|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: India
In response to intensifying class antagonisms
Indias Congress Party revives discredited Garibi
Hatao slogan
By Kranti Kumara and Keith Jones
21 October 2006
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
Indias Congress Party-led United Progressive Alliance
(UPA) government has decided to revive the populist electoral
slogan Garibi Hatao (eliminate poverty), first
popularized by Indira Gandhi during the 1971 parliamentary elections,
in the hope that it can provide political cover for a new wave
of neo-liberal reforms.
In particular, the UPA government is intent on throwing open
public infrastructure projects to private capital, gutting restrictions
on layoffs and plant closures, introducing market-pricing
for electricity, privatizing public sector companies, and establishing
Special Economic Zones (SEZs), modeled after those in China, in
which companies enjoy tax holidays, strikes are effectively prohibited,
and standard labor and environmental regulations are waived.
No sooner had the UPA cabinet decided to place Garibi
Hatao at the center of the governments propaganda
than Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and other key ministers left
for a series of big business functions at which they pledged to
intensify the pace of economic reform. (See Indias
prime minister pledges to accelerate neo-liberal reform)
Lest there be any confusion within business circles as to what
the Congress leadership intends by resurrecting a slogan that
Indira Gandhi employed in the early 1970s when she postured as
a socialist, Congress and government spokesman have stipulated
that
Garibi Hatao is to be the first point in
a revised Twenty-Point [Congress] Program (TPP) that
will be updated with particular reference to economic reforms,
liberalisation and globalisation of the Indian economy.
The revised TPP-2006 is to become operational in April 2007,
which, as The Hindustan Times observed, is almost
[coincident] with the [state assembly] election campaigns in Punjab,
Uttaranchal and Uttar Pradesh. The latter state is home
to almost 15 percent of Indias population and far and away
the largest in the Indian Union.
But the Congresss revival of Garibi Hatao
is not just a matter of electoral calculations.
The Congress and UPA are involved in a precarious and increasingly
untenable balancing act, posing as a party concerned with the
aam admi (common person), while implementing neo-liberal
socio-economic reforms, massively increasing military spending,
and seeking to fashion a strategic partnership with US imperialism.
To its great surprise, the Congress-led UPA was propelled to
power in the 2004 elections after it made a calibrated appeal
to popular discontent over the increasing unemployment, economic
insecurity, and human suffering that have resulted from the neo-liberal
program. Predictably, the Congress promise of reforms
with human face has proven to be a cruel hoax. The UPA government
has pursued an economic and geo-political agenda that is all but
a carbon copy of that implemented by its predecessor, the National
Democratic Alliance, a coalition led by the Hindu supremacist
Bharatiya Janata Party.
Recent weeks have seen mounting social unrest over the plans
of the Union and state governments to expropriate hundreds of
thousands of peasants, so that their land can be handed over at
little or no cost to big business in the form of Special Economic
Zones.
As a sop to the Communist Party of India (Marxist)-led Left
Front, on which it is dependent for its parliamentary majority,
the UPA recently inaugurated a National Rural Employment Guarantee
Program (NREGP) under which the state is legally obliged to provide
one member of every rural household in the countrys 200
poorest districts 100 days of work per year. Pay rates may vary,
but are generally around 60 rupees ($1.33) per day.
This measure is a band-aid under conditions where rural India
is hemorrhaging. In May the UPA Minister of Agriculture conceded
that between 1998 and 2003 more than 100,000 peasant farmers were
driven by mounting debts and onerous interest payments to commit
suicide. No less striking is the fact that four-fifths of rural
Indiansa group constituting about half of Indias total
populationhave experienced a fall in their per capita consumption
since 1989-90.
But Finance Ministry officials have made it clear that even
the minimal increase in social spending caused by the Employment
Guarantee and a handful of other pro-poor initiatives
may be unsustainable due to mounting government deficits.
Big business meanwhile is demanding the government accelerate
the pace of neo-liberal reform.
The Congress-led UPA is anxious to do just that. According
to press reports, Manmohan Singh and the neo-liberal ideologues
who hold the UPA governments economic portfolios calculate
that they have a 12-15 month window to enact major
reforms before the governments agenda will be dominated
by preparations for the general election slated for 2009.
