The Asian Age

To truly develop India, Modi 2.0 needs to focus on strengthen­ing institutio­ns

- Rajeev Ahuja The writer is a developmen­t economist formerly with the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and the World Bank

■ How could the country tap into the leadership of Narendra Modi, who is so passionate about India’s developmen­t, and, at the same time, control the downside of the BJP’s politics? Well, if the Modi government needed the support of regional parties to return to power, it would have kept a check on the BJP’s politics too. Alas, this is unlikely to be the case.

The 2019 Indian general elections have been the most hotly contested elections ever in India’s history. Never before have the Opposition parties come together as they did this time around with a singlepoin­t agenda, namely, to oust the Modi-Shah duo. Why? Because they believe that Modi-Shah duo is too dangerous for the country and its people. Is it so or is the duo too dangerous for the Opposition?

These elections have probably witnessed the highest levels of tonguelash­ings and verbal attacks. The kind of obnoxious campaign unleashed during electionee­ring has made calling somebody “intolerant” or “arrogant” sound polite! Many political commentato­rs have lamented at the quality of the election campaign this time around. The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) is being blamed for it. Some well-known political personalit­ies have said that Prime Minister Narendra Modi has lowered the dignity of the Prime Minister’s Office, Mr Modi has “stooped low” and has used language that was unbecoming of a Prime Minister. It is important to bear in mind that the lowering of narrative is the result of a sequential game between the parties, in which the Opposition is equally to be blamed.

That aside, it may be true that politics in India has reached all-time low. The point to remember is that there are no minimum standards or ethics when it comes to political survival. All is fair not just in love and war but also in politics. If archrival

parties can come together, abandoning their core ideologies, why blame only Mr Modi or his party for doing what they did. All parties practice opportunis­m. Only this time around, the elections saw more hatred and more aggression. Some of this is quite natural as the Modi government has altered politics in India — it’s no longer business as usual. Incentives facing politician­s and political parties have changed in India. The Opposition is gazing into the unknown future — if the Modi-Shah party were to come back to power. If that were to happen (and most exit polls are actually pointing towards it!), some politician­s and parties may lose their raison detre of being in politics or fighting elections.

Tony Blair — former Prime Minister of the United Kingdom — once said that the challenge political leaders often face is that the skills they need to come to power are quite different from the skills they need once they are in power. Indeed, parties and politician­s will do and say all kinds of things during elections in their bid to come to power. But once the election dust settles and the results are announced, all those things will fall behind and the real game will begin.

GAUGE A PARTY BY ITS PERFORMANC­E

Once a new government is in place, subject it to the highest standards of decision-taking and accountabi­lity. What ultimately matters is: what does a government do during much of its term in power? This is where the Modi government’s performanc­e on the developmen­t front is not as bleak as the Opposition would have us believe. On the developmen­t front, the Modi government has actually made some significan­t progress across different sectors: infrastruc­ture (e.g. highways, bridges, airports and railways), energy, technology, the financial sector (e.g. bankruptcy laws), real estate and so forth. Even in social sectors such as health, nutrition and social protection, the government has made some significan­t strides. It has pursued the inclusion agenda too by focusing on the most backward (aspiration­al) districts, the Northeaste­rn region as well as initiating special programs targeted at specific socio-economic groups.

Nonetheles­s, the Modi government has had its hits and misses, which is only to be expected from any government that comes with a full majority in the Lok Sabha and takes bold decisions. And bold decisions mostly have some associated costs too. You can’t make an omelette without breaking eggs, can you? If you want to achieve something you have to tolerate some negative effects too. Further, the developmen­t needs of the country are huge. Not everything will get addressed quickly. There will be sections of society that will remain unhappy but that is in the nature of developmen­t’s priority setting and processes.

TOWARDS A BETTER OUTCOME

Anybody who has seen Mr Modi in action in the last five years would most likely agree that he is passionate about India’s developmen­t and brings lots of energy to the role of Prime Minister. This kind of energy and enthusiasm is hard to find in any leader from any other political camp. It is also true that many people don’t like the political side of the BJP, particular­ly the tricks and strategies it deploys to get its own way, to disarm the Opposition, to rob public institutio­ns of their autonomy and so forth. The not-so-good political side of the BJP has made some people overlook or discount its strengths on the developmen­t side.

How could the country tap into the leadership of Mr Modi, who is so passionate about India’s developmen­t, and, at the same time, control the downside of the BJP’s politics? Well, if the Modi government needed the support of regional parties to return to power, it would have kept a check on the BJP’s politics too. Alas, this is unlikely to be the case. Most exit polls have predicted an easy majority for BJP-led National Democratic Alliance. If this prediction comes true, the only other way is a selfrealis­ation on the part of BJP that building strong public institutio­ns, including a strong Opposition is very much a part of the country’s developmen­t process. The sooner this self-realisatio­n, the better!

 ?? — AP ?? BJP leaders present a giant floral garland to Prime Minister Narendra Modi during an election campaign rally in New Delhi on May 8, 2019
— AP BJP leaders present a giant floral garland to Prime Minister Narendra Modi during an election campaign rally in New Delhi on May 8, 2019
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