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* Rajeev Srinivasan on how Indians are satisfied with illusions, not
reality.*****

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   *The great Indian rope trick and other illusions of progress.**July 16,
2013 15:37 IST*****

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*Rajeev Srinivasan on how Indians are satisfied with illusions, not reality.
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*Indians live in a state of illusion: they believe there is progress, there
is a democracy, and that the State is a benign mai-baap nanny State. It
turns out that they are wrong on all counts, but apparently this political
and economic theatre is quite enough as anodyne for the long-suffering
ordinary Indian.*****

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*I was impelled to write this after reading ‘The Great Indian Rupee
Trick<http://ramanujapuram.wordpress.com/2013/07/09/the-great-indian-rupee-trick/%20>’
by Krishnara at and a piece in The Economist magazine of June 13, 2011 (Big
Mac index: Value
Meal<http://www.economist.com/news/finance-and-economics/21581733-our-lighthearted-guide-currencies-takes-closer-look-euro-area-value>).
Although the two disagree -- the former suggests the rupee has a long way
left to fall, while the latter suggests that the rupee is the most
undervalued currency around right now -- it is a tribute to the
fecklessness of the Indian government that the rupee has tumbled so far so
fast (from around $1=Rs 45 in 2011 to $1=Rs 61 now, some 30 percent).*****

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*I also happened to leaf through an old issue of National Geographic from
1988 with a story on Kerala, and it mentioned that $1=Rs 12 at that time.
Thus, the rupee has, in about 25 years, lost 80 percent of its value, and
quite a bit of that in the last few years (mostly coinciding with UPA 2).
In simple terms, the fall of the Indian rupee reflects the lack of
competitiveness of the Indian economy.*****

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*The dramatic increase in the current account deficit suggests the same
thing: that there is little India makes that foreigners want; whereas
Indians want to import a lot of things others make. It was blithely
predicted by India’s mandarins that the rupee’s fall would lead to a surge
in its exports, but on the contrary, India’s exports have actually shrunk
by 4.6 percent year to year.*****

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*We don’t need to go far to understand why this has happened: it is because
of pure economic mismanagement. The immense potential of the country and
its people has been wasted -- a colossal crime against the people and
indeed against humanity, which has prevented half a billion people from
clawing their way out of poverty.*****

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*Why have Indians allowed a clutch of clever political entrepreneurs to do
this to them? It must be because Indians are satisfied with delusion (is
that why Bollywood is so big?). They are happy with the illusion of
progress; they are happy to have the illusion of a democratic republic;
they are happy to have the illusion that our wretched are being looked
after. In fact none of these is true, but they happily suspend their
disbelief. They live in a make-believe world.*****

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*The fact is that India is falling further and further behind the rest of
the world. Half the world’s poor, half the world’s blind, half the world’s
sick and malnourished, are in India. Things are not getting better; they
are getting worse by the day. India is regressing rapidly.*****

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*Remember how India was compared to China and other developing nations,
courtesy Goldman Sachs and the convenient BRIC (Brazil, Russia, India,
China) epithet? But have you noticed that these days India is increasingly
bracketed with Africa -- and sometimes contrasted negatively with
sub-Saharan Africa, for instance in malnourishment -- as the last reservoir
of the world’s miseries? China appears to have decisively trounced India in
the race for growth and prosperity.*****

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*There is, some argue, the effect of democracy, as though there were a
democracy penalty. But this is absurd, because India is not a democracy. It
is a hereditary feudal monarchy with a large set of court jesters and other
hangers-on. Parliament is a chimera, or at best a smokescreen. There are
what look like elections, what looks like an assertion of the people’s
will. But this is a hugely expensive, elaborate charade like the Potemkin
villages of Tsarist Russia.*****

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*In fact, Parliament is merely a place to park the hereditary scions of the
ruling castes.** Patrick French’s 2011 research ('The Princely State of
India <http://www.outlookindia.com/article.aspx?269931>', in Outlook magazine,
January 17, 2011) showed that 100 percent of the Congress party’s members
below the age of 35 were sons or daughters of some senior party person.*****

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*Furthermore, Parliament is just a rubber stamp. There is the gigantic Food
Security Bill, which will add many a billion dollars to the nation’s budget
deficit. It was enacted not after parliamentary debate, but as an
ordinance, or executive order.*****

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*Similarly, a few years ago, the ‘nuclear deal’ with the US was signed by
the executive without ever informing Parliament about how much was being
given up in national security in return for virtually nothing.*****

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*Therefore, the Indian Parliament is merely ornamental, and a playground
for the children of political bigwigs. But Indians are under the
comfortable illusion that they live in a parliamentary democracy. Yes, that
and ten rupees will get them a cup of coffee.*****

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*Then there is the fantasy that the Indian State is benign. And that it
looks after its poorest and worst-off. Which is the alleged reason that the
unelected National Advisory Council (a truly motley crew) has rammed
through various hare-brained schemes such as National Rural Employment
Guarantee Act, Right to Education, and the latest turkey, FSB. And what is
the reality with all this spending -- which amounts to hundreds of billions
of dollars? The Indian State is actually a predatory State, the direct
descendant of the colonial construct intended to loot and pillage.*****

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*In a March 23, 2011, article titled 'India can’t fumble its ‘food right’
plan<http://online.wsj.com/article/SB30001424052748704461304576216041457429666.html%20>',
the Wall Street Journal noted that, according to theGlobal Hunger
Index<http://www.ifpri.org/book-8018/ourwork/researcharea/global-hunger-index>,
India is in the category of ‘alarming’ along with Haiti, Bangladesh, Sudan,
Cambodia and Nepal. This is worse than war-ravaged Afghanistan and Iraq. The
only countries were hunger is worse than India are: war-torn Congo, Haiti
and Bangladesh. This is how the UPA has helped the common man?*****

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*Even worse, reporting on a study in the British medical journal Lancet, The
Economist pointed out in February 7, 2011 ('Global Obesity: An expanding
world. How men’s waistlines have grown since
1980<http://www.economist.com/blogs/dailychart/2011/02/global_obesity>')
that there are only three countries in the world where people have grown
thinner in the recent past (ie. 1980-2008): Afghanistan, Congo and India! That
means malnutrition is endemic in India, while much of the rest of the world
struggles with obesity. (Note that Congo and Afghanistan are wretched,
war-torn States).*****

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*A more recent update is even more damning. Quoting the Asian Development
Bank, The Economist of July 6, 2013
('Widefare<http://www.economist.com/news/asia/21580531-asias-emerging-welfare-states-spread-themselves-thinly-widefare>')
points out that of all the welfare states in Asia, India’s is the
worst-performing: it has neither depth nor breadth. That is, neither is the
alleged welfare net reaching a large proportion of the people, nor is the
per-person welfare amount high. Even Pakistan manages to give its welfare
recipients more.*****

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*So this is the reality of the welfare State: yet another figment of your
imagination.*****

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*I will close with a final illusion: that of toilets in trains. Even in
higher-class compartments, if you use the stinking toilets, you will notice
that there is no way you can clean your bottom with dignity. There is a
chained mug and a faucet, thus giving you the idea that you can wash
yourself. Much of the time, there is no water. The rest of the time, you
are frustrated because the chain is just slightly too short -- there is no
way you can wash yourself without twisting yourself into contortions, or
without spilling soiled water all over the toilet floor.*****

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*The bureaucrat who specified the length of that chain -- just three inches
too short -- is a perfect metaphor for India’s ruling classes. They have no
interest in your welfare, only in giving you the frustrating impression
that you can actually accomplish something, which of course you cannot.*****

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