Bengals
plunder gifted the British Industrial Revolution’
Who would have believed that
one of Indias least industrialised states today, West Bengal, was the ignition of the late 18th century
Industrial Revolution in Great Britain Nobody talks about how Bengal fired up
this turning point in the West.
From early 17th century, India had a superior
cotton manufacturing industry with dye technology, mechanical devices and
elaborate division of labour among specialised craftspeople. Indian cotton was
so popular among all classes of British women that English silk and wool
weavers felt threatened and rioted. So, by 1725, Britain banned Indian
textiles. But the demand for Indian fabrics continued. This stimulated the
mechanisation of Britains textile industry.
Heres how Bengal fits in. The East India
Company defeated undivided Bengals Nawab Siraj-ud-Daulah in the Battle of
Plassey in June 1757, as the Nawabs commander-in-chief, Mir Jafar, betrayed
him. This spurred British domination over India. American historian Brooke
Adams has recorded that the Bengal plunder from the Nawabs treasury was so
excessive that it fuelled Britains Industrial Revolution from 1760 and changed
the worlds lifestyle forever.
(from Shombit Sengupta | Shombit Sengupta | Updated: Feb 8 2010, 01:18am hrs)
The conquerors remitted an estimated 1 billion
to Britain. Robert Clive, who led troops against the Nawab, collected 2.5
million for the East India Company and 2,34,000 for himself. His colleague
William Watts grabbed 1,14,000. To put these figures in perspective, an annual
income of 800 was considered sufficient for luxurious living by British
nobleman of those days.
So, says history, the plunder of Bengal post
the Battle of Plassey sparked the Industrial Revolution, which rapidly
auto-mechanised the British textile industry. The inventions between 1764 and
1785 were the spinning jenny by Hargreaves, the water frame by Arkwight, the
mule by Crompton and the powerloom by Cartwright. John Kays had invented the
flying shuttle and coal began to replace wood in smelting, while in 1768 Watt
matured the steam engine.
The spoils from Bengal boosted Britains
economy, but its fallout was de-industrialisation for India. Once England
established industrial capital, it needed markets for selling its products. It
was again Bengal, the first Indian region the British colonised, that was
forced to absorb these goods so England could sustain its Industrial
Revolution. The drain of wealth into Britain destroyed Indias industries, and
impoverishment led to a string of famines. Historian RC Dutt writes, The people
of Bengal had been used to tyranny, but had never lived under an oppression so
far reaching in its effects, extending to every village market and every
manufacturers loom. They ... had never suffered from a system which touched
their trades, their occupations, their lives so closely. The springs of their
industry were stopped; the sources of their wealth dried up. This domineering
British control pushed India hundreds of years behind in economic development.
Those struggling times made our independence
movement look like momentary politics. The call to abandon British manufactured
products, make handloom cloth or get salt from the sea without
industrialisation once again instigated de-industrialisation. Can this be
considered a vision for India or was it just a political shock factor of that
time India today is growing with industrialisation fuelled by foreign
investment from the West. This is changing the countrys economic perspective
for the better. This development is totally opposite to both Indias
de-industrialisation post-1760 and the independence movements methods before
1947.
Not only did the British plunder Bengal in
1757, they created two blunders we still continue to suffer from. First, their
divide-and-rule policy created fissions between Hindus and Muslims in Bengal,
which persist in pockets throughout India today. Secondly, they divided Bengal
into East Pakistan and West Bengal, aside, of course, from creating West
Pakistan too. From 1947, up to 1970, five million people were displaced from
East Bengal. West Bengal is yet to recover from displacement, which continues
till today.
My family fell victim to this political chaos
and had to abandon land holdings and prosperity in East Pakistan. My father,
his widowed mother and 10 siblings came to squat on a piece of land with other
refugees 30 km from Kolkata. Economists say West Bengal ranks third among
states in the number of small retail shops--4.5 million. An estimated 20
million are directly dependent on these small shops. I can vouch for this.
