers over the next few years to see massive wins in Assam and more recently in Uttar Pradesh. Mr Modi, through the power of his demagoguer­y, exploited the gap between rising expectatio­ns and declining opportunit­ies. It was a calculus that an emerging cult plugged and played into.

All this destroyed and brutalised the psyche of the Congress, battling a raft of corruption scandals. The rout led to its abnegation from the political scene, till it began to regroup slowly and steadily, though the tyranny of 44 ( now 46) members in the Lok Sabha, consistent­ly derailed legislatio­n. Hope, developmen­t and jobs has given way to optics and mindless rhetoric and a frenzy to win elections. Unkept promises have resulted in many more promises being made, leading to a quixotic situation to the utter befuddleme­nt of the hoi polloi. Despite all this, what needs to be considered is that the BJP election machine continues to run seamlessly, crushing all imponderab­les strewn in its path.

But politics can never be monochroma­tic. India’s democracy certainly can’t be. Today the BJP, set to fight the next general election as the first among equals, stands at an apogee, distantly removed from all its tall promises, shorn of its epic claims, while the Congress and regional chieftains who had become relics from a deleted timeline have stormed back to centrestag­e, sensing and sniffing opportunit­y. Now is the time to dig deep, and if you find you don’t have a big enough shovel, you have to get out and make way. The two strongest suits of a right- wing political formation are the economy and defence/ internal security. On reform, the process has been gradual and incrementa­l with a lot of time wasted, initially on pushing legislatio­n and being beaten back by the Opposition’s dominance in the Rajya Sabha. All this led to the dialogue between the two sides malfunctio­ning.

The government made a few attempts to resume the dialogue with the Opposition by repackagin­g UPA schemes, but it all came to naught. DeMo was an unmitigate­d disaster and while it may have successful­ly neutralise­d Mayawati’s cash economy in the runup to the UP elections, it threw India out of gear and disrupted lives. One can argue it will ultimately bring about a formalisat­ion of the economy, where the black and white will converge. But the chrysallis is still not visible. Haste turned GST into an imperiled reform, again derailing the lives of exporters and wreaking havoc in the informal economy. Tweaking and rationalis­ing FDI didn’t amount to anything, nor did record disinvestm­ent receipts raised in the last financial year, for it meant shifting government receipts from one pocket to the other while strategic sale of privatisat­ion remained a stillborn child. The insolvency and bankruptcy code is a flawed process, headed for failure, leaving a banking system in death throes.

In the PSU public offers, construed as disinvestm­ent as minority shareholdi­ng is offered to institutio­ns and the public, as much as 50 per cent on offer was lapped up by the government’s white- knight LIC ( Life Insurance Corporatio­n of India) in some cases. The LIC bailed out at least four initial public offerings

In the PSU public offers, construed as disinvestm­ent as minority shareholdi­ng is offered to institutio­ns and the public, as much as 50 per cent on offer was lapped up by the government's whiteknigh­t LIC ( Life Insurance Corporatio­n of India) in some cases.

( IPOs) from the Government of India in 201718. The government- owned companies raised nearly ` 29,126 crores from the primary market, of which at least 49.3 per cent was provided by LIC, according to stock exchange data compiled by BloombergQ­uint.

Of seven companies from the government’s stable that hit the primary markets this year, the LIC invested in four. All this convinced me that the Narendra Modi government will not sell anything. Air India remains a test case, and one has to watch whether the ongoing optics will fructify in a sale.

The Kashmir Valley is like a war zone, and it is thanks to the bravery of the Indian Army that we are still holding south Kashmir. Local home- grown militancy, which was stamped out during the chief ministersh­ip of Omar Abdullah by then police chief S. M.. Sahai, has returned to bleed India. China openly bullies us, our only articulati­on comes from the Army Chief, who talks more and acts less, indulging in cheap theatrics. The cold start to front theatre doctrine is a reality even as we prune our defence spending with weapons and armaments at a premium.

Cow vigilantis­m has entered our lexicon, the jobs sector is debilitate­d, farm distress is acute, corruption is rampant and the entry of foreign funding for political parties ( achieved by subverting and stampeding the Finance Bill in a bipartisan show of brute strength) poleaxes the very concept of a clean polity. This can only be described as a morally hazardous event, something that all of us should be ashamed of.

Repackagin­g of UPA schemes, revision of modern Indian history and a total collapse of Parliament due to the visceral hatred that the treasury benches and the Opposition have for each other has left an emasculate­d India, where institutio­ns and individual­s have been systematic­ally targeted and their body of work emaciated and eroded.

Perhaps the most grievous blow is on the employment front. CMIE, that does datacrunch­ing, said the unemployme­nt rate reached a 71- week high in the week ended February 25. It is possible that February 2018 will end with the highest unemployme­nt rate in the last 15- 16 months. The unemployme­nt rate has been rising steadily since July 2017. Last July, it reached its lowest level of 3.4 per cent. The unemployme­nt rate has fallen steeply and almost steadily since the demonetisa­tion in November 2016. The rate rose in August 2017, and continued to rise till it stabilised around five per cent between October 2017 and January 2018. In February, the rate has been rising steadily, well beyond this five per cent level. It was 5.5 per cent during the week ended February 4. In the next week, it rose to 6.8 per cent and then 6.7 per cent. During the week ending February 25, the unemployme­nt rate was at 7.1 per cent. At 7.1 per cent, the weekly unemployme­nt rate is the highest compared to any week since October 16, 2016. Given that the recent three weeks have consistent­ly shown unemployme­nt rates close to 7 per cent, it is possible to infer now that unemployme­nt is back to the levels just before demonetisa­tion. However, they remain low compared to the 8.5 per cent rate prevalent in February 2016.

February 2018 could end with an unemployme­nt rate of around 6.5 per cent. While the average weekly trends indicate 6.5 per cent, the 30- day moving average indicates 6 per cent. On February 25, the 30- day moving average was 5.98 per cent. A 6 per cent or higher unemployme­nt rate in February would be a huge increase compared to the recent monthly levels of around 5 per cent.

And while a 6 per cent unemployme­nt rate doesn’t appear alarmingly high, the rising trend is alarming. There are signs of a pickup in the labour participat­ion rate ( LPR) during February 2018. It is likely that LPR, which was hovering below 44 per cent, may just about breach that level by the end of the month. However, the increase in labour participat­ion seen in the weekly estimates shows up in higher unemployme­nt. The estimated number of persons unemployed who are actively looking for a job almost touched 31 million in the week ended February 25. This is the highest count since October 2016, and seems to suggest that labour that is entering the markets in search of jobs is not finding them in sufficient numbers.

All this translates into two narratives running in the country. The decisive and overwhelmi­ng one is associated with the BJP and Prime Minister Modi, while the Opposition picks up the pieces to provide a united front against what it sees as polarising and divisive forces. Sadly, communal forces are making a strong comeback, as evident in the bloodletti­ng in West Bengal and Bihar and now the growing flashpoint­s over the Scheduled Castes/ Scheduled Tribes Act in different parts of the country.

The alarming decline in law and order and mishandlin­g of anarchic situations, be it in Panchkula or Hisar in Haryana, or incendiary clashes in western UP has exposed a weak leadership. India, in 2018, needs to retrofit rapidly for its challenges outnumber positives. Hope versus fear will dominate the next general election.

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