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Friday, May 30, 2014

What Does Modi’s Victory Mean for the World?


Posted by John Cassidy

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The world’s biggest democracy and second-biggest country has a new leader, and he’s a controversial one: Narendra Modi, the head of the Hindu-nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party, and the longtime chief minister of Gujarat, a state in the northwest of India. In a post here today, the Indian journalist Samanth Subramanian describes what the lengthy election campaign felt like, noting how Modi, who will forever be associated with the 2002 riots in Gujarat that left more than a thousand people dead, most of them Muslims, tacked to the center, emphasizing economic growth and anti-corruption measures rather than Hindu chauvinism.

From an international perspective, Modi’s ascension to the Prime Minister’s office raises two questions. Will India adopt a more strident and bellicose foreign policy than it did under Manmohan Singh, an Oxbridge-educated economist, and his Congress party? And will the new government succeed in rebooting India’s “economic miracle,” which has sputtered in recent years?
During the election campaign, Modi didn’t talk very much about foreign policy, which isn’t voters’ primary concern. But the B.J.P. has traditionally adopted a more aggressive stance toward Pakistan, Kashmir, and other international issues than the Congress party. Optimists suggest that Modi’s desire to attract foreign investment, which he made a big theme of his campaign, will militate against any foreign-policy adventurism on his part. In what is perhaps an encouraging sign, Pakistan’s Prime Minister, Nawaz Sharif, called Modi on Friday, congratulated him on his victory, and invited him to visit Islamabad.
In the past, Modi has also had his issues with the U.S. government, which denied him a visa in 2005, when memories of the Gujarat riots were still fresh. (Modi has always denied having anything to do with the killings. His critics accuse him of whipping up anti-Muslim feelings and doing nothing to prevent the pogrom. A special committee appointed by India’s Supreme Court investigated his role, and found nothing to charge him with.) In recent years, as the prospect of Modi becoming India’s leader has become more real, U.S. diplomats have reached out to him and tried to improve relations. On Friday, Benjamin Rhodes, a deputy national-security adviser, tweeted, “US congratulates BJP on its victory in India’s historic election; we look forward to working w/ govt once formed to advance our partnership.” A bit later, the White House announced that Modi would now be welcome to visit the United States. 

Whatever tone Modi strikes on foreign affairs, his most urgent task will be to fulfill some of the domestic economic pledges he has made. In the decade from 2000 to 2010, India’s gross domestic product grew at an annual rate of about nine per cent, and, despite rapid population growth, per-capita income doubled. These were the years of the “miracle,” when observers often twinned India with China. Since then, though, the rate of economic growth has fallen sharply, and inflation has risen. In the 2013-14 fiscal year, which ended in March, India’s G.D.P. expanded by just about five per cent. During the election campaign, Modi promised to revive the growth rate by attracting foreign investment, reducing red tape, making hiring and firing easier, and improving the nation’s infrastructure. 

All of these things have the support of India’s business community, which provided strong backing to Modi during the election. Investors like Modi, too. (The Indian stock market has risen sharply in anticipation of his victory, and it rose again on Friday.) During his long tenure in Gujarat, he courted foreign companies, oversaw G.D.P. growth that exceeded the national average, and helped start irrigation projects that have boosted agricultural yields. Capitalizing on this success, he organized a series of conferences for international investors that he called Vibrant Gujarat. 

It will be fascinating to see if Modi can replicate his success in Gujarat on the national stage. Many, though not all, economists believe the Indian economy needs another wave of liberalization that builds upon the one that Singh introduced in the nineteen-nineties, when he was minister of finance. Those measures cut the budget deficit, stripped away some of the country’s infamous licensing restrictions, and made it easier for foreigners to invest in Indian companies. Jagdish Bhagwati, the Columbia University economist who is one of Modi’s most prominent supporters, has criticized Singh for not following up on these reforms during his time as Prime Minister. 

