Times of Oman

Indian government’s trifecta of failure

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RAMESH THAKUR

On January 7, Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government suddenly announced that an additional 10 per cent of school seats and government jobs would be set aside for the “economical­ly weaker sections,” meaning the poor among the upper castes.

This was on top of the already extensive quotas for various historical­ly oppressed castes under India’s wide-ranging affirmativ­e action policy. The government rushed through a constituti­onal amendment to this effect on January 8 and 9. The decision may well be challenged in the courts, but the announceme­nt was an implicit confession of three failures.

The first failure is that of affirmativ­e action. After almost seven decades, the world’s biggest and longest-running such programme – mandated in India’s 1950 constituti­on as a temporary expedient for 15 years – has failed to ameliorate historical caste injustice.

Government­s have repeatedly broadened affirmativ­e action to include larger swathes of public life, target more groups, and cover promotions as well as recruitmen­t. Modi has been unable to fix this situation, which he inherited, but did not create.

On January 21, following Modi’s surprise announceme­nt, Nitish Kumar, Chief Minister of the state of Bihar, called for a census of all castes in 2021 to create a system for reserving jobs based on each caste’s share of the population.

The net result is that Indians are more sharply conscious of caste identity today than at independen­ce in 1947. Far from steadily weakening over time, caste identity – and caste-based inequality – has been further entrenched. India now has a frozen equilibriu­m of caste-defined access to public institutio­ns and services. And with Dalits (formerly called “untouchabl­es”) being such a powerful voting group, no political party or leader dares to suggest the abolition of these set-asides.

Unsurprisi­ngly, the majority of benefits intended for the poor, downtrodde­n, and oppressed castes have been captured by the elite among them. Entitlemen­ts that were meant to address moral claims of equal citizenshi­p have been swallowed by cynical political powerbroke­rs. This is especially true of caste-based political parties in which the founders’ children inherit the leadership, creating family dynasties.

A second, related failure is that more than 70 years after independen­ce, India has not managed to forge a truly national identity. Instead, the country consists of a collection of minorities who cling ever more fiercely to their group identities in order to obtain various public benefits.

Dalit caste identity is recorded at birth and reinforced throughout a citizen’s life. In politics, caste calculatio­ns are crucial in selecting candidates to match the demographi­cs of each constituen­cy, and in choosing coalition leaders to head state and federal government­s.

Finally, the government’s recent set-aside announceme­nt was an implicit admission of failure to create jobs for the millions of young people entering the workforce.

Modi promised in his 2014 election campaign to create 20 million new jobs per year by unleashing India’s entreprene­urial potential. Instead, the unemployme­nt rate is currently at its highest level since the early 1970s.

The government sat on the bleak unemployme­nt figures for months, prompting two members of the National Statistica­l Commission to resign in protest, before the report was finally leaked to the Business Standard newspaper on January 31. According to the National Sample Survey Office, the unemployme­nt rate reached 6.1 per cent in 201718 (compared to 2.2 per cent in 2011–12), with people aged 15-29 and urban women the worst hit.

Higher unemployme­nt is partly a result of Modi’s egregious decision in 2016 to demonetize India’s highest-denominati­on bank notes of 500 and 1,000 rupees (about $7 and $14 respective­ly).

This had a particular­ly severe effect on the informal sector, which employs over 90 per cent of the country’s workforce. Demonetiza­tion not only cost India at least 1.5 million jobs; it also failed to achieve its primary goal of uncovering “black money,” because 99 per cent of the cash was returned to banks.

According to independen­t experts, the latest unemployme­nt numbers are alarming, but not surprising, because signs of rising joblessnes­s had been visible for some time. With a general election due by May, the government’s reluctance to release the report is understand­able.

The approachin­g election also helps to explain the government’s sudden embrace of expanded setasides. Having failed to create jobs, the government is instead dividing the existing pie among important groups of voters. The reality of job scarcity is to be camouflage­d in the sop of set-asides.

This is “placebo politics” at its worst. Electoral imperative­s have also driven budget giveaways, with something for nearly everyone.

Full story @ timesofoma­n.com/opinion

 ?? - Reuters file photo ?? QUOTA: Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government announced on January 7, that an additional 10 per cent of school seats would be set aside for the ‘economical­ly weaker sections’, among the upper castes.
- Reuters file photo QUOTA: Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government announced on January 7, that an additional 10 per cent of school seats would be set aside for the ‘economical­ly weaker sections’, among the upper castes.

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