There is a clear disconnect in the assertions of the scion of the Gandhi family Rahul Gandhi and Prime Minister Manmohan Singh. The Congress is giving a sense of hiding behind the smokescreen created by the Prime Minister, which perpetuates crony capitalism.
“Maen jaantaa hun ki aap log
system se tang aa chuke haen…aap log system maen change chaahate haen…maen
aapke saath iske liye khada hun (I know that you all are fed up with the system
and want a change and I am standing with you all for this),” the Gandhi scion
and heir to the political legacy of the Congress, Rahul Gandhi, trumpeted at
the Ramlila Ground.
My ears instantly plugged in
to sound boxes blaring out Rahul’s speech, as I forced my way to the front of
the ground. But for a moment I doubted if my ears were hearing properly. Rahul was
with those who are fed up with the system!
Since 1947, the Congress has
ruled the country barring the phases of 1977-1980, 1996-2004 (eleven years in
all). Furth er, Jawahar Lal
Nehru , Ind ira
Ga ndhi, Rajiv Gandhi (all from
the first ruling family) have headed the governments. So, “system” is very well
the product of the hegemonic rule of the Gandhi family. But Rahul wants to
change it; good to hear this.
Earlier, Rahul blared “the
Congress was a party of a dozen people until Mahatma Ga ndhi
opened its door for the mass”.
Having been a student of
history, Rahul’s statement was clearly a new revelation.
A number of history books,
including the government censored NCERT books, mention glowingly of the
contribution of the likes of Dadabhai Naoroji, Bal Ga ngadhar
Tilak, Lala Lajpat Rai, Gopal Krishna Gokhale and many more before Gandhi
appeared on the horizon. There were definitely more than a dozen people in the
Congress.
“After Gandhiji opened the
doors of the Congress for the mass, the English ran away to London ,” Rahul furth er
blared out.
The history is, however, less
dramatic. Gandhiji came to Ind ia
in 1915 and the English left Ind ia in 1947; and
there lies a whole 32 years in between.
Therefore, I too wis h to open the door of
the Congress for the mass, Rahul continued. So, Rahul also wants to do a
Mahatma Gandhi for the people; but he should have explained why the mass
deserted the Congress in the intervening period.
But Prime Minister Manmohan
Singh, speaking after Rahul, listed the achievements of the government and
mentioned hard pills that he has administered to the ailing Ind ia n
economy. “Manzil pahunchane ke liye abhi kaaphi lamba safar karma padega
(destination is still far away and will have to undertake a long march),”
Prime Minister was clearly
not buying the “change the system” slogan of Rahul.
Speaking last, Congress
president Sonia Gandhi took pains to say “aajkal galat khaboron ki aandhiyan
chal rahi haen (these days the storm of wrong news is blowing)”. Po or Rahul; neither the Prime Minister nor the Congress
president subscribe to his views to change the system.
The world acclaims Manmohan
Singh as a top ranking economist. So, his analysis of Ind ia n
economy should be seriously paid attention to. But what he offered as defence
for allowing FDI in multi-brand retail baffled whatever little understanding of
economics I had.
Sample it. “In cities like Del hi ,
domestic companies are already into multi-brand retail. By allowing FDI in
multi-brand retail, people in smaller cities will benefit,” he said.
But what about the concerns,
that the sharks of the multi-brand retail, like Walmart, Carrefour, etc, would
siphon Ind ia n
wealth abroad and capture Ind ia n market for
foreign products. No answer from the Prime Minister.
“This will ensure that the
wastage of foodgrains is curbed and farmers get the right price,” the Prime
Minister said.
The government is sitting
over more than 90 million tones of foodgrains this year alone, which is more
than double the prescribed buffer limit. The wastage of foodgrains is due to incompetence
of the Food Corporation of Ind ia and not the
other way round.
Member of the Sonia Gandhi
headed National Advisory Council (NAC), N. C. Saxena, who is considered a top
ranking poverty expert, is of the view that the government should release the
stock of the foodgrains in the market, either through open market allocation to
bulk buyers or through the public distribution system. This will address to the
demands of the food security and curb price rise.
But the Prime Minister
reminds that the rising subsidy burden would make Ind ia
unattractive for foreign investment and claims that wherever FDI in multi-brand
retail has been allowed both the organised and small retailers have flourished.
For over three years, the UPA
managers have been struggling to curb the runaway subsidy. A union minister is
of the view, that if the government stops the subsidy given to corporate (cheap
2G spectrum, coals, land, etc.), the subsidy for the welfare scheme will not be
a pain at all. The Prime Minister may well be accused of hiding behind a
smokescreen.
A number of Asian tiger
economies, including Malaysia ,
Ind onesia ,
Thailand ,
who had to open their retail market for FDI as part of a World Bank bail out
package in 1990s, have seen the large retail business growing in double digit,
while the small retailing has shrunk. So, they have begun to take a number of
remedial measures now, which, however, Ind ia
is oblivious of.
As we took out a long walk
out of the Ramlila Ground, a fellow scribe summed up the grandiose exercise of
the Congress in demonstrating its show of strength. “People are walking over
all these pamphlets with pictures of Manmohan, Sonia and Rahul. What respect
people have for these leaders,” he said; and I took a hard look at the street littered
with pamphlets crushed under the feet of teeming flow of people mobilized from Haryana
and Rajsthan.
2 comments:
I wish Rahul spoke about a return to Nehruvian socialism rather than the "change" that has been advocated by Manmohan-Montek duo.
good analysis on the last Mogul.....
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