Did the shutdown help anyone at all?
It is hard to find anyone in this country who is not seriously concerned about the spiralling prices of essential items. Prices have been unconscionably high for two years, from the days of the first UPA government, and all but the top five per cent of the population are affected. However, prices were shooting up even when petroleum products were selling at a lower rate than at present. There is, therefore, no direct and unique correlation between what the consumer pays for kitchen goods and the government’s decision to cut subsidies on petrol, diesel and LPG. Much of that subsidy wasn’t benefiting the poorer sections anyway. It can be argued that reducing those subsidies has the potential to raise prices to some extent. It can equally be said that the money saved by the government from the subsidy cuts now becomes available to alleviate the living conditions of the neediest in other ways. By overlooking the basic causes that caused the price rise, by disregarding issues pertaining to economic management that might have helped to rein in prices, and by highlighting petroleum prices as the villain of the piece, the Opposition forums that orchestrated Monday’s “Bharat bandh” — which has the unpleasant meaning of “shutting down India” — have shown their penchant for dramatic effect but not for the hard political work it takes to bring public grievances to the fore.
There is also some hypocrisy in the posturing of the parties that did their utmost to bring daily life to a halt on Monday. Each of them — during the rule of the National Democratic Alliance and the United Front — was a party to earlier decisions by the Centre to deregulate petroleum prices and cut subsidies, the Left not excluded. It should also be said of the Left that they did not withdraw support from the UF on this count. Later, when they partnered UPA-1, they pulled out of their pro-Congress arrangement over the nuclear deal with the United States, and not over pressing economic issues that matter to the working class and the poor. Therefore, the unbridled zeal of Opposition parties of the Left and Right, acting in tandem, to shut down India, no less, is inexplicable, not to say inconsistent with their previous actions. Add to this the question of ends and means, and the “Bharat bandh” call becomes hard to defend. Dozens of trains cancelled across the country, nearly a hundred flights grounded, and the spectacle of menacing party workers of all shades forcing economic activity to cease in cities and towns across India is not exactly the currency of democratic protest, even if it had not meant the loss of several thousand crore rupees in potential earnings for the national economy. It is hard to think of another democracy where flagrant coercion substitutes for constitutional mass action. There is a possible explanation for this: the bandh enforcers might be incapable of organising people by persuasion, and therefore prefer to make do with shortcuts involving threatening daily life and income opportunities of the poorest sections of society — the daily wage-earner and the push-cart operator. No country that wishes to move ahead can afford to go that way.
The Left has struck together with the BJP and it will have to stand on its head to explain the rationale to its cadre. Both sides will claim “victory” for their cohabitation approach, and offer expedient justifications. In due course, this might even lead them to join forces in Parliament and possibly in the state legislatures as well. The ball was set rolling with the visit of CPI(M) and CPI parliamentary leaders to the offices of the BJP recently. Are we revisiting the era of opportunism that had brought Mandal and “Kamandal” together, midwifed by the Communist Manifesto?
Comments
There was no choice for the
Madhu
08 Jul 2010 - 22:36
There was no choice for the opposition but to do a bharat bandh, to put the government on notice. As pointed out by one poster, UPA-II government came into power by promising prices will be brought down in 100 days, but things then seemed like good old times and life seems to be becoming tougher for everybody now ...Hope people teach the UPA-II government a good lesson in the ensuing state and other elections ...
The opposition will rue the
Ronald D'Souza
08 Jul 2010 - 13:51
The opposition will rue the day they decided to cost the country some Rs 13,000 crore loss on a single day by production loss and damage to public property. They will rue the election day when those daily wage earners could not feed their families by this Bharat bandh and translate it into votes. They will rue the day when they in their mistaken perception of people participation while in reality it was people coercion comes back to bite them.
The people of India will
Ravishankar
07 Jul 2010 - 22:21
The people of India will teach a tough lesson to the UPA government because before elections, they promised that prices will be brought down within 100 days. Unfortunately, two years have passed but double digit inflation ditched the hopes of people. In the next elections, the UPA will definitely be thrown out. In spite "Bharat Bandh", the government seems to be "very cool" about the issue of price rise.
The ruling party practices
Rajendra Asthana
07 Jul 2010 - 13:05
The ruling party practices the dictum, we are in power and we shall use it to our and our supporters advantage. They rammed nuclear treaty with US down the country's throat and wanted to limit nuclear disaster liability to Rs 500 crores but for blow up in Bhopal after 25 years. The Present government has succeeded in making India the second-most inflationary economy in world. Please see last but one page of Economist magazine for last one year, India is having second highest CPI after Venezuela. What have the government done, loose monetary policy, real asset bubble, prices of essentials risen 200% in last one year. Do it remind it you of Marie Antoinette's famous remark," if they do not have bread let them eat cake". Issousiance and arrogance of present leadership cannot be matched even by medieval Delhi sultanate. Even Allauddin Khilji ensured price control in 13th century AD. Do not blame BJP/ Left for the Bandh, the insensitivity and arrogance of ruling parties must take the blame.
The government has been
J.N.Mahanty
06 Jul 2010 - 17:50
The government has been insensitive to the common man's woes. It is no doubt that recent hikes in petro-products will serve as "Fuel to Fire" for the common man who has been reeling under hyper-inflation. Have you ever heard the price of Moong Dal at Rs100 and above per kg? In my opinion for the time being the government should roll back the hike.
Concerning the deregulation of petrol, the government must trim down the heavy tax component first before allowing the price to be linked to International market price. So the ball is in the government's court.
India does not require
Reader
06 Jul 2010 - 11:14
India does not require external forces to bring it down to its knees when we have the likes of political parties that call stikes and bandhs.
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