[《*You have seen many governments come and go. How would you remember this
government? Is there a particular thing that strikes you most about this
government?*

That probably wouldn’t be economics (smiles). It is a government that
divided the country. It is a government that led human rights very
difficult to pursue. It is a government which has taken an interest in who
eats what, and if you eat the wrong thing, then you may not deserve to
live. I think it is the divisiveness of the government which would dominate
my thinking, because it goes so much against my understanding of India. The
neglect of education and healthcare is a mistake, but generating a sense of
hostility to part of the population is more than a mistake. It is evil.》]

https://www.livemint.com/Politics/5kgdVipXXzpAFqvSHPyYsN/Farm-loan-waiver-is-not-as-silly-a-policy-Amartya-Sen.html?fbclid=IwAR2gKd8mAHK8AQNh70MmkfCzPcGeLqM_c45XXQNouR1pdfA2E-l6_AbG6vM

Farm loan waiver is not as silly a policy as you might think: Amartya Sen
Loan waiver is not a completely wrong thing. It has an incentive problem,
but many equality policies have incentive problem, says Amartya Sen.

Last Published: Mon, Jan 07 2019. 09 44 AM IST

Nidheesh M.K. & Sundeep Khanna

Photo: Jithendra M./Mint

Bengaluru: Amartya Sen looms large over our economic and political
discourse. A Nobel laureate and Bharat Ratna awardee, the eminent economist
and philosopher was in Bengaluru over the weekend to join other jury
members of the Infosys Science Foundation that, each year, honours
outstanding contemporary researchers and scientists (Sen is the jury chair
for Humanities). Feisty as ever, Sen answered a range of questions that
Mint threw at him, with his unique combination of wit, intellect and
empathy laced with philosophical humanism.

Edited excerpts:

*Professor, the China-India comparison goes on all the time. But there are
two areas, education and health, where it almost seems like there is no
contest between the two countries. Could you put that in context for us?*

The Chinese had an interest in making sure its economic growth works
through expanding human ability, through being more educated and healthy.
It is old wisdom; you will find that Adam Smith quite extensively discussed
both in Wealth of the Nations and in The Theory of Moral Sentiments.
There’s an intellectual connection there. Smith was the biggest influence
on Marx, and Marx was a big influence on Mao Tse Tung. Mao’s methods and
authoritarianism is something which made people critical of him in China
eventually, but the fact is that his focus on creating economic growth
potential through advancing human capability remains. There are poor people
in China. But you don’t have the kind of difficulty that you have in India
where a poor person doesn’t have a school to go to, doesn’t have a hospital
where he can take his child to, which will provide basic diagnostic and
healthcare. That’s a gigantic thing and I’m afraid we are not going to meet
this bar in any way at all. The main thing is India has never tried to
develop on a solid footing either primary healthcare or primary education.
In the absence of that, you cannot make anything else stand.

*Is that a failing of our early planning process?*

Yes. But it is ultimately a failure of our political process. At the time
of Indian independence, these were concerns that came from different
political sides, and Jawaharlal Nehru certainly cared for the fact that we
need basic education and basic healthcare above all else. Minoo Masani in
his book ,Our India, explained the difference between India’s failure and
success rested on things connected to education and healthcare. There was a
kind of consensus. But by the time India became independent, the political
divisions went in different directions. The whole idea that this could be
done privately is ridiculous. No country has succeeded in doing it. The
basic Adam Smithian understanding is that, ultimately, economic expansion
is dependent on the quality of human ability. And education, healthcare and
social security are central to that. Why Indians have been so negligent on
that, I don’t know. That’s not the old tradition. When Jamshedji Tata
arrived in what we later called Jamshedpur, he looked around and said: I’m
going to put my steel plant here, what do I need? I need schools for
everyone, hospitals for everyone, not just the workers of the steel
factory, everyone who will be living here. So, here’s a private
entrepreneur who right from the beginning understood what the challenge was.

*If it cared to listen, what would you tell this government to do in terms
of both healthcare and education?*

That premise is so unlikely to happen! Before the government, it is also
the media which has to recognize that this is a problem. When Jean Drèze
and I were doing our book, The Uncertain Glory, we were just amazed to see
how little attention bad health and bad education policies get in the
media. And, so, it is to some extent the government’s neglect, but it is
also what the public is interested in. If the public takes no interest in
healthcare, you won’t get healthcare.

*What are your thoughts on farm distress? We have seen the Bharatiya Janata
Party (BJP) losing elections on this issue; yet, we don’t seem to be able
to find a solution to it.*

Farm distress is among many problems, something that we have discussed from
1920s onwards. I don’t take the view of some, saying that the loan waiver
is a completely wrong thing. It has an incentive problem certainly, but
many equality policies do have an incentive problem. Progressive taxation
has an incentive problem. To say that we won’t do progressive taxation, on
grounds that it has an incentive problem would be a huge mistake. Here, the
question is how can you deal with the incentive problem given what your
objectives are.

I grew up in Shantiniketan, surrounded by tribal villages. Between our
house and the rice mill three or four miles away, there was nothing but
paddy fields. These were small plots mostly owned by tribals. Now they are
full of houses, because they got into debt and sold them. I don’t want to
be bourgeois enough to say I object to not being able to see the paddy
field. But the big learning, of course, is that the farmers had to sell
their land, because they were too much into debt. Loan forgiveness is not
as silly a policy as you might think. Those who have got into debt have a
set of problems and it may be their fault in some way. You might take the
Smithsonian, rather moralizing, view. On the other hand, most of them did
nothing to deserve it. They just, given the amount of income they can earn
from their little land, couldn’t maintain it.

*The fundamental problem is that we have way too many people dependent on
agriculture?*

That is one problem certainly and that is connected to the fact that our
employment generation in the manufacturing sector has been poor. It is even
poorer now than it was under the UPA (United Progressive Alliance)
government. The previous Congress government doesn’t deserve much credit
for thinking clearly on education and healthcare, but they did generate
more employment than the present Modi government seems to be doing. In
fact, there seems to be an amazing lack of interest.

*You have seen many governments come and go. How would you remember this
government? Is there a particular thing that strikes you most about this
government?*

That probably wouldn’t be economics (smiles). It is a government that
divided the country. It is a government that led human rights very
difficult to pursue. It is a government which has taken an interest in who
eats what, and if you eat the wrong thing, then you may not deserve to
live. I think it is the divisiveness of the government which would dominate
my thinking, because it goes so much against my understanding of India. The
neglect of education and healthcare is a mistake, but generating a sense of
hostility to part of the population is more than a mistake. It is evil.

*Any two or three recommendations for the next government?*

There are no two or three things. We have to do many different things
together. Whenever someone says what are the two or three things, I say why
two why not 200. I’d like people to recognize that the citizen is a citizen
is a citizen, and that you cannot convert someone into a second-class
citizen. That India is not a communal country, India is for all Indians.
And India is a country which has a huge tradition of toleration and
plurality and we have every reason to be proud of it. And also, I’d be very
interested in science, the role of education and healthcare is part of
science. We have to avoid mistakes, as well as we have to avoid evil.

First Published: Mon, Jan 07 2019. 09 30 AM IST

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