Cosmetic changes in
political structures bring no real benefits to the masses. This applies as much
to Iraq as to India. Only in the former it is crude and blatant, in the latter
it is more subtle. The Congress-led PDA has already vouched to take forward all
the economic policies initiated by the BJP-led NDA; while the newly installed
interim government in Iraq, handpicked by the US, has a notorious CIA operator
as its chief. Though comparisons are often not accurate, and the case of Iraq
and India are not exactly similar, what must be understood is that neither can
deny imperialist dictates.
Both India and Iraq,
as are many other countries of the third world, victims of imperialist policies
of globalization, most aggressively pushed by the US imperialists. India has
been facing a massive economic onslaught, Iraq a military onslaught. The
economic needs of the imperialists, particularly that of the US, determines
political and military policy in most countries of the world. And the servile
comprador elite of these countries faithfully follow their imperialist master’s
dictates.
The RAND
Corporation is the biggest of the 2000 think tanks and the most reactionary
and fascist which does all the strategic military planning of the US army. It
has a staff of 1000 and an annual budget of $100 million. It has lately set up
offices abroad, particularly in Europe. In India it has set up a branch with
the innocuous name "Centre for Asia Pacific Policy". Its Board is
chaired by none other than Ratan Tata.
So it is not
surprising that after all the hype of the CMP (Common Minimum Programme) is
over, and notwithstanding the so-called Left’s support, it is business as usual
— with the first tasks of the new government being to get their instructions
from their foreign bosses and their Indian agents in big business.
Hardly had the
government been sworn in when the very first meeting that was held was of the
US-India DPC (Defence Policy Group). This three-day meeting which began on May
31st (barely a week after the government was sworn in) was led by the top
Pentagon official, Douglas Feith. This US Under Secretary of Defence discussed
the entire gamut of India-US relations, including strategic issues, joint
exercises, training and acquisition, counter-terrorism requirements of India,
security of the sea-lanes in the Indian Ocean, etc. He opposed any slow down in
ties in key areas and said that "defence is an important component in the
strategic relationship and we have constantly exchanged ideas and solved
problems in this area".
Hardly has the new
government come to power and it has sent a UN (read US) request to 16 State
governments to train Iraqi police to crush the Iraqi resistance. And Natwar
Singh’s (Foreign Minister) first visit abroad was to Nepal, where, speaking like
any other Indian expansionist, he said that Nepal’s security was India’s
security and vowed all support to the Nepalese government to crush the Maoists.
Besides, he had a secret discussion with the genocidal Nepalese king with no
officials present!!! And on the eve of his departure the government arrested 8
senior Maoists of Nepal from Patna — these included five Central Committee
members.
And as for the
Finance Minister, Chidambaram, his first task was to fly to Mumbai and have
meetings with the FIIs (Morgan Stanley, Citigroup, Merill Lynch and other such
big-wigs), stock-brokers and Indian big business. In a series of meetings he
listened to their long list of demands (like further reduction in the rate of
corporation tax) and promised full cooperation. The first change brought in, in
the sphere of the economy was by Praful Patel for the privatization of airports,
which has been a persistent demand of the foreign investors. And bowing totally
to their dictates these were not only privatized but foreign investment up 49%
was allowed in the two key airports of Mumbai and Delhi and 100% in any new
airport opened. The CPM put up their traditional mock protest under full media
gaze.
Similar have been the
policy announcements of nearly all ministries: Commerce Minister, Kamal Nath,
says that he will remove the existing caps on foreign investment in sectors like
telecom, banking and insurance, etc. and will work to maximize exports; Sharad
Pawar, the agriculture minister has told farmers not to weep over losses and has
increased focus on biotechnology, being pushed by the US multinational,
Monsanto. Even HRD minister, Arjun Singh, has gone to the extent of saying that
he will bring FDI into education. As far as ‘economic reforms’ go, to prove
their credentials to the imperialists, the Congress appear to be moving faster
than the BJP. In addition, the CMP talks of "maintaining a credible nuclear
weapons programme", which had been opposed by both the Congress and the CPI/CPM
when the BJP went nuclear. And once again Home Minister, Shivraj Patil, states
that there is no time frame in the CMP for repealing POTA!!!!
The Tutsi incursion
into Rwanda had started as early as 1991, with the assistance of Uganda. In
Oct.1991 a Tutsi invasion came as close as 60 kms from Kigali. The French
troops stationed in Rwanda, helped the Hutu dominated government to fend off
the attack. The US was already working closely with Paul Kagame, head of the
Tutsi-dominated RPF (Rwandan Patriotic Front). In April 1994 it was after the
plane carrying the Rwandan and Burundi Presidents were shot down at Kigali
airport (both Hutus) that the massacres began (It is said that the RPF was
responsible for the missile attack on the airplane). The massacre of Tutsi
minorities continued for 13 weeks as the ‘international community’ looked on.
The Church is supposed to have played a major role in it. The UN was warned of
the impending danger but chose to ignore it. In July 1994 when the RPF took
power, Kagame accused the French of masterminding the massacre. It was the US
that forced the UN not to use the word "genocide" for what went on, and the UN
remained a passive observer. In a recently held ‘elections’ Kagame is back in
power and rules with an iron hand.
In the US while Bush
continues his maniacal war against the Iraqi people; the entire Senate backs
him, including the ‘Democratic’ opposition candidate, Kerry. Kerry critises Bush
for lying, but rules out any withdrawal from Iraq if elected. When Spain decided
to pull out it was not Bush, but Kerry who intervened to try and make him change
his decision. And as a senior Democratic Senator, he was one of the vocal
supporters of the resolution giving Bush unlimited powers to make war. He also
told all the lies that Bush told on the WMDs. He even went further than Bush
saying "Iraq is developing UAVs (unmanned aerial vehicles) capable of
delivering chemical and biological warfare agents that could threaten us".
