Addressing business leaders at
the ET Global Business Summit in New Delhi today, Prime Minister Modi thundered
that in the five years his government has been at the helm, "instead of
avoiding issues, we addressed them; instead of burying, we dug it out, and
instead of confusing, we came up with solutions". He also claimed that
hesitation has been replaced by hope and issues by initiatives.
This was in front of a galaxy of
business leaders and corporate bigwigs who need reassurance that the government
is indeed doing its best to improve ease of doing business, deregulate even
more sectors of economy, allow even more foreign capital, and give even more
tax concessions, besides ensuring that labour is pliable and not too demanding.
On these and such other counts, indeed, the Modi government has been innovative
and decisive.
But is governance only about
pleasing corporates, domestic and foreign? Surely not. Governance is primarily
about taking the country's people forward through their all-round economic and
social development. If you put the Modi government's record on this count under
the lens, you will discover that it is ABC in spades. In fact, it is nothing
but ABC. Have a look at a few of the gigantic problems the country and its
people:
Kashmir: Government's policy on the
violence-torn state of Jammu & Kashmir has always been of following ABC,
but the Modi government has pushed the state and its unhappy people to the
brink. Killings have increased, cross border incursions and support has
increased, local violence has increased, and the sense of alienation is more
than perhaps ever before. That's because Modi has been avoiding real political
dialogue, burying any economic boost and confusing the rest of the country by
blaming everybody else for his government's failures.
Jobs: The Modi government has
spectacularly failed to create the promised jobs. In fact, reports by Centre
for Monitoring Indian Economy (CMIE) suggest that over one crore jobs were lost
in 2018 itself. The Modi government has avoided even looking at this harsh
reality, and has done its best to bury the data on jobs as was the case of the
leaked NSSO report that has still not been officially published. It has tried
to confuse everybody with spurious data based on EPFO enrolments or tourism or
transport sector figures. But the reality is known to all those who have been
wandering about looking for jobs.
Farmers: Despite persistent demands by
the farmers for ensuring better incomes through higher support prices and debt
waivers, the Modi government has avoided implementing the Swaminathan
Commission's recommendation of fixing Minimum Support Prices (MSPs) for various
agricultural produce at cost price + 50 per cent. It has tried to confuse - hoodwink is a better word - people by taking partial cost of production, adding
50 per cent of that, and claiming that it has met the promise! In the process,
it tried to bury the farmers' justified unrest by declaring a measly Rs 500 per
month "income support" just two months before its term ends.
Wages: Workers, both, in agrarian and
non-farm sectors have been ceaselessly fighting for better wages. Industrial
workers have gone on one-day strike across the country twice, and, only
recently, they successfully observed a two-day strike. For five years, the Modi
government avoided any settlement with them. Similarly, agricultural workers' wages have been virtually stagnating (they have increased by 2.5 per cent in
five years). But Modi avoided any relook at them. It sought to bury its head in
the sand wishing that the problem would just go away. It also tried to confuse
everybody by declaring a National Minimum Wage even as it destroyed the laws
relating to the implementation.
Corruption: One of
the big claims of Modi and the BJP, when they were asking for votes in 2014,
was that they would cleanse the country of corruption and black money. As far
as corruption goes, the Modi government has avoided even appointing a Lokpal,
the ombudsman for corruption at the national level. It has overseen thousands
of crores of rupees being embezzled from the banks by the likes of Mallya and
Nirav Modi, etc. all of whom are now living happily ever after in the foreign
countries. Recent revelations indicate that in the Rs.60,000 crore Rafale deal,
unanswered questions indicate favours being allegedly granted to the Ambani's
firm. Crony capitalism has flourished under Modi, and all the claims of
transparency have been buried.
Social Strife: Ever
since assuming power, the Sangh Parivar, mentor of the ruling BJP, has actively
fanned communal divisions by targeting minorities, barbaric lynchings in the
name of cow protection, proposing communal laws like the Citizenship Bill,
reviving talk of Ram Mandir, etc. It has also intensified upper caste
oppression by killings and floggings of Dalits and Adivasis, obstructing
welfare funds, allowing dilution of protective laws and questioning reservation.
The BJP government and Modi, have avoided coming out openly and condemning this
strife, and have tried to bury it saying that these are just expressions of
anger or emotion even while trying to confuse the issue by holding that
questions of faith and tradition are above the law.
This is just the tip of the Modi ABC iceberg. There are
dozens of more examples of how the Modi government has pursued a disastrous ABC
policy as far as the welfare of the people is concerned. But, it's true - he
and his government have removed all doubts the corporate world may have had
about him. For them, there is no ABC.