Why states must not aspire to be like Haryana
The state has made a Faustian pact with development, and citizens will have to pay
In a move that could affect the Aravallis and other forest areas in the state, the Haryana government has decided to amend the Punjab Land Preservation Act (PLPA). This proposed amendment is misguided. It will only encourage real estate developers and the Haryana Urban Development Authority by allowing untrammelled construction in areas where it was banned due to the enforcement of PLPA. This could adversely affect the catchments of Badhkal, Surajkund and Damadama lakes in the state, which is struggling with water challenges. The groundwater level has dropped by more than 50% in the past four decades, show government figures.
Many states aspire to be like Haryana, and have, as the jewel in its crown, a city such as Gurugram. In 2018, Haryana chief minister, ML Khattar spoke about how 200 Fortune 500 companies have set up their offices in Gurugram, and it was incumbent on his government to burnish the city’s image. Gurugram generates around 60% of the total revenue of the state. According to a PRS analysis of the state’s budget (2018-19), the Gross State Domestic Product has been growing in the range of 7% to 9% between 2012-13 and 2016-17. But behind those numbers, and behind the chrome and glass towers and malls and golf courses that are Gurugram’s signature, lies a troubling portrait of rapaciousness that could sit well in a dystopian JG Ballard novel. The glass-fronted buildings devour electricity; the diesel-powered malls are just what the environment does not need; and the golf courses guzzle water. There is a lot more that is far from rosy. Haryana has the lowest forest cover (3.59%). According to the 2011 Census, Haryana’s child sex ratio is 834 females for every 1000 males; India’s is 933 females for every 1000 males.
In the development versus environment debate, Haryana chose, years ago, which side to be on. The state has made a Faustian pact with development. This latest decision on Aravallis is of a piece with that. Notwithstanding what Gordon Gecko said in Oliver Stone’s film, Wall Street, greed is not good. In the medium and long-term, citizens will pay the price for the state’s greed.