Business Standard

Classicism, liberalism defined the man

- —T C A SRINIVASA-RAGHAVAN

Deepak Lal, another of those wonderful Indian economists that India exported to the West, passed away on April 30. He was deeply suspicious of government­s and politician­s. That could have been one reason why he quit the Foreign Service in 1966, after just three years. It was an inspired decision. He would never have fitted into the bureaucrac­y, where brilliance is sneered at.

For five years, from about 2014, whenever he was in India, he and I sat on adjacent chairs at the weekly editorial meetings of this newspaper. He would shuffle in with his walking stick, mask and, in the summer, his straw hat. At first, he would bring along his pipe, but later on I think he gave up tobacco.

In these five years, I had just one grievance against him. As the designated supplier of samosas, I took around 2,500 samosas to the meeting, at the rate of 10 per meeting over about 250 weeks. He never took one, never, not once. In fairness, though, he didn’t touch the biscuits either.

He was past his academic prime by then and had also developed fixed views on most things. But this is better than those who develop fixed views in their forties. It wasn’t such a bad thing in his case because he was rarely wrong. And, above all, he still knew his economic theory. Most Indian economists have either forgotten it or don’t know it to begin with.

Born in Lahore in 1940 and educated at the traditiona­l triad of Doon School, St. Stephen’s, and Oxford University, he drifted away to the US at the end of the 1980s. Before that, he had taught in England. He eventually became a professor of economics at UCLA (University of California, Los Angeles).

His research interests were hugely varied and you can find the entire list on his webpage. Not a lot of it was very influentia­l in the mainstream economics thinking, but he did stick to his guns that always had two barrels: classicism and liberalism. These two values defined the man.

There were many things that he took a dim view of. China was one of them. He regarded its economic policies as bizarre.

In many articles in this paper as well as in other publicatio­ns he would praise its achievemen­ts and then go on to say these were not sustainabl­e. Human freedom is what makes for long-lived greatness, he believed, and the communist party’s lack of regard for them would hold China back. The current dispensati­on in China was as much a source of annoyance for him as was the current Democratic Party in the US.

“Stupid fellows,” he said.

On Brexit, he was a hawk, which is not surprising considerin­g he was a member of the UK’S Shadow Chancellor’s advisory group for nine years from 2000. The Labour Party was in power then. He thought Britain would gain by opting out.

He said he had voted in 1975, all bright-eyed and bushy-tailed, for Britain joining the Common Market but that “I, along with many of my peers in 1975, came to see, as the Common Market evolved into the EU, that we had been lied to by the Europhile political elites. Whilst selling us a freetradin­g area they were, in fact, surreptiti­ously co - opting us in the creation of a political union, A United States of Europe: a state run by unelected technocrat­s”.

But it was not just China and the EU that annoyed him. He was equally derisive of India.

The excessive focus on ‘people’ was all right for politics and politician­s, he thought, but not for economics and economists. He would quietly laugh at economists who batted persistent­ly for redistribu­tion without reference to its costs.

At the end of the 1980s, he wrote a book that passed largely unnoticed in India. It was a three volume affair and was called The Hindu Equilibriu­m. It was a vast survey of India and its economy over 2,000 years and more.

Volume One was about cultural stability. Volume Two was about labour. Volume Three is an abridged edition. The book irritated economists and historians both. It was that sort of book and, I would venture to suggest, is the very essence of a good intellectu­al that Deepak Lal was.

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T C A SRINIVASA-RAGHAVAN

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