So, Congress or BJP,
Democrats or Republicans, Labour or Conservative (Britain) their difference to
real policy matters is small. At most when inter-imperialist contradictions
intensify one section of the ruling classes may back policies of one bloc, while
the other of another. At present with the US as sole superpower dominating the
world, collusion between the imperialists is till now primary, though contention
between the EU/Russia and the US continues to intensify.
The Congress
continues the BJP’s policies of economic reforms while the Democrats will
continue the policies of aggression and war. No doubt there may be differences
in methods and intensity, but in essence they will be the same. Unfortunately
people have short memories and forget the aggressions of the Clinton era or the
Congress role not only in the Emergency, but also in the anti-Sikh pogrom and
even the very initiation of the present Hindutva trend by Rajiv Gandhi. But,
what is of advantage to the people at large is the growing infights amongst
different sections of the ruling class and the resulting destabalisation of
their polity. For, such instability weakens the ruling classes of the respective
countries and allows the masses greater space to organize their forces to more
effectively hit at them. And as the crisis in the world economy deepens,
such infights are bound to intensify giving greater opportunities to the world
people and revolutionaries to advance their struggles.
Having said this let
us look at the international geo-political scenario and then its reflection in
India. Finally we shall turn to the resistance against the policies of war and
reaction worldwide and in India.
International Scenario
With US’s world
domination, economically, politically and militarily, though no power is willing
to clash with this monster, the US ruling clique is getting more and more
isolated worldwide. The US-Zionist Axis is getting increasingly isolated with
Spain deserting and even Britain showing increasing hesitation to follow
outright all US dictates on the war. In this the great Iraqi resistance is at
the forefront tying down the US’s plans for world hegemony. It is stuck in a
quagmire unable to extricate itself and also unable to succeed. It had to change
the recent UN resolution on transfer of power to the Iraqis three times before
the other imperialist powers accepted it. Its greed for Iraqi oil prevents it
from sharing its booty with other imperialists. On the other hand this is
resulting in a backlash with fears of the spill-over of the war shifting to
Saudi Arabia which alone provides 10% of world oil. With attack on oil
installations there and in Iraq, prices of crude oil have hit a 23-year high at
over $42 per barrel. Though this gives windfall profits to the oil majors,
continuing high oil prices can once again push the world economy into recession.
US’s Economic
‘Recovery’
The much touted US
recovery of 2003 with a GDP growth rate of roughly 4% is not as good as it
appears. It has been artificially stimulated by huge increase in government
spending, unheard of reduction in interest rates and massive tax cuts to boost
spending.
The bulk of the
growth has been fueled by the massive hike in the defence budget and the war
expenditure in Iraq. The defence budget for 2003 was $375 billion and is likely
to increase to $402 billion this year. It has reached a gigantic 5.1% of GDP.
This does not include the $40 billion spent on the CIA and the huge amounts
spent on the FBI, Homeland Security and other counter-insurgency operations. The
total figure would be well over $500 billion. This figure alone is equal to
India’s GDP. So, far the US has spent a huge $120 billion on the Iraq war — of
this $98 billion has been for military purposes, while $21 billion for
rebuilding Iraq’s economy (for US TNCs) and $1 billion for US administrative
expenses. Till today the US is providing 80% of the foreign troops and 90% of
the costs — the so-called ‘coalition of the willing’ is more a show piece of
support to the US aggression.1
And yes, CEO salaries in this period have been shining.
Take the list citing Dhirubhai Ambani’s last salary. This appeared in The
Economic Times a little before his death. It showed him taking home close
to Rs.9 crores. (And that from just Reliance Industries.) That is about 30,000
times what a poor landless agricultural worker in Kalahandi might make in a
year. Which is around Rs.3,000.
The US was expecting
a bonanza from the Iraqi oil. But due to consistent attacks on the oil
establishment, production is barely 2.2 million barrels per day, which was the
amount pumped out in 2002 under Saddam. The US claims it will rise to $13
billion by year-end, which is unlikely due to the intensification of the
resistance. The Iraqi puppet government will cost the US $15.6 billion in 2004.
So, the loot from Iraq is yet to materialize; only, expenditure on the war
effort has no doubt boosted the US economy. The West’s desperation for oil can
be seen from the scandal that broke out at Shell where the Chairman had to
resign for over-stating the reserves it was said to possess.
But this ‘growth’ has
not benefited the people of America, only the huge TNCs. There is no reduction
in the unemployment which continues at a high of 5.6%. In fact the number of
planned layoffs rose for the second consecutive month in May this year, up 1.6%,
with the retail sector registering the highest number of cuts.2 The main
benefit of this recovery has gone to the TNCs whose profits have skyrocketed in
the year 2003. The Fortune 500 listing of the top 500 US corporations 3
have seen their profits surge by 540% to a gigantic $446 billion. This was after
two years of falling profits, with the Fortune 500 total profits dropping to as
low a figure as $70 billion in 2002 ($206 billion in 2001). Not surprisingly
leading the pack in profit-making was the oil giant Exxon with a profit of $21.5
billion, to be followed by GE and the two big banks, Citigroup and Bank of
America. Though profits increased 540%, revenues from sales increased a mere 7%.
This shows that the high returns did not come from a booming economy but from
wage cuts, speculative returns and war profiteering. The top 10 companies
alone made profits of $120 billion — more than the GDP of many a backward
country.
Besides, this
recovery has been fueled with a continuously rising budgetary deficit and trade
deficit. The trade deficit is all set to rise to $550 billion this year compared
to $490 billion last year. The budget deficit continues to be to the tune of
$500 billion. Such large deficits are unsustainable in the long run. But to fuel
this economic growth and capture oil resources anything of up to 55,000 Iraqis
have been killed and over 1000 US soldiers. As no records are being disclosed
and all we are fed is US media spin, the figures could be even larger. The bulk
of the Iraqis killed are civilians.