The revival of Garibi Hatao is thus a transparent attempt
to throw dust in the eyes of Indias toiling masses. The
more faithfully it implements the agenda of big business, the
more the Congress-led UPA resorts to pro-poor demagogy.
The Congress is the historic and traditional governing party
of the Indian national bourgeoisie. Its chief utility has been
its ability to use anti-imperialist and socialist verbiage to
bind the masses to the program of Indian capital.
But this deception has become increasingly difficult to sustain
and more and more dependent on the support lent it by the Stalinist-led
Left Front, which claims the Congress is more amenable to mass
pressure than the BJP and a secular bulwark against the Hindu
right .
It a measure of the political bankruptcy, even desperation,
of the Congress leadership that in trying to refurbish its tattered
credentials as a party of the people it has resorted
to reviving Indira Gandhis slogan of Garibi Hatao.
As the Deccan Chronicle noted, Congress leaders
do not realise the pitfalls inherent in their move. ... Adoption
of Banish Poverty slogan will be admitting that the Congress has
failed to eradicate this scourge even 35 years after embarking
on the mission.
Moreover, while the Garibi Hatao slogan and an associated
program of limited reforms did initially prove politically rewarding
to Indira Gandhi, they failed utterly to contain class antagonisms
in India. Three years after she effected a left turn
under the banner of Garibi Hatao, Gandhi was employing
Indias security forces to break a strike of railway workers
and the following year she suspended the constitution under the
Emergency.
From Garibi Hatao to authoritarian rule
By the latter half of the 1960s the Congress Partys post-independence
model of national economic development was in crisis, provoking
both an upsurge of worker, student and peasant struggles and a
push from sections of Indian big business and the old landlord-princely
elite through the Swatantra Party and the Jana Sangh (forerunner
of the BJP) for a sharp shift right in economic and foreign policy.
Widespread poverty and hunger and popular demands for social
reform had caused the Congress to suffer steep losses in the 1967
general elections. These losses in turn exacerbated a struggle
for power within the Congress.
Between 1969 and 1971, Indira Gandhi was able to lead a rebel
faction of the Congress in wresting leadership from a corrupt
and increasingly conservative old guard by posturing as the protector
of Indias poor and by convincing Indias elite that
the Congress, because of its association with the independence
struggle and ability to maneuver with the Stalinist Communist
Parties, was the best vehicle through which to contend with growing
popular social discontent.
It was during this period that Indira Gandhi and her advisors
coined the Garibi Hatao slogan and utilized it in gaining
an overwhelming electoral victory in the 1971 parliamentary elections.
The slogan was not simply propaganda. Gandhi did introduce
a series of popular reforms such as bank nationalization, increasing
the budgetary allocation for the poor, and stripping Indias
former princely rulers of their state stipends.
But rather than financing her anti-poverty measures through
income redistribution by taxing the wealthy, she resorted to deficit
financing, much of it made possible through an expansion of the
money supply. In other words, Gandhi sought not to antagonize
the partys capitalist patrons, while at the same time attempting
to placate Indias toilers.
The purchasing power transferred to the poor was not matched
by an increase in grain supply, leading to soaring price inflation
and grain hoarding by merchants. Then in 1973, Indias economy
was hit by the world oil price shock.
By 1974, Indira Gandhi was forced to turn to the International
Monetary Fund (IMF) for a rescue-loan.
The Indian economy was thus in grave crisis by 1974-75, fueling
an explosive eruption of the class struggle which increasingly
turned against the Congress government itself. A strike wave culminated
in a weeks-long nationwide railway strike that at its height involved
more than a million workers.
Although Gandhi was able to successful break the strike by
mobilizing the army, her government continued to be challenged
form both the left and right. In 1975 and with the support of
the Stalinist Communist Party of India, she declared the Emergency,
under which basic democratic rights were suspended, the working
class ruthlessly suppressed, and more than 100,000 opponents of
the government jailed.
Coincident with the turn to the IMF and imposition of authoritarian
rule, Gandhi and the Congress leadership thought it politic to
drop Garibi Hatao as a central slogan.
Thirty years on, it can be safely said that UPA government
will not be able to contain the growth of explosive class antagonisms
by reviving a discredited populist campaign slogan.
See Also:
Indias prime minister pledges to
accelerate neo-liberal reform
[21 October 2006]
Kashmir earthquake survivors face another
freezing winter without adequate shelter
[12 October 2006]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |