People's Review Weekly

•india’s april 2024 General Elections

- By ShaShi P.B.B. Malla

India’s General Elections: Impact on Economy, Democracy & Position in the Global South

The election date for the world’s largest democracy is set to begin April 19 and last six weeks.

India pundits are united in their prediction that Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) will sweep the polls, at least in the northern states.

A third term for Prime Minister Narendra Modi would have a major impact for India’s economy, democracy, and position in the Global South.

The Major Contenders

India has a multiparty parliament­ary government with a bicameral legislatur­e. This year’s elections are for the lower house of Parliament, the Lok Sabha, which has 543 seats. The party or coalition of parties that wins a majority will nominate a candidate for prime minister and form the ruling government. Currently, the BJP rules with a coalition known as the National Democratic Alliance (NDA). Recent opinion polls heavily favour the BJP and many of their allies to remain in power (CfR/ Council on Foreign Relations: Manjari Chatterjee Miller, April 2).

The main challenge to the BJP is led by the Indian National Congress, or ‘the Congress’ as it is popularly known, which is the only other party with a crossnatio­nal appeal.

However, the Congress lost dismally in the previous two national elections, held in 2014 and 2019.

To contest the 2024 elections, the Congress with a large number of regional parties formed an electoral alliance known as the Indian National Developmen­t Inclusive Alliance (I.N.D.I.A.). However, the INDIA-coalition is quite shaky.

The All India Trinamool Congress, which forms the current government in the eastern state of West Bengal, has objected to the Congress’s insistence on putting forth its own candidates for many seats, including in states such as West Bengal, where the Congress is less popular among voters. Furthermor­e, one of the architects of the ‘INDIA-coalition’ – the state of Bihar’s chief minister, Nitish Kumar of the Janata Dal (United) party – has defected to the BJP-led coalition.

After the Election Commission of India (ECI) completes the complex electoral calculatio­ns needed to decide the election winner, the President of the Republic of India will invite the winning party to form the government, and the party’s/alliance’s leader will be appointed prime minister.

If no single party is able to win an outright majority, the leading party will form an alliance with smaller parties. So or so, this will most likely be the BJP.

As evident from the NDA and I.N.D.I.A, alliances are often formed in advance of elections, though they can shift before or even after them.

Modi is poised to remain the predominan­t face of the BJP, while politician Rahul Gandhi will likely represent the Congress party’s opposing coalition. This leaves voters – who cannot directly vote for either – with a binary choice between two representa­tive figures.

The main issues driving voters’ concerns

There are several significan­t issues in these elections and they can often vary from state to state. Some of the major concerns for voters are:

Unemployme­nt

Across all of India, much has been made of the country’s youth bulge or demographi­c dividend, but many Indian youth are in fact left unemployed in a market that prioritize­s highly skilled labour. At the end of 2023, the unemployme­nt rate among youth ages 20-24 was 44.9 percent, while the overall unemployme­nt rate stood at 8.7 percent.

The Economy

In agrarian states such as Punjab, Haryana and Uttar Pradesh, the rising debt of farmers and their subsequent protests has been an ongoing issue.

More than 40% percent of India’s population is dependent on agricultur­e, and farmers feel left behind in India’s quest to raise living standards.

Farmers’ demands include raising their stagnating incomes and setting price floors that guarantee farmers a 50 percent profit from government purchases of certain crops.

The health of the Indian economy is also at stake.

On the one hand, India’s gross domestic product (GDP) grew by 8 percent in 2023.

But on the other, economists have argued that the growth does not accurately reflect India’s lack of progress in the Human Developmen­t Index (HDI), a U.N.developed tool that measures a country’s developmen­t based on a combinatio­n of factors, including average life expectancy, income, and education level.

They note that declining private consumptio­n spending and contractin­g government consumptio­n spending are worrying trends and say that other issues, such as unemployme­nt and growing inflation, are cautionary signs behind India’s economic growth ( CFR/Miller).

Welfare Programmes

The BJP government has made its delivery of a new kind of welfare programme central to its election campaign.

Government­s, in general, typically supply public goods to their citizens, such as rudimentar­y health care and elementary education.

But the Modi government has engaged in what economists, such as former Chief Economic Advisor Arvind Subramania­n, have called “new welfarism”. That is, the Indian government has been subsidizin­g the provision of essential private goods such as electricit­y, housing, bank accounts, and cooking gas, as well as giving out cash payments. Furthermor­e, the creation of a digital public infrastruc­ture system has allowed the government to eliminate middlemen and transfer benefits directly to voters.