US-Zionist fascist
Offensive
The Zionist regime of
Israel is the US’s outpost in the Middle East. Bush, in speech after speech
makes out that they are faced with Hitlerian forces comparing his offensive
against so-called terrorism as that of the Allies against Hitler. But it is
quite the contrary. It is they who are the fascist Hitlerian forces while those
fighting them are resistance forces — whether in Iraq, Afghanistan or any other
country. That the resistance turn to Islamic fundamentalist ideology is because
the Marxists have weakened to take up the battle; and politics and wars of
resistance do not take place in an ideological vacuum.
About the same time
that Bush came to power the Zionist began their systematic assassinations,
called targeted killings. Since Nov.2000, 327 Palestinians have been
killed in a total of 160 assassination operations carried out by Israeli
security forces. Of these killed 129 persons, including 41 minors, 14 women and
15 old, were non-targeted civilians. A total of 789 persons were injured the
bulk of whom were civilians. The Zionists have even openly threatened head of
state, Arafat. And through all this the ‘international community’ and the UN
have been silent. Earlier the CIA killed in clandestine operations, now the
Zionists have got so arrogant as to openly declare their murderous intentions.
The viciousness is unprecedented. Over and above this, in the same period, about
139 Palestinians were arbitrarily executed by Israel in the Occupied Palestinian
Territory (OPT). In the same period 2,397 Palestinians were killed by the
Israelis in the OPTs of which 460 were minors. Those who have been targeted
include activists of Fatah, Hamas, the Islamic Jehad, the Al Aqsa Martyr’s
Brigade, and the PLFP — including its top leaders.
The Zionist offensive
against the Palestinians matches that of the US in Iraq, Afghanistan and other
parts of the world. The brutalities in Iraq, brought out by the recent pictures
of torture are probably the tip of the iceberg. Their terror methods would
involve barbarities unheard of in earlier wars, utilizing all the sophisticated
scientific equipment for the purpose. Similar methods have been used against the
prisoners being held at Guantanomobay. Bush keeps pitting their fight as that of
a crusade of the "civilized against the Islamic barbarians". In fact it is quite
the reverse — the US forces and the Zionists have behaved worse that the most
evil barbarians of yore. The civilizing effect of US occupation has pushed Iraq
back to the level of the Middle Ages. The rich civilization of Mesopotamia, with
rich land, oil and water resources has been all but destroyed. One of the few
countries in the Arab world which was not fundamentalist with a large crop of
highly educated people, including women, is being devastated. Besides the over
50,000 killed since the war began thousands more have been killed, maimed or
otherwise devastated by hunger, disease and the free run of US-sponsored
criminal gangs. While the US has nursed a small class of super-rich Iraqis, over
50% of the population is unemployed.
And now after Iraq it
is Haiti. The only difference here is that the EU has backed the intervention,
the UN has given it legitimacy, and the main occupation force under US command
is that of Lula’s Brazil.
But genocides come
naturally to the imperialists. As recently disclosed the massacre of 8 lakh
Tutsis in Rwanda in 1994 was the fall-out of US-French conflict for control over
the Great Lakes region (with its huge mineral wealth), where the US backed the
Tutsis and the French/Belgians the Hutus. Later this genocide spread to Congo.
It is now estimated that 4 million people were killed in the conflict in Congo,
which started in 1997. (See BOX)
However, the growing
economic crisis and scramble for markets and sources of raw materials is fueling
a whole set of new political alignments which continue to remain fluid, due to
the lack of a strong rival imperialist pitted against the US.
Changing International Political
Alignments
The main focus of the
US was, first and foremost, to bring all the countries of West Asia to their
knees. To some extent they have achieved this in countries other than Iraq, with
Syria and Iran falling into place. So much so that Bush no longer talks of the
Axis of evil. Syria, is to a large extent cooperating and is relatively silent.
Iran has not only opened up its nuclear facilities, but also recognized the
US-appointed INC (Iraqi National Council), entertained Chalabi in Tehran
(one-time main US puppet, now sidelined for allegedly passing on secret
information to Iran) and allied with the pro-US Shia leader, al-Sistani. Also,
what has been most surprising has been the total capitulation of Gaddaffi to the
US. After nine months of secret talks with the US/British, Libya has not only
abandoned its nuclear programme, but also shipped the secret blueprints and
components to the US, while inviting US oil companies back for exploitation of
its oil resources. Gaddaffi also agreed to pay huge compensations to the
families of those killed in the Lockerbie flight to victims in Britain and the
US but has refused similar payments to those affected in France. With increasing
attacks on oil installations in Saudi, the US is also keen to take direct
control of oil production there, fearing greater inroads of Russia, China and
Europe into Saudi oil production. For the present, only Kuwaiti oil is securely
in Anglo-American hands.
In the international
imperialist camp two new factors have come on to the agenda. First is the
increased trade contention between the US and the EU and the attempts of the US
to split the European alliance. Second, the relative re-assertion of Russia
vis-à-vis the US, and as an imperialist power in its own right, in the light of
its recent economic growth fueled by the high international prices of petroleum
and gas.
(i) The Trade Wars
The continuing
stalemate at the WTO after Cancun is an indication of the severe rift between
the US an EU on trade issues, particularly on agricultural commodity prices. For
the first time ever, in March this year, the EU slapped sanctions on US goods
when the US refused to retract its export tax breaks even after a WTO decision
against it over a year back. This would cost US companies $315 million in 2004
and $666 million in 2005. The lower tax rates on exports by US firms including
Boeing, Microsoft, etc. were judged as illegal by the WTO in 2002. Despite
warnings by the EU the US has not bothered changing the rates, resulting in the
present action. Further the EU imposed a record $613 fine on Microsoft for its
monopoly practices in Europe.