It has been widely reported that Bhagwati and his Columbia colleague Arvind Panagariya, another supporter of free-market reforms, will play some role in the new Indian government. Modi, however, also has his critics in the academy. Some studies suggest that Gujarat, despite enjoying stronger than average growth, has a questionable record relative to other Indian states in reducing poverty, improving child nutrition, and promoting education and social inclusion. Last year, Amartya Sen, perhaps India’s most famous economist, came out strongly against Modi’s candidacy, criticizing his failure to protect religious minorities, and saying, “His record in education and health care is pretty bad.”

Indians and people the world over will be watching to see how far Modi goes in the direction of liberalization. Reforming India, which has many powerful states and innumerable vested interests, is much harder than reforming an individual state like Gujarat. And while Modi has obtained a historic mandate for his economic agenda—the B.J.P. will be the first party in thirty years to have an outright majority in Parliament—there are still widespread concerns that the fruits of economic progress are not being spread widely enough, concerns that more business-friendly reforms are unlikely to alleviate. “It felt like a vacuum period,” Modi said on Friday, addressing his supporters in Ahmedabad. “Now we will fill that vacuum.” 

Photograph by Vipin Kumar/Hindustan Times/Getty.

COURTESY-THE NEWYORKER

An appeal to Consortium of Christian Minority Higher Educational Institutions,


From,                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

R.Christodas Gandhi, IAS(Retd),

Former Additional Chief Secretary to Government of TamilNadu,
Chairman REEDA, President AMBU,
President PAALAM, President AKAM,
President Carrom Association TamilNadu,

To,

Rev. Fr.Dr.G. Pushparaj, S.J.

Founder General Secretary,
Consortium of Christian Minority Higher Educational Institutions,
ST.Joseph's college.
Trichy - 620 002.

We gather that the members of Consortium of Christian Minority Higher Education    Institutions are getting together to discuss how post-matric scholarship (PMS) sanctioned to students of SCs and STs need not be made applicable to your institutions.(St.Joseph’s College Tiruchy on 25.05.2014)

The intention is preposterous and malignant to Christian faith. It appears that a mischievous propaganda is being systemically spread that Christian minority institutions have no bounden mission or any Christian compulsion to admit students from SC and ST communities, even if they belong to Christian faith or even to care about the scholarship extended by governments to them.

The obdurate adherence to minority privileges is being resorted to for excluding SCs and STs even though they belong to the same minorities. It is unchristian-like to say that Christian minority institutions have no responsibility, strategy or finances towards SC Christians.

Minority privileges should not be invoked to provide services to non-minority community candidates who are ready to fill your coffers at the cost of SC Christians. In other words Christian minority institutions should not play the sham game of excluding SC/ST Christians who form 60% to 80%of Christians in India.

The catholic stand taken by the Tamil Nadu Government nearly 37 years ago to extend the privileges of SCs also to minority Christian SC-converts  mocks at the stand that your consortium is about to take, particularly, to exclude SC Christians from minority purview. We strongly appeal to you to desist from entertaining any notions or practices of excluding SCs of any faith in general and SC Christians in particular. We also would like to remind you that, many of the SCs in general and SC Christian students in particular, through their genuine hard work, score higher marks than many others. 

For the limited purposes of the meeting of your consortium on 25/05/2014 at St. Joseph’s College, Thiruchirapally please prevail upon your institutions to admit not less than 40% to 50% SCs of any hues (SCs of Hindu, Christian, Sikhor Buddhist origin) at no cost. The scholarship that the government extends to every one of them (subject to income ceiling viz Rs 2.5 lakhs per annum for SCs and Rs.2 lakhs for SC Christians) is generous enough to run your institutions. Whatever more your institutions may require can and should be collected from the rest-whomsoever you deem fit to admit. If this ratio could not be followed there is no point in claiming yourselves to be charitable institutions supposedly working with the missionary zeal and based on the Gospel values that have been handed down to you by the Divine Person on the cross.

 DATED 23.05.2014

Yours,
RCG