With hundreds of political parties, religions and
languages, thousands of castes and subcastes, 3 million elected officials, 20
million government employees and 670 million voters, "there is never a dull
moment in the great Indian political circus," as one newspaper here recently put
it.
Todays most dazzling act - with consequences for Indias survival as
a pluralistic, democratic, united nation - is the perilous high-wire act of
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh as he attempts to balance the conflicting demands
of a high-tech knowledge-based economy and Indias low-tech farm-based
impoverished masses.
Lean too far to the right, by boosting Indias
surging middle class without fulfilling promises of "inclusive growth" for the
600 million rural and poor majority, and Singh - and his Congress Party-led
coalition - risks the kind of electoral drubbing that toppled the previous
government three years ago.
But lean too far to the left - by allowing
leftist and Communist parties to continue blocking reform of bloated government
bureaucracies, archaic labor and investment laws and subsidies for food and fuel
- and India risks missing its goal of $15 billion in annual foreign investment.
Proceed too fast, with rising inflation that recently hit a two-year
high, and Indians angry over soaring food prices will exact their revenge, as
they did in dealing the Congress Party stunning defeats in recent municipal and
state elections.
But proceed too slow, by failing to create enough jobs
for the 10 million Indians entering the labor market every year, and the country
risks a potentially destabilizing "unemployment explosion" in coming decades
where perhaps 30 percent of Indians - some 200 million - are jobless.
As
Singh and his coalition walk this tightrope of economic development, several
dangerous distractions now threaten to knock them off balance.
The
countrys overcrowded and crumbling roads, railroads, ports and airports are
already blamed for slowing economic growth by perhaps two percentage points. But
while people here celebrate the capitals new state-of-the-art subway and a
network of expressways linking major cities, New Delhi lacks the hundreds of
billions of dollars needed to resolve Indias infrastructure crisis.
Indias only hope will be cost-sharing partnerships with the private
sector, such as new airport projects in New Delhi, Hyderabad and Bangalore and
the $5 billion infrastructure fund recently launched by Citigroup, Blackstone
and Indias Infrastructure Development Finance Company.
The crown jewel
of the Congress Partys poverty eradication program, a massive jobs program that
guarantees every rural household 100 days work building roads, dams and other
projects, also faces hurdles. In a country of rampant corruption, its uncertain
whether cash payments for unskilled manual labor will indeed uplift the needy
or, like so many similar efforts, enrich the greedy.
Meanwhile, dozens
of ethnic and tribal separatist groups across the countrys remote northeast
states wage decades-old rebellions against Indian rule. The bomb that greeted
Singhs visit to the state of Assam this month was the latest reminder why a
region rich with oil, gas and coal remains the poorest in India.
Most
ominous, though, is the brutal Maoist insurgency, now active in half of Indias
28 states, which Singh has called "the single biggest security challenge ever
faced by our country." Last month, a day after police in the eastern state of
West Bengal gunned down 14 people protesting the creation of special economic
zones on rural lands, Maoists retaliated by murdering 55 police in one of the
deadliest attacks of their 40-year insurgency.
Such is New Delhis
development dilemma. Do nothing, and the impoverished flock to the Maoists. But
proceed with manufacturing-based economic zones, and displaced farmers flock to
the Maoists.
Predictably, new rules announced this month making these
zones smaller and granting more benefits to affected farmers have satisfied
neither business groups nor rural activists, and the country is bracing for more
Maoist attacks against industry and infrastructure.
And yet, Indians
display an exuberance for the future, that, given their remarkable progress in
60 years of independence, doesnt seem so irrational. "This is a democracy,
obstreperous and seemingly chaotic but effectively functional," says Krishna
Rasgotra, a former Indian foreign secretary. "People are aware of their rights
and will assert themselves. This is not a sign of Indias decline or threatening
doom, it is a sign of Indias vitality."
And so while Western observers
may lament the slow pace of Indian reform, democracys greatest show on earth
goes on with New Delhi moving ahead the only way it can - keeping its balance
and taking one careful step at a time.
Stanley A. Weiss is founder and
chairman of Business Executives for National Security, a nonpartisan
organization based in Washington.
With Love and Care
Vikram Bharat Gen. Secretary Bharat Udhay Mission Politics is a noble endeavour to transform the nation and maintain this transformation. http://2ndfreedomstruggle.blogspot.com "We have only one passion, The rise of a Great Nation."