In retaliation, the
US in April, demanded the EU lift its ban on Genetically Modified crops and pay
at least $1.8 billion in compensation for loss of exports over the past six
years. Meanwhile, on June 1, 2004 the US has further pushed its arbitrary
behaviour by ignoring the WTO stipulations and enhancing the subsidy to steel
manufacturers. The US faces sanctions on potentially hundreds of millions of its
exports because of Congress’s failure to repeal the Continued Dumping and
Subsidy Offset Act after the WTO declared it as illegal. The programme known
as the Byrde Amendment distributes money raised by anti-dumping duties on
imports into the US.
Trade conflicts
between the two are also hotting up in various parts of the world with each
desperate to consolidate trade pacts with individual countries and/or groups of
countries. With the US making deeper inroads into Africa, once considered
France’s backyard, the EU has been making inroads into Latin America, always
considered as the US’s backyard.
We have already seen
US’s greater penetration in Africa in Libya, Rwanda and other countries. While
in Latin America, the US is desperate to extend the Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)
between the US, Mexico and Canada to the whole of Latin America by 2005, the EU
has pre-empted the effort by its own steps in the region. Negotiations for an
EU-Mercosur (a customs area pact of major South American countries) Free Trade
Area began in 2000. The EU has completed deals with Mexico (1999) and Chile
(2002). With Mercosur discussions have advanced to complete a FTA by October
2004. As a bait towards this it was reported in May 2004 that the European
Commission was all set to offer Mercosur access to the EU countries on more
favourable terms. The quid pro quo is that Mercosur will stop pressing the
Commission to cut its high farm trade barriers.
No one bothered
when an estimated 1½ lakh people were
forcibly evicted from Delhi’s Yamuna Pushta well before the elections. Most
dwellers have being staying in this huge slum for 20 years and most had brick
and cement houses. It was the home to about 3½
lakh people. The rest are to be evicted soon. Both Congress and BJP are
silent. This process is being repeated all over Delhi as slums are bulldozed
to yield ground to parks and river-front promenades, the Metro rail, and other
prestigious projects. Yamuna Pushta now resembles a bombed out site. Homeless
families camp out under the blazing sun, wondering where to go, warily
avoiding the police posted here to pre-empt any protest. Little children look
distraught in the burning heat of the sun. An estimated 8 lakh people have
been displaced in the Capital in the last four years. The scale and the size
of these forced evictions recalls the Emergency, when an estimated 7 lakh poor
were forced out of their homes. An alternative plot is provided at a payment
of Rs.7,000, 20 kms from the present place of work and school education for
the children. The tiny plot that is given is on a wasteland with no
development. Yet only 16% of those displaced have got plots. The tyranny of
the officials is added to the brutality of the eviction. The Delhi High Court
ordered the eviction on the grounds that the slum pollutes the river. But, of
the 3,296 mld of waste water let into the Yamuna daily only 3 mld is from the
Pushta!!! Hardly a word was mentioned in the media when, overnight, 30,000
families were destroyed. Sheila Dixit and Jagmohan may beautify Delhi, but the
displaced 8 lakh people will not forgive them.
Of course a major
sphere of contention is Europe itself. With the EU all set to expand into the
east by May first, the US hurriedly pushed through NATO expansion in end March
itself — just a month before the planned EU expansion. The latter was not only
resented by Russia but also by the France and Germany for its unseemly haste.
All the new entrants were part of Bush’s "coalition of the willing".
On March 29 Bush
formally welcomed seven new members into the NATO fold — Bulgaria, Estonia,
Latvia, Romania, Lithuania, Slovakia and Slovenia. In 1999 Poland, Hungary and
the Czech Republic were included into NATO. NATO also plans to include Ukraine,
Moldavia, Georgia, Uzbekistan and other Central Asian countries into its fold.
While the US is
consolidating this military alliance the EU seeks to extend it trade grouping by
extending the EU to East Europe. On May 1, 10 new members joined the EU, taking
its number to 25 and making it the biggest trading block in the world. The
countries include eight former Soviet states. The new entrants are Estonia,
Latvia, Lithuania, Slovenia, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary, Poland, Cyprus
and Malta.
While Russia took
serious objection to both these expansions the US proceeded arbitrarily while
the EU negotiated with Russia. The EU’s expansion could cost Russia upto $600
million in lost trade yearly. Moscow laid down 14 conditions in its PCA
(Partnership and Cooperation Agreement) with Europe in order to extend it to the
10 new entrants.
And so the tug-of-war
between the two main imperialist powers continues. With some of the European
countries all set to launch its new Rapid Action Force this year they will
militarily begin the path of breaking free of US military domination exercised
through NATO.
(ii) Russia’s New
Assertion
Russia has made it
clear to the US that it considers the recent NATO expansion as an extension of
US hegemony into Central-Eastern Europe. Humiliation mingles with fear as bases
built by the Soviets are all taken bloodlessly from under Russia’s nose by NATO.
The Russian sense of slight is accentuated particularly by the fact that Russia
had extended support to the Western alliance by providing intelligence on
Afghanistan and in establishing bases in Central Asia. Russia had also allowed
the transit of NATO troops and military hardware across its territory to
Afghanistan.
Now, though, after 5
years of economic recovery some of Russia’s big business companies have begun
major investments abroad and are slowly growing to become Russian TNCs —
particularly in the energy field, also in heavy metals. Some Russian giants that
have made major forays are the oil & gas companies Gazprom, Tatarstan’s Tatneft
Oil and Lukoil,; the electricity company UES (United Energy Systems); heavy
metal companies like Norilsk (Nickel) and RusAl (Aluminium) and even the telecom
company Sistema-Telecom.
Net foodgrains output per capita has fallen by about 7
kilograms since the mid-1990s owing to the slowing of output growth.
Availability (defined as net output plus net imports and minus net additions
to public stocks) however, has fallen by thrice as much as output.
In the first step
Russia sought to win back the ex-Soviet countries. The UES has brought under its
control four-fifths of Armenia’s hydro-electricity and bought up most of
Georgia’s energy facilities. It has acquired stakes in electricity assets in
Kazakhstan, is about to buy major stakes in 10 of the 27 Ukrainian energy
companies, and plans to participate in the disinvestment of power assets in
Moldova. In Kyrgzstan it has set up a joint venture for two huge hydro-electric
plants.
Russia’s Gazprom
controls practically all the natural gas flows to and from former Soviet
republics. It has signed a deal to invest a huge $1.4 billion in energy in
Uzbekistan, while Lukoil signed an accord for the investment of $3 billion into
joint development of Kazakhstan’s oil and gas fields.
Russian trade with
the CIS countries rose 30% last year. In a deal in April 2004, that will shock
the US, Kazakhstan planned to increase oil exports to and from Russia from the
current 20 million tones a year to 250 million tones a year by 2020. In other
words Kazakhstan will pump all its oil through Russian pipes, making the
US-pushed $3.6 billion BTC (Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan) pipeline a profit-losing
project (as Azerbaijan does not have enough oil to fill the pipeline).
Russian investors
control 80% of Ukraine’s oil refineries, practically all non-ferrous industry, a
quarter of the privatized electricity companies, half of the cell phone
operators and 30% of the dairies. Ukraine, which long rejected Moscow’s
expansion, signed last September a common market pact with Russia, Kazakhstan
and Belarus which envisions a customs union, free movement of goods, capital and
labour, and unification of tax, monetary and foreign trade policies.
Lukoil has also
entered Saudi Arabia with a tie-up with Aramco and Gazprom is the major natural
gas supplier to the whole of Europe. Russia seeks to further set up a gas
transport consortium that will consolidate Europe’s dependence on Russia for its
energy needs.
High Stakes In Iraq
With this growing
contention for world markets the US has high stakes in Iraq. A defeat there can
affect its bid for world hegemony considerably. Not only will it effect its
control over the crucial Middle East oil, not only will it further effect the
dollars hegemony with increasing influence of the Euro, but it can plunge its
own economy into an even deeper crisis given its existing fragility. No wonder
therefore it is resorting to the most brutal and inhuman means to suppress the
Iraqi resistance. No wonder it is also seeking by all means possible to split
the European alliance, particularly using Poland as its Trojan horse in the EU
(having lost Spain). And now with Oil prices hovering over $40 a barrel economic
chaos is a distinct possibility unless it is brought down. So fearful is the US
of the future that it has been recently buying huge excess stock of oil in
further preparations for wars and/or economic crash.
But, any setback to
the US’s militaristic adventures will only make it more ferocious, more
desperate to maintain its worldwide dominance. Countries like India, which have
closely allied with the US Axis will be pressurized to open up their economies
even more to the TNCs and forced into deeper politico-military alliances. The
rival EU bloc’s influence is yet weak in this region and Russia is yet to regain
its influence in the country. Though contradictions between the imperialist
powers are bound to get reflected here, there is yet a long way to go for any
real polarization of India’s compradors — US influence is predominant.
It is within this
international scenario that one must view the possible line of development in
India.
Indian Scenario And
The Possible Future Course
The focus of the new
Congress government is clear when it appointed India’s top counter-insurgency
expert as the special advisor to the Prime Minister in the PMO. It was openly
stated that his focus will be on ‘internal security’ — i.e. the suppression of
the people’s movements.
M.K.Narayanan, the
new appointee, was a former director of the IB (for two terms) was currently
vice-president of the think-tank Centre for Security Analysis and a
member of the Expert Group on Counter-Terrorism. He was also chairman of
the Joint Intelligence Committee and held the post of Secretary,
National Security Council. He was also a member of the post-Kargil Task
Force on Intelligence. He has had experience in dealing with the naxalite
movement in the late 1960s, militancy in the NE and Punjab, the J & K problem,
the LTTE issue and Operation Blue Star. He has been the point-man behind
butchers like KPS Gill and other such cops in the anti-insurgency operations
throughout the country. It will now be this most experienced operator who will
run the Centre’s operations against the revolutionary and nationality movements.
This is quite
obviously linked with the new government’s plans to continue the economic
reforms resulting in greater and greater deprivation of the masses — and so the
increasing danger of revolts. Take the present economic scenario of the country
and you will find this to be an inevitability unless the government takes
radical steps to curtail the crores being made by the elite of this country and
from abroad. But the way Chidambaram went cringing before the moneybags in
Mumbai is an indication of what is to come.
Take then the
economic scenario that determines such oppressive policies. Economic reforms
have, particularly in the last few years, resulted in a real "India Shining" for
big business, foreign capital and their hangers on. But, on the other hand it
has led to extreme deprivation for the majority, particularly the poor.
Now starvation deaths strike CPM’s West Bengal. After
reports of such deaths in the Tea Estates and Amlasole, six children died for
want of government medical aid in Kankrajire village. Under fire, the arrogant
CPM Chief Minister snapped: "Starvation deaths may seen something very sudden
to you, but its not for us. You don’t have to go to Amlasol, there are
thousands of bastis in Kolkata where people suffer from malnutrition". This is
the revisionist-style alternative!!
First let us look at the reality and then turn to government policy that
facilitated this reality. Finally we shall see what are the economic policies
necessary to bring in even an iota of reforms.
India Continues to
Shine?
The latest ET 500 (of
the top 500 companies in India) list of the Economic Times (June 2, 2004) shows
that the net profits of the top 200 companies saw a huge jump of 40% in 2003 and
42% in 2002, though increase in sales was a mere 15%. Such massive increase in
profits can only have come from squeezing the workers even more, a big increase
in subsidies and tax cuts to them, low interest rates, etc. This is in spite of
the fact that the top bosses of these companies have taken massive hikes in
their salaries. Ambani’s Reliance was the first private sector company to make a
profit of over $ 1 billion last year. His net profit jumped from Rs, 4,104
crores in 2002 to Rs.5,160 crores in 2003 — or Rs.15 crore per day. This is
after they took salaries varying from Rs.7 to Rs.10 crore a year. There are 30
banks in the top 200 whose profits too have jumped by 40%. The State Bank of
India is at number 4 with profits of a huge Rs.3,560 crores. Even the steel
companies which were earlier doing badly have made big profits with Tata’s Tisco
seeing a jump of 138% taking profits to Rs.1586 crores and the PSU SAIL’s to
Rs.1,740 crores. A similar picture is to be seen for the car, chemicals, cement,
IT, and all other major industries. In just the five years from 1998/99 to
2002/03 the ET 500’s percentage of gross value added to the GDP increased from
11.5% to 13.8%.