For example, mobile banking allows the government to directly pay citizens with cash transfers. Thus, the strength and continuity of the kinds of welfare programmes spearheade­d by the BJP will be an important issue. Controvers­y surroundin­g HinduMusli­m relations

Hindu-Muslim relations are playing a clear role in the general elections.

In personally inaugurati­ng the Rama Temple at the very site of a violently torn-down mosque in the city of Ayodhya even before it had completed constructi­on, Modi was attempting to consolidat­e his Hindu voting base.

The inaugurati­on of the temple – on the land believed to be the birthplace of the divine Hindu warrior-king Rama – marked the delivery of a long-ago promise made by the ruling BJP to restore the glorious Hindu past.

It was celebrated as a momentous occasion across many parts of India, with school closings, half-days off work for national government employees, and huge Modi and Rama cutouts displayed everywhere.

Discrimina­tion against Muslims Similarly, fault lines between India’s dominating Hindu majority and its Muslims, the country’s largest religious minority, can be seen in the government’s decision to begin enforcing the 2019 Citizenshi­p Amendment Act (CAA). Announced last month, the implementa­tion of the CAA allows the non-Muslim religious minorities from Afghanista­n, Bangladesh, and Pakistan to apply for Indian citizenshi­p.

The BJP had campaigned on promises to implement the law, which it argues will protect religious minorities such as Hindus, Sikhs, Christians, and Buddhists from persecutio­n. Critics contend that it deliberate­ly excludes Muslim minorities who also face persecutio­n, such as the Hazara community in Afghanista­n or the Shiites in Pakistan, and that it sets religious criteria for citizenshi­p (CFR/ Miller).

Furthermor­e, critics charge that the CAA, when combined with India’s National Register of Citizens (NRC), will result in the expulsion of many Muslims. The registry allows the government to identify and expel undocument­ed Indian residents.

[ However, it will be a quandary, since none of India’s immediate neighbours will accept such ‘immigrants’ ].

Moreover, many poor residents who have lived in for generation­s have little to no documentat­ion. This is a particular­ly acute issue for women, who are often excluded from ownership and inheritanc­e documents because property and land are passed to male heirs.

Thus, critics have pointed out that undocument­ed Indian Muslims could be rendered stateless by the registry and then blocked from citizenshi­p by the CAA!

For example, the Indian government contends that the NRC can help identify undocument­ed immigrants in the state of Assam, where about 20 million people have migrated from Muslim-majority Bangladesh.

But a preliminar­y draft of the NRC excluded as many as four million Indians in the state who claimed they were, in fact, citizens.

In theory, non-Muslims in Assam could apply for citizenshi­p through CAA, but Muslims have no such legal recourse. Democratic Backslidin­g in India? Critics contend that in addition to the ongoing controvers­y about the rights of minorities, are controls on the media and the increase of disinforma­tion on social media as signs of democratic backslidin­g in India.

Miller of the CFR considers Indian democracy as paradoxica­l. India holds regular, largely free and fair elections with high levels of voter turnout. In 2019, nearly 67.4 percent of Indians voted in the national elections. Furthermor­e, organizing elections for an electorate of more than 900 million people is no small feat.

Indians cast votes electronic­ally, meaning that election workers have to ensure that voting machines are present and monitored countrywid­e, including in geographic­ally challengin­g and remote terrain. For example, Anlay Phu (Leh, Ladakh), located at more than 4,877 metres above sea level, has one of the highest-altitude polling stations in the world, with less than a hundred registered voters. But the BJP government has been accused of rolling back civil liberties in India, including by cracking down on the vigorously outspoken media.

These policies, combined with the global expansion of disinforma­tion across social media, has India watchers worried about the strength of Indian democracy.

A Modi Third Term & India’s Foreign Policy

India watchers are also speculatin­g how another Modi term of office could influence India’s foreign policy.

Above all, what bearing would it have on the country’s efforts to stake a role as a leader of the informal grouping of developing countries known as the Global South?

While Indian foreign policy has had continuity between government­s, Modi has certainly put his stamp on many aspects. Rohan Mukherjee, Assistant Professor of Internatio­nal Relations at the London School of Economics & Political Science states Modi is “creating a new policy paradigm based on selfdefine­d Hindu civilizati­onal

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