Corruption
is not exactly new in India. Quite apart from the
extensive historical evidence of its spread, during
and after the "mixed economy" period of
state planning, the "licence-permit raj"
was regularly accused by commentators of breeding
graft, constraining economic activity and forcing
citizens to be at the mercy of corrupt officialdom
at all levels.
So if this is an old problem, why has it suddenly
become such a hot political issue? Has Indian society
now come of age, as the citizenry demands official
transparency and freedom from corruption? This is
partly true: the movement for the Right to Information
(which culminated in a law) does reflect to some extent
the social mobilisation and citizens' awareness necessary
in mature democracies.
But this does not explain the recent eruption of either
the problem of corruption or the social reaction to
it. All indicators suggest that economic illegality,
fraud and corrupt practices have ballooned in recent
times in India. Increasingly, this is felt as a great
betrayal by a populace that had been told that the
era of neoliberal economic policies would end vices
that were supposedly associated with greater government
involvement in economic activity.
Scams and scandals have become a staple of the economic
environment. The numbers keep growing, as hundreds
of billions of rupees are extracted in various ways:
through government spending on mega-projects or big
events (such as the recent Commonwealth Games in Delhi);
through often illegal and inadequately compensated
expropriation of land to benefit large private players
(for industries and real estate projects); through
the gratuitous takeover and handing to favoured parties
resources ranging from water and minerals to spectrum
(the allocation of which was at the centre of one
recent high-profile scam).
One reason for the public anger is that the period
of market-oriented reforms has delivered higher aggregate
growth but also significantly increased economic inequality
and material insecurity for the majority of India's
population. As the elites and burgeoning middle classes
become more confident, they become more brazen in
flaunting their consumption to a population that is
generally denied any such access and may even be facing
worsening prospects. So the collusion between economic
power and political/bureaucratic power that leads
to the rapid enrichment of a few is resented even
more.
Many recent analyses of such corruption have seen
it as a brake on India's growth potential. In fact,
however, such graft and the "crony capitalism"
associated with it have been an integral part of India's
growth trajectory. The last two decades have seen
strongly "corporate-led" growth, with huge
rises in the ratio of profits and interest to GDP.
Much of this is related to what Marx called "primitive
accumulation" – the use of extra-economic means
to extract resources and surpluses. The Indian state
has played a crucial role in this.
The animal spirits of entrepreneurs tend to be unleashed
by such avenues of surplus generation, and this contributes
to buoyant economic growth. But this is raw, wild
west-style economic dynamism – unfettered by adherence
to any rule of law that treats all citizens as equal,
and reliant on close relations between capital and
the state to ensure high levels of surplus extraction.
The extreme dependence of large corporate capital
on these relations, and therefore the extent to which
they are deeply implicated in the corruption that
they openly deplore, is usually missed by observers.
Most of the media and even the citizens' movements
against corruption add to the obfuscation, by presenting
the problem solely in terms of the corrupt behaviour
of politicians.
Consider the two protests that are currently exercising
the media and the government in Delhi. One of them
is led by Anna Hazare, a self-styled Gandhian social
worker with some success in water harvesting and other
development activities in his village of Ralegan Siddhi,
in Maharashtra. He combines personal integrity with
a puritanical, and even slightly authoritarian, streak.
Hazare went on a fast to demand (eventually conceded
by the government) to be part of a panel to draft
a bill for a public auditor to monitor the activities
of top officials.
Hazare's associates pride themselves on being "apolitical"
(as if that itself were a badge of honour), and persist
in seeing the problem entirely in terms of the government
– politicians and bureaucrats – without noting the
connection with corporate power. Their demand for
yet another law conveniently ignores the point that
the lack of genuine implementation of existing laws
is often the most obvious way in which corruption
occurs.
Recently, another figure has emerged. Baba "Swami"
Ramdev is an entrepreneurial yoga instructor who has
built up a significant business empire based on yoga
camps, traditional medicines and TV channels. Unlike
Hazare, Ramdev openly declares political ambitions
and plans to float a political party, and he has a
large mass following. Many businessmen and bureaucrats
are also impressed with his skills, despite his often
socially reactionary views.
The central government behaved in an extraordinary
fashion with Ramdev. First, they greatly elevated
both him and his demands by sending four senior cabinet
ministers to meet him at Delhi airport and whisk him
off for private talks. Then – when this did not succeed
– within two days they sent riot police to break up
his peaceful camp of tens of thousands of followers,
injuring women and children.
Such peculiar and often contradictory responses of
the central government have been attributed to the
possibility that senior figures in the administration
and the ruling Congress party are deeply involved
in many scandals and is reportedly stashing "black
money" in accounts abroad.
But it might be that these strange responses reflect
a deeper and genuine dilemma. Perhaps the government
knows something that is not yet explicitly recognised
in the media: that the Indian growth story has been
reliant on corruption, and that reining this in will
also rein in the extravagant growth that has become
so necessary not just for the survival of the government
but for the self-image of the country's elites.
This article was originally published
in The Guardian on 17th June, 2001
http://www.guardian.co.uk/global-development/poverty-matters/2011/jun/17/india-anger-over-corruption
June
17, 2011.
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