So big business has
made huge money. Then if we turn to out Members of parliament, according to a
Times of India survey (May 30, 2004) they get an average yearly
salary of Rs.31 lakhs each — and this does not include the Rs.2 crore given to
them yearly for their constituencies and the lakhs made though corruption and
deals. For them too India is shining. MLAs would cost nearly as much, and
recently the UP government doubled the salary of its ministers. Vajpayee ordered
six super BMW cars, each costing Rs.1 crore — all from public funds — but he
says there were no funds to increase the food subsidy for those dying of
starvation. In the very elections an estimated Rs.10,000 crores was spent and
not even a petty leader went to destinations except by helicopter.
Chronic Poverty
Now if we look at the
other side chronic poverty stalks the countryside and the vast urban slums. Even
if one takes the doctored official figures roughly 30 crore people live in
chronic poverty. Another 40 crore are just a little better. Thousands of farmers
each year are resorting to suicide. In UP alone sugarcane farmers have arrears
of Rs.2,000 crores due to them. According to the latest National Family
Health Survey (1998-99) half of all children are malnourished and half of
all adult women suffer from anaemia; 30% of all children under age of 3 had
fever, anther 20% had diarrhea, and another 20% had symptoms of acute
respiratory infection. 4 During the entire period from 1997/98 to 2002
/03 the rate of growth in agriculture was just 1%. The number of agricultural
labourers increased from 2.7 crores in 1951 to 10.7 crore in 2001. Half the
rural population had less than one acre of land and another 19% had less than
one hectare (2.5 acres). 5 In other words roughly 75% of the rural
population (or 55 crore people) eked out an existence on less than one hectare
of land. In most of the slums in the urban areas peoples living conditions was
often even worse — and in a city like Mumbai half the population live in slums.
Take Dharavi in
Mumbai. Billed as Asia’s largest slum, it is home to maybe a million human
beings. In official reckoning, there are almost no poor people here. As of
September 2003, there were only 128 Below Poverty Line ration cards serving just
740 people in this giant slum.
In the early 1960s,
51 per cent of jobs in Mumbai were in the organised manufacturing sector, where
workers had permanent employment and assured benefits like leave and provident
fund. Today about 65 per cent of Mumbai’s workforce works under contract.
Farce of ‘Human Face’
Now it is these two
worlds that face each other in a country like India. Policy cannot support both
rich and poor as the CPM would have us believe saying that they "support
economic reforms with a human face". It is a simple matter of arithmitics —
with a large fiscal deficit of 10% in the State and Centre’s budget where is the
money to come from to give policy a human face? Unless the huge subsidies
to big business are curtailed, and tax on their gigantic profits increased where
will the funds for the poor come from?
To take just one
example: exemptions on excise and customs duties alone amount a massive
Rs.60,000 crores6. This is a massive sop to big business, but will the
Congress government have the guts to cut this exemption and give it instead to
the poor of the country?
In Rajasthan, plagued by water scarcity for five years,
we plan more water parks and golf courses. A single golf course takes 1.8 to
2.3 million litres of water a day through the season. On that amount of water,
one lakh villagers in that State could have all their water needs met right
through summer. This unfolds in a country that wants to spend what equals
roughly a fourth of its GDP on linking tens of rivers.
Also as a ratio of
GDP public expenditure on health in India is amongst the lowest in the world at
about 1%. Only 15% of the total health expenditure is public — in East Asia it
is 40%, Latin America 50% and Europe 75%. Will the government divert funds to
public health and eradication of diseases like malaria and TB which are now at
epidemic levels? To give disease control a ‘human face’ massive investment will
be necessary and the huge profits of the pharmaceutical companies drastically
curbed. This is totally unthinkable by the new power brokers.
Rural Devastation
Take then the
devastated rural population — ie. not only the poor and marginal farmers who eke
out a hand-to-mouth existence, but now even the middle and rich farmers who have
been devastated by WTO policies. Is the government willing to act? Public sector
investment in agriculture has come down from 14.1% in 1981/82 to 4.9% in
2000/01. The share of agriculture in Gross Capital Formation has come down from
10.8% in the pre-reform period of the 1980s to 7.6% in the post-reform period of
the 1990s. Is the government or the CPM willing to hike corporation tax and tax
on high incomes, re-introduce capital gains tax, reduce export subsidies, etc
etc to get the requisite funds for greater public investment in agriculture? Are
they willing to instruct the banks to once again introduce preferential loans to
the primary sector even if it entails a small drop in their burgeoning profits?
The disbursement of credit to small farmers has dropped from 15% in the 1980s to
11% in the 1990s 7. Similarly direct disbursements to marginal farmers
fell from 18% to 13%. But the Congress talks of further privatization of the
financial institutions which will result in them falling into foreign hands and
then even this small amount of institutional credit to the rural poor will dry
up. Already pushed into the clutches of the rapacious moneylender, such policies
will further the hold of the moneylender. According to the Gupta Committee
farmers already rely now more on moneylenders whose rate of interest lies
between 40% and 60%.8
Rural development
expenditures, which averaged 14.5 per cent of gross domestic product (GDP),
during 1985-90, before reforms, were reduced to 8 per cent of GDP by the early
1990s as part of the deflationary policies advised by the Bretton Woods
Institutions (the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund). Since 1998,
they have been reduced further, averaging less than 6 per cent of GDP and in
some years falling to less than 5 per cent. In real terms, there has been a
reduction of about Rs.30,000 crores annually in rural development expenditures
on average during the last five years, compared to the pre-reforms period. If we
assume a plausible value of between 4 and 5 for the Keynesian multiplier, this
means a drop in incomes in agriculture annually to the tune of between Rs.20,000
crores to Rs.150,000 crores - a massive contraction indeed. This order of income
fall, combined with real income declines owing to other causes, is broadly
consistent with the observed fall in the contribution of agriculture to GDP
during the 1990s, from around one third to barely a quarter at present.
