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Friday, December 07, 2001 

Economy and the Nation

Short-term goals cannot address long-term challenges

Sanjaya Baru

The India Summit of the World Economic Forum and the Confederation of Indian Industry and the Annual General Meeting of the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry, provided ample opportunity for the National Democratic Alliance-led government to articulate its vision on economic policy half way through its term in office. At the end of the week one remains as confused as ever, and this is not because the key economic ministers did not do their job.


On the contrary, Union finance minister Yashwant Sinha spoke eloquently at both events and both audiences were impressed by his honest and energetic portrayal of the extant economic situation, the gains made and the tasks ahead. Equally eloquent, candid and convincing were other key economic ministers like Dr Arun Shourie and Mr Murasoli Maran. Adding to the quality of their presentations were the highly regarded chief ministers of Andhra Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh, Mr Chandrababu Naidu and Mr Digvijay Singh. A developing country democracy can be reasonably proud for bringing such ministerial talent into government through the democratic process.

A major disappointment was Union home minister Lal Kishan Advani who was asked to speak on economic security at the FICCI AGM, but preferred defending the Prevention of Terrorism Ordinance — which he said was needed to tackle terrorism and would create the right environment for business. Hence POTO is vital for economic security.
For a man hailed as a latter day Sardar Patel, Mr Advani sounded like an intellectual version of Om Mehta, the minister of state for home during the Emergency of 1975-77! FICCI gave Mr Advani an excellent opportunity to elaborate his views on economic policy. Most businessmen and diplomats gathered at the luncheon meeting came to hear a potential future Prime Minister. In the event, they were disappointed not just by his reticence in going beyond his narrow ministerial brief on the concept of national security, but also by the fact that he opted to speak in Hindi, as if he was addressing an audience outside, perhaps the electorate in Uttar Pradesh. What a pity.

If Mr Advani’s speech ended up as a mere footnote in the week’s proceedings, the government should thank Mr Sinha for saving its face and gathering the courage to speak on larger issues, even if he too ended up defining the concept of economic security rather narrowly by confining himself to the gains made in defending India’s external economic security over the past decade. FICCI had more than September 11 on its mind when it chose to focus on economic security as the theme for this year’s AGM. The session theme was sub-titled “New Issues, New Options and New Opportunities”.

What exactly are these? What have security analysts and strategic policy thinkers been saying? What was the message coming through from some of the speakers at the WEF-CII summit? Speakers like Dr Narayana Murthy of Infosys, Mr Rajat Gupta of McKinsey, Dr A P J Abdul Kalam and Mr Richard Haass, a Bush Administration official from the United States but more importantly a former big gun from the Brookings Institution.

What should the representatives of the government have focussed on? That the key challenge for India is to return to the 7 per cent growth trajectory of the mid-1990s, to invest in human capabilities, to step up the rate of investment, to increase our share of world trade, to reverse the process of de-industrialisation witnessed in the second half of the 1990s. To make government and the public sector more efficient and effective.

A quick reading of the reports of the National Security Advisory Board may have helped. How many of our ministers are even aware of the existence of this report, leave alone having had the time and inclination to read it. Mr Haass’ speech showed that he had read something written by a colleague on India which underscored the critical importance of economic growth and development for India’s national security and global stature.

I am referring here to an excellent paper written earlier this year by Dr Ashley Tellis, presently Advisor to the U.S. Ambassador in New Delhi and formerly a senior policy analyst at Rand Corporation, USA. Dr Tellis’s paper on “South Asia” is published in a book entitled “Strategic Asia 2001-02: Power and Purpose” (Edited by R J Ellings and A L Friedberg, Rand, 2001). Summing up his analysis Dr Tellis says: “If India can sustain an average growth rate of even 5.5 per cent or thereabouts for the next two decades or so, it will become a significant actor on the Asian stage. If it can accelerate its growth rates to levels beyond this 5.5 per cent band, then its significance for Asian geopolitics only increases further. ... If this growth occurs as a result of a trade-centered strategy, India’s economic relevance to Asia will become obvious as new patterns of interdependence arise.”

However, concludes Dr Tellis, “a realisation of a growth rate consistently 7 per cent or higher, an economic performance that inexorably transforms India into a great power, positions it as an effective pole in the Asian geopolitical balance, and compels international attention to itself as a strategic entity with continent-wide significance.” Dr Tellis echoes the thinking of many in India who have studied the concept of economic security and national power. If our ministers and political leaders were familiar with what has been written here they would have been more focussed in their work in government and in their public statements at this week’s events.

Mr Advani referred to many books in the course of his speech at FICCI and yet could not think beyond POTO. A government obsessed with short-term political challenges and gains can not think and act for the long term. It is not through stricter laws and better policing that our national security will be enhanced. Rather, it is superior governance in the economic field that will make India prosperous, powerful and secure.

It may be news to many of us in this country, but we have many friends today in the outside world who want us to succeed economically, partly because in our success they see an opportunity for themselves. We are fortunate today in that our friends far outnumber our adversaries. It is up to us what we make of this opportunity.
 
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