Commentary/Mani Shankar Aiyar
If the CPI-M wishes to impact nationwide, it can do so only in association
with the Congress
The political economy of Manmohanomics, there might have been
grounds for an apprehension of ideological incompatibility. Now
we can be more sanguine. For while the methods and goals of Communism
can never be those of the Congress -- and vice versa -- the question
in their evolving a working relationship is not whether the one
view or the other will prevail in an electoral outcome where they
have no need of each other, but whether they can evolve a compatibility
when the failure of the electorate to give either party a mandate
to rule on its own imposes on both an ineluctable compulsion to
work together.
I profoundly believe that what the Communists call
'objective conditions' do exist to impart credibility
and viability to a Congress-Communist relationship. And I believe
that this arises not in spite of but because of Manmohanomics.
Let me explain:
The political economy of Manmohanomics comprises two parts. What
can be done by the market is being increasingly left to the market,
thus progressively diminishing the responsibility of the state
in finding budgetary resources for investment in the modern sector
of the economy. The Communists, of course, complain that this
means abandoning the commanding heights of the economy to private
capital, domestic and, worse, international.
The only significant
Communist country left in the world. -- the People's Republic
of China -- has been doing the same ever since Deng Xiaoping decreed
that it did not matter whether a cat was black or white so long
as it caught mice. The flines of the CPI-M can be persuaded to
acquiesce in the same theology even if their knees will jerk from
time to time.
The other --- and, by far, the more important -- part of Manmohanomics
is that what cannot be done by the market must be done by the
State. Here, in principle, the Communists need have no great difficulty
in swallowing the ideological wish-bone. For, in a developing
country like ours, what cannot be done by the market is much larger
than what can. After all, only some 200 million Indians occupy
the marketplace. The rest live largely outside it.
Were the State
to concentrate its energies and resources on these 700 million,
we might actually achieve something in terms of poverty eradication
and human resource development. And it is the experience of Communism
in West Bengal the holds the most important lessons for what we
next need to do: The completion of land reforms and the institution
of real Panchayati Raj.
Both parts are integral to the process of Manmohanomics. Unfortunately,
in the period 1991-96, so much attention was lavished on the first
part of the agenda that he second went by default. That is why
the single-greatest achievement of the Rao regime -- the economic
reforms -- proved such a damp squib at the polls. True, no one
voted against the Congress because of the reforms; but no one
voted for the Congress because of reforms either.
I know this
is not the CPI-M view, but if instead of scoring debating points
they were to ask themselves whether the bulk of the national agenda
does not still lie in the hands of the State, they could not but
tell themselves it does. Moreover, it is an agenda which the
CPI-M more than any other party has successfully pursued in one-and-a-half
states of the Union: West Bengal for two decades (full marks)
and Tripura from time to time (half marks). Add Kerala, if you
want (I don't because the impact of the Communists in Kerala has
been no more than marginal and never as sustained as in WB) --
but you still get only three states of the Union, of which only
one can qualify as large.
If, therefore, the CPI-M wishes to impact nationwide, at least
in respect of that part of its programme that impinges on the
vast majority of our populace, it can do so only in association
with the one party that is capable of giving it a sustained national
presence -- the Indian National Congress. The task in the run-up
to the next millennium is not capturing the commanding heights
of the economy but capturing the commanding heights of the polity.
That -- not crying over split milk -- is what Comrade Jyoti Basu
should be doing.
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