Then we come to the
question of the PDS (Public Distribution System) of cheep foodgrains to the poor
which has all-but collapsed under the BJP dispensation. Offtake of PDS
foodgrains has dropped from 20 million tones in 1996/97 to a mere 12 million
tones today — that too the bulk of these reaches the hands of unscrupulous
traders due to the complex mechanisms set of BPL, APL and the Antyodaya Anna
Yojna schemes.9 On this there is not a word mentioned in the CMP. The
earlier government exported wheat at BPL rates but was not willing to give these
to the drought-stricken millions.
There was a slow
decline in the absorption of foodgrains per head between 1991-92 and 1997-98,
after which it has fallen very sharply, from an average annual level of 174.3 kg
in the three-year period ending in 1997-98, to only 151 kg by the pre-drought
year 2000-01, an abysmally low level last seen during the early years of the
Second World War, which included the years of the terrible Bengal famine. Thus,
by 2000-01 the average Indian family of four members was absorbing 93 kg less
foodgrains, compared to a mere three years earlier — a massive and unprecedented
drop, entailing a fall in average daily intake by 64 grams per head, or a fall
in calorie intake by 256 calories from foodgrains (which accounts for 65 to
70 per cent of the food budget of the poor). There is nothing in the CMP to
reverse this.
Unemployment
Nightmare
Then take the
question of unemployment which is one of the most serious problems facing
today’s youth. Economic reforms have particularly had a devastating impact on
employment generation with lakhs being thrown out of jobs and an entire
generation forced to seek temporary and insecure jobs. During the last six years
8.4 million people have come of employable age every year, but less than 3
million have found jobs of any kind. None have found jobs in the organized
sector of the economy. The sizable presence of the unorganised sector in
manufacturing is evident from its massive increase from 28% of the total in
1993/94 to 39% of the total in 1999/2000.10 In the organised sector the total
employment has been falling steadily since 1999 and the rate of decline has been
accelerating. Since 1990 the annual average increase in employment was under 1.2
lakhs per year. And in the organized sector employment declined from 282.5 lakhs
in 1997 to 280 lakhs in 2001.11 The reason why there are no jobs is that there
is no industrial growth, and what little that may be there is capital intensive
with more and more jobs being contracted out. The drought of private investment
has been compounded by even greater decline in public investment. This lopsided
growth is reflected in the fact that in the year 2002/03 manufacturing exports
accounted for close to 53% of manufactured output. 12.
In fact even in
agriculture growth in employment saw a sharp decline in the 1990s. In
agriculture and allied sectors it came down to 0.01% in the 1994-2000 period,
compared to 1.43% in the 1983-94 period. Even in the employment schemes of the
government in the last year there was a drastic reduction in the food component
of the scheme from Rs.5,267 crores last year to a mere Rs. 775 crores in
2003/04.
Besides no economy
can sustain when agriculture accounts for two-thirds of the workforce and a mere
25% of the GDP. In other words there has been development, where nearly 75% of
the GDP comes from manufacturing and services — but this ‘development’ has not
been able to absorb the displaced rural populace. So, oasis of growth takes
place in a vast desert of backwardness.
Now what formula does
the Congress and CPM have for this key problem of the masses — UNEMPLOYMENT. How
do they plan to give a human face to the problem of unemployment if they plan to
carry on the policies of economic reforms? Besides even those who are employed
are in a much worse condition than they were before. Over the period 1981/82 to
1999/2000 the share of workers’ emoluments in net value-added declined by nearly
16% from 46.7% to just 30.8%. This was primarily due to a steep decline in the
wages component in emoluments from 30.3% to just 18.1%. Conversely
profits/rent/interest share rose from 47.1% to 61.8% in the same period. 13.
The gigantic increase in profits of the ET 500 is to be seen from this fact, the
corresponding fact of workers’ destitution is ofcourse ignored by such
newspapers. Yet, under economic reforms downsizing, wage cuts, contracting,
pension cuts, etc continue unabated without any "human face".
What Future?
So the problems of
employment, agricultural development, working class rights and living standards,
social welfare and health care, minimum necessities of life like good drinking
water, sanitation, electricity, etc — are the issues facing the bulk of our
people. Is the new government, with the ‘Left’ in tow, going to really address
any of these? That is impossible unless they reverse the process of economic
reforms. But the entire new dispensation, including the CPM, has been going out
of their way to say they are not against reforms. And to prove their credentials
have begun taking steps in that direction within the first few days of coming to
power. They seem more enthusiastic to please their financers than those who
voted them to power.
But if the Congress
is not much different why the euphoria? Some liberals even went to the extent of
calling it "liberation". Their hatred for the BJP was so strong that anything
seemed to them better than the Hindutva fascists. This may be partially true but
that should not blind us to the reality of the other political formations. The
reason for such false hopes is that the people’s movements against the fascists
are as yet weak, so the liberal tends to cling on to any straw of hope.
The real question
before us is that economic reforms is intertwined with the international
imperialist policies of globalization and imperialism’s, particularly US
imperialism’s, rapacious drive for markets and sources of raw materials. The two
cannot be separated. An attack on ‘economic reforms’ is necessarily linked to an
attack on imperialist policy. None of the parliamentary formations in the
country are prepared for this. In fact, because of their comprador character
they act as servile tools of the imperialists, getting fat commissions with
which they sustain themselves and grow. Through these links the big business
community thrives, top bureaucrats and politicians get huge commissions and much
of the top elite are linked through thousands of visible and invisible threads
to the imperialists. Today, even ‘dissent’ is imperialist sponsored through the
lakhs of imperialist-funded NGOs sprawling all over the country.
