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Calcutta Notebook

B J

The basic problem of governance is how to make the rulers act in the interests of the people, not in their own. At the same time it is also a truth that every living being acts in her own interest. We have, therefore, two contradictory requirements. On the one hand we want the leaders to act above their own interests; on the other hand we also accept that they necessarily will act in their own interests. The solution to this riddle is that there are different levels of self-interest. Gandhi rose above his personal interests of money and power; at the same time he acted in his own spiritual interests. Material interests of the people and spiritual interests of the leader can be fulfilled together without any contradiction. The problem of governance thus becomes this: How to get the leaders to rise above their material interests and pursue their higher goals.

The Hindu solution to this riddle was to strengthen the social role of the monk. It made a distinction between the Brahmin and the Kshatriya. The Manu Smriti says that the Kshatriya can be controlled only by the Brahmin. It also says that the best Brahmin is one who does not know from where his next meal will come. The voluntary poverty of the Brahmin enables him to stand up to the Kshatriya and speak the truth. Guru Gorakhnath thus stood up to the tyrannical ruler of Nepal. He caused rains not to fall by this penance and forced the rulers to do his bidding. This system of governance was based on the idea that the Brahmin, Sage or the Monk had a social role for only then would they take the risk and trouble of standing up to a Kshatriya ruler.

This system fell apart when the Hindu religion denied the material world and, therefore, also the social role of the monk. The dominant idea propagated by Adi Shankaracharya was that the world was unreal. A fallout of this idea was that since the world did not exist, therefore, a monk need not confront the ruler and should instead make efforts to attain his individual salvation. This meant that the Brahmins were led away from their social role of controlling the Kshatriya. It did not matter if the Kshatriya tyrannized the people because the Kshatriya and the people were both illusions. Thus Tulsidas and Kabir pushed the people towards worship of the Lord and away from confronting the tyranny of the British rule in India.

The Hindu Monks today continue to follow that false tradition. The NDA is tyrannizing the people. Demonetization and GST have killed large numbers of small businessmen. A taxi driver in Mumbai told me recently that large numbers of small vendors who eked out their living selling on the footpaths have been wiped out and have gone back to their villages. The NDA has made the Ganga into the National Waterway No 1. It has converted the Holy Ganga into a donkey to carry cargo. The Monks of the country, however, are silent because they are focused on leading their followers to individual salvation. The anti-people tyrannical policies of the NDA are thus continuing because the monks have absolved themselves of their social role of controlling the rulers.

The UPA has been only a trifle better. Jesus had implicitly propounded the principle that it was okay to ignore bad governance. At one time, Caesar had become tyrannous towards the Jews. At that time Christ was asked whether it was right to pay taxes to Caesar. Jesus replied, "Render therefore unto Caesar the things which are Caesar's; and unto God the things that are God's." In other words, Jesus accepted the writ of Caesar and looked the other way at his tyranny. There was no need to resist paying taxes to Caesar so that his tyranny was brought to an end.In another incidence Jesus responded to the Caesar's satrap: "My kingdom is not of this world."The kingdom of Jesus was that of spirit while the kingdom of Caesar was of the world. The two were separate. There was no need for the kingdom of spirit to resist the tyranny of the kingdom of the world. Thus Manmohan Singh implemented many an anti-people policies. He pushed for FDI in retail, dismantled reservations for the Small and Medium Enterprises, reduced rates of taxes on machine made cloth thus killing the handloom sector, and provided huge monies to sustain the corruption in Public Sector Banks.

We can see a deep similarity between the philosophical roots of the NDA and UPA. The Hindu Brahmins find no need to resist the tyranny of the Kshatriya. The Christians find no need to resist the tyranny of Caesar. Thus both have merrily implemented anti-people policies.

Yet, it is also true that both needed to win the elections. Thus both the alliances have implemented certain pro-poor measures. The NDA has provided free gas cylinders under Ujjwala scheme to the poor and virtually free health insurance under Ayushman Bharat. The UPA had likewise implemented MNREGA and farmer's loan waivers. My take is that the pro-poor measures implemented by the NDA are more superficial than those implemented by the UPA. However, that is a subject of a separate assessment. The common thread in the two policies is to create an anti-people economy and assuage the poor by giving them some doles.

In this background, the new Government that will be formed after the ongoing elections needs to implement the following steps. One, compliance of GST must be simplified so that small businesses can focus on doing business rather than on making compliances. Two, the large numbers of welfare schemes such as Public Distribution System, electricity subsidies to farmers and government-funded education and health provision should be dismantled and the money used to pay Universal Basic Income to all citizens of the country. Three, the salaries and pensions of Government Servants must be frozen until their average salary becomes equal to the average income of the Indian citizen. Four, all Public Sector Banks and Undertakings except those have a strategic role should be privatized and the receipts used to undertake research and make India a global knowledge hub.

NOTA is the best option until the NDA and UPA commit to these policies.

Frontier
Vol. 51, No. 45, May 12 - 18, 2019