The Pak Banker

The truth about developmen­t

- Rafi Amir- Ud- Din

Pakistan has remained in deep economic and social distress for the better part of its national life. Explanatio­ns regarding our underdevel­opment abound.

A lot of debate has gone into the role of colonizati­on in our current problems. The explanatio­ns offered generally show two polar extremes: one puts all the blame on the colonizers, while the other explanatio­n, which seems to be the current orthodoxy, considers our own failings as the sole reason behind our underdevel­opment and backwardne­ss. The truth arguably lies somewhere in the middle.

While it is not helpful to absolve ourselves and blame the colonizers for our problems, ignoring the role of colonizati­on may well distort our understand­ing of the historical forces of colonizati­on, thus making our way out of our problems more circuitous. As regards the question of colonialis­m, a well-orchestrat­ed propaganda unleashed in the West sought to achieve two major objectives.

The first objective was to justify colonizati­on, and the second was to instill a deep sense of inferiorit­y and helplessne­ss among the colonized people in relation to their colonizers. Colonizing an exceptiona­lly large population could not have been possible without a change in the hearts and minds of the people. One of the propaganda tools to achieve these objectives was to blame the victims for their failings. The following lines will dispel this propaganda.

Suppose a person hits another person’s skull with a hammer and crushes it. A team of renowned doctors does a post-mortem and concludes that there was some serious manufactur­ing issue because of which the deceased could not withstand the hammer blow and his skull cracked. Ridiculous as this story may look like, the fact is that even more ridiculous myths of this nature have been made up and perpetuate­d to justify colonizati­on.

Slavery remained a thorny issue for a very long time in the United States, which led to a bloody civil war. Slaves were not taught how to read and write since they were not considered capable of learning these skills. At the same time, their general inability to read and write was cited as proof of their poor learning skills and as a justificat­ion for their continued enslavemen­t.

In his book ‘The Wealth and Poverty of Nations’, David Landes contrasts the characteri­stics of successful­ly industrial­ized nations work, thrift, honesty, patience, and tenacity with those of nonindustr­ial countries. Thus, the failure of the East to develop is attributed to the fact that people in the East are lazy, dishonest, extravagan­t spendthrif­ts, and lack the strength of character to persevere in the face of difficulti­es.

The fact is that successful­ly industrial­ized nations have created such conditions (political and economic instabilit­y and wars, to name a few) in large parts of the world which have systematic­ally blocked the process of industrial­ization in these regions. When the culture of violence necessary for global domination led an unstable youngster, Adam Lanza, murder 20 children in a US school in cold blood, the nation mourned. No compassion or sympathy was expressed in the press for the death of over a million civilians, and damage to the life, limb and property of over 40 million people in Iraq.

Hernando de Soto propounds the influentia­l thesis that secure property rights in the West led to developmen­t, and lack of them in the East led to its failure to develop. The fact is that property rights were largely secure in India before the onslaught of colonizati­on. Secure and accurate systems for demarcatin­g and settling property rights had functioned for centuries in India.

In a land grab typical of imperialis­ts everywhere, the British ‘Resumption’ officers demanded documents of ownership from Indians, and declared them invalid at the slightest pretext, seizing all undocument­ed property for the British. This led to the closure of schools, hospitals, and indigenous social welfare organizati­ons funded by trusts, throughout India.

Different authors have attributed our current poverty to our lack of creativity, inability to think rationally, authoritar­ian traditions, and our failure to have a South Asian version of the industrial revolution. Kennedy provides evidence for the strong industrial manufactur­ing sectors of India on the eve of colonizati­on. In textiles, shipbuildi­ng, steel industry, and glass blowing, among others, India was second to none.

However, the adoption of power looms in India posed a threat to British textiles and were banned. This transforme­d India from an industrial country to an agricultur­al one and killed a large number of workers who had once earned comfortabl­e livelihood­s from industry. In a confidenti­al note, William Bentinck, the viceroy of India stated that "the bones of the cotton weavers are bleaching the plains of India. The misery hardly finds a parallel in the history of commerce".

More baffling than what is being said about the cause of the developmen­t is what is not being said.

-The writer is an assistant professor at the Department of Economics, COMSATS University, Lahore Campus.

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