So, today any
reversal of economic policies, however minor, requires taking on the
imperialists and inviting their displeasure — particularly that of the US. And
for this, is Iraq and Afghanistan not a warning to all? Today with the Bush
formula of "those not with us are against us" operating, nothing but
total lackeyism is tolerated as witnessed in Haiti and also the coup attempted
in Venezuela.
So, what is bound to
continue is what already existed with small changes particularly around the
question of aggressive Hindutva. All else will remains as before. Peoples’
condition will continue to deteriorate further, the moneybags will thrive even
more. And Hindutva will in fact be pushed even more aggressively — only now, not
from the treasury benches but from the opposition.
In this scenario what
then is the alternative?
The Real Alternative
When we begin to
consider an alternative it is necessary to have a cold, objective look at the
reality and the forces at play in the country and world. It does not help to
avoid uncomfortable facts to create false hopes and illusions. One must not only
look at the reality in its crude nakedness, but also the forces behind it which
are the chief driving factor for what is easily visible. For over half a century
the people of our country have been fed with one false hope or another. In 1947
we thought we had achieved freedom and now all would prosper. That turned out
false; the imperialist grip continued, though in a new form; the poverty of the
masses continued as before. Then came the euphoria of Indira Gandhi’s "Garibi
Hatao, bank nationalization and the end of privy purses to the Rajas" —
again many were duped into thinking a new era had dawned, including the then
CPI. So also after the Emergency a hope was ignited in the so-called Janata
formation; that collapsed within two years. And so the hopes and despair are
repeated again and again. Each time peoples’ anger against a more horrendous
force makes a lesser monster look like a fairy. So at the time of 1947 in
comparison to the British, their agent and comprador, Nehru, looked beautiful.
In the 1960s, compared to the Swatantra/Jan Sangh reactionaries, Indira’s Garibi
Hatao looked attractive. The horrors of the Emergency kindled great hopes in the
Janata in the mid-1970s. And now once again, the terror raj of the BJP mafia,
with their Gujarat pogroms and crude Hindutva fascism, makes the Congress look
like an angel in comparison.
But, the reality has
always, time and again, told another story. Disillusionment soon sets in, and
with it comes cynicism and a sense of hopelessness. The reason for this is not
to see events objectively and the driving forces behind it. No doubt, one of
them may be better than another in a given set of situations, but that is not
the whole reality. It can be compared to the difference between a highly
venomous snake and one with less poison. But both are poisonous; that
understanding is fundamental, their shades of difference are relative. If one
starts playing with the less poisonous ones with great hope, one can be in for
severe trouble.
But given this
reality is it not better that the two snakes continue to fight each other,
rather than gang up against us. Of course it is. Their fight though, is not
dependent on us, but intrinsic to the very nature of the system, wherein ruling
class contradictions intensify at times of crisis in the economy and the system.
We, must of course use it to our advantage, but not fall into the trap of one or
the other. The euphoria over BJP defeat is understandable, for it punctures the
arrogance of a venomous, vicious, treacherous and ruthless political entity. But
much hope in the Congress/CPM/CPI combine is illusory.
Such illusions are
particularly fueled by the fact that people do not see any other real
alternative. And the Congress gets more creditability due to CPI/CPM ‘Left’
demagogy. Though, in West Bengal, they may be faithfully implementing all World
Bank policies, unleashing terror on all opposition and also torturing and
killing naxalites in fake encounters, they maintain their aura of
‘progressiveness’ amongst a section of the intellectuals — particularly those
not from West Bengal. So, ‘Left’ support to the Congress gives the latter
greater legitimacy, adding to the illusions even further.
But it is true that,
as yet, there is no observable viable alternative in the country. But, such an
alternative does not fall from heaven; it has to be created through painstaking
work. There is no quick-fix formula which the intellectual often hopes for. The
question then before us is what is the nature of the alternative that needs to
be created. Many years back the Liberation group formed the IPF (Indian People’s
Front). But soon, that party went into the parliamentary pig-sty and the IPF
disappeared from the scene.
To get grips with the
alternative it is necessary to see which are the forces capable of building such
an alternative and, as to what the polices of that alternative should be.
Firstly, there are the revolutionaries, the Maoists, who are the most consistent
fighters against this rotten system. They are leading a people’s war in the
country. In a way they are the real alternative to the existing system. But,
they exit only in certain pockets, what is needed in addition, is countrywide
alternative. Then there are a wide spectrum of progressives, democrats,
anti-imperialists and a host of others opposing some aspect of the system that
particularly affects them. It is all the above forces that need to be united
into a common front — which is consistently anti-imperialist (i.e. attacking not
only their policies being pushed in India but also their policies abroad),
against Hindutva fascism, against state repression and supporting all the
struggles of the rural people, where the bulk — 70% — of our population live.
Such an alternative must avoid getting involved in the electoral trap and build
a true people’s movement from the grass-roots. While firmly standing by the
oppressed in the country such an alternative must also stand steadfastly with
the people of the world struggling and fighting against imperialism — today, it
particularly means the people of Iraq, Afghanistan, Palestine and other
countries throughout the world.
Today there may be no
concrete alter-native; the point, however, is to build it.
Notes
1.
Frontline, April 9, 2004
2.
Economic Times, June 3, 2004
3.
Fortune April 12, 2004
4.
The Hindu March 13, 2004
5.
Alternative Economic Survey 2002-03
6.
Economic Times June 2, 2004
7.
RBI Report on Currency and Finance 2001- 02
8.
Economic Times, June 2, 2004
9.
Alternative Economic Survey 2002-03
10.
Alternative Economic Survey 2002-03
11.
Alternative Economic Survey 2002-03
12.
Economic Times, April 30, 2004
13.
Alternative Economic Survey 2002-03
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