07/27/2005

Hello Uncle Sam

Hello Uncle Sam I was watching our Prime Minister address the US Congress joint session the other day and I was thinking to myself that if I was a neutral observer ( someone who doesn't know much about India) I would think on the basis of his speech that India is doing a damn good job or atleast better than most of its contemporaries on the road to development and progress. I was watching this sitting in my hotel room Jaipur and looking at news reports on how the two child population policy has led to people preferring to have two sons and killing the female foetus. So while the population growth of the state has been controlled, it has been at the expense of a fast declining sex ratio. I was staying at one of the 5 star properties in Jaipur, one of the old palaces that have been converted into hotels, and where they were hardly any Indians staying at it was mostly full of foreigners even though it was the off season and the rates were at their lowest for the year. The staff at the hotels seemed more helpful and courteous to the foreigners and they seemed to get more prompt service.

So I started analysing PM's speech to try and pick holes in his argument. Except I couldn't find any. All that he said about India being a democracy, reservation of women in Panchayat elections, about civil society, the roles of judiciary, army and the press. Yet I don't agree with the hype coming out in the press about India being an "economic superpower". I don't know why India is aspiring to be an economic superpower. Even Saudi Arabia to me is an economic superpower because today it sits on world's largest oil reserves and it has guided OPEC to increase the oil price to $50 a barrel and there has not been a whimper from the world. I don't know of a single industry yet where India calls the shots and the world follows. I personally think that all this talk of the economic superpower is the US trying to prop up India against China just as it had propped up China against Russia in the 70s. But I also don't agree with the Left view that we shouldn't have close co-operation in all fields with the Big Satan. US is the only superpower in this world and will be for some time to come and, notwithstanding its current foreign policy, there is a lot that India can learn from the US.

To me our strength lies in our population and we should aspire to be a people's superpower. We should empower our people, free them of the economic and societal shackles and enable them to do what they want inside our legal and civil society framework. It disturbs me that too much of our economic prosperity is limited to the big cities and the people, especially the younger generation, think that what holds good for them and their metro also holds good for the rest of the country. Surely if I have got a huge bonus everyone would have got one, right and so the world is one happy family! The majority of the English language press supports this view and very little information comes in from the small towns and districts. The very little news that does permeate in is then sensationalised and is mixed with all sorts of uniformed opinions. A case in point been the recent Imrana controversy where way too much importance was given to the Deoband ruling and no one tried to explain that the Deoband ruling had no legal standing and this was a criminal case and the criminal law is the same for every citizen of this country. Uselessly the talk turned towards uniform civil code and there was this spin given on how all Muslims in this country follow the Deoband ruling which had no bearing on this case whatsoever.

The PM ended his speech by saying that "India is today embarked on a journey inspired by many dreams". For me, if this journey has to be successful it has to take every Indian on board and make sure that we all have equal stake in the success of the journey.

Jai Hind.

Comments

Deepan,
Terrific read! You hit the nail bang on the head. Let us not compete with the West on the West's terms. Instead, let us define our successes on our own terms.

That said, I genuinely think the American "liberal" media is paying a lot more attention to Manmohan Singh than any recent Prime Minister that I can remember. His credentials as an economist stand him in good stead. I watched an interview of him on PBS (America's Doordarshan), which I liked immensely.

Here's a link to the transcripts:
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/commandingheights/shared/pdf/int_manmohansingh.pdf

Cheers,
Anand

Posted by: Anand | 07/27/2005

At long last, I do believe that you write far too little these days.
I absolutely LOVED the points you make - a people superpower - that holds promise like no other.

Great post! and worth the long wait - - please don't have us wait as long for the next one.

Posted by: Priya | 08/02/2005

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