Every time I return to my erstwhile refugee colony, my childhood friends have
expanded a section of their house to set up a small store as they have no other
job opportunity there.
The most frightening part of my refugee colony
childhood was the arrival of the land tax man. Hed go around tom-tomming a
drum, alerting and threatening people to pay land tax on time, or else face
forfeiture of their houses. Our thatched roof, bamboo wall, mud floor house was
small, but at least it was better than the tents the other refugees lived in.
My grandmother Nalini Bala would console me in this nightmare. I recently heard
from my father that the West Bengal government subsequently regularised the
squatters colony and gave free land rights to refugees where their houses
stood. My pleasure in owning this miniscule piece of land is more than having a
farmhouse in California. It must have been the same for landless farmers who
were given land for free. But nobody had taught them the value of
industrialisation, so these landowners cannot understand why suddenly their
land is required for industrial development. People have not been educated on
the need for a balance between agriculture and industry. Without having their
buy-in, its difficult to have industrialisation, so West Bengals livelihood
continues to be small retail stores.
After economic liberalisation in 1991, while
India flourished, Bengal languished. With no industry, locals fight each other
for power and money. The central subject today is who will come to power, not
how to industrialise the state or educate the masses for industrialisation.
As Bengal still reels under the ghost of the
1757 British plunder, only an evangeIist, a thinker and implementer can preach
to the masses the value of bringing a balance between agriculture and industry
to change the states economy beyond any political manifestation.
Shombit Sengupta is an international creative
business strategy consultant to top managements. Reach him at
www.shininguniverse.com
***
··· ··· ·-
India: How a rich nation became poor
and will be rich again
|
March 19, 2007 - 12:38
(Developing Cultures : Case
Studies, co-edited by Peter Berger and Laurence Harrison, Routledge, 2005.)
Does 'culture' in some way help to explain the fact that
the same Indian economy that was stagnating for the first fifty years of the
20th century began to grow at a respectable clip after 1980 and was amongst the
fastest growing in the world by the end of the century?
Consider the following hundred year trend: between 1900 and
1950, the Indian economy grew on the average 0.8 percent a year; but the
population also grew at about the same rate; thus, net growth in income per
capita was nil and we rightly called our colonial economy stagnant. After
Independence, economic growth picked up to 3.5 percent between 1950 and 1980,
but so did population growth (to 2.2 percent); hence the net affect on income
was 1.3 percent per capita, and this is what we mournfully referred to as “the
Hindu rate of growth.” Things began to change with modest liberalization in the
eighties when annual economic growth rose to 5.6 percent. This happy trend
continued in the reform decade of the nineties when growth averaged 6.2 percent
a year, while population slowed to 1.8 percent; thus, per capita income rose by
a decent 4.4 percent a year.
TABLE: INDIAN GROWTH 1900-2000
Colonial Post-Independence Reform Period
|
1900-1950 |
1950-1980 |
1981-1990 |
1991-2000 |
GDP
growth |
0.8 |
3.5 |
5.6 |
6.2 |
Per
capita growth |
0 |
1.3 |
3.5 |
4.4 |
Sources: 1900-1990: Angus Maddison (1995), Monitoring the
World Economy, 1820-1992 (Paris:OECD); 1990-2000: World Bank/IMF. Although 1991
is the celebrated turning point of India's economic reforms, modest and
significant reforms began in the 1980s as I explain below.
As a benchmark, recall that the West's industrial
revolution took place at a 3 percent GDP growth and 1.1 percent per capita
income growth after 1820. To appreciate the magnitude of the Indian change
after 1980, let me illustrate: If India's per capita GDP had continued growing
at the pre-1980 level, then its income would have reached present American
capita income levels only by 2250; but if it continues to grow at the post-1980
rate then it will reach those levels by 2066: a gain of 184 years!
How does one begin to explain India's economic performance
over the past hundred years? The Indian nationalist blames the first fifty
years' stagnation on British colonialism. But a trade economist will counter
this by showing that the world economy was also stagnant in the first half of
the 20th century (especially after World War I) when world per capita GDP grew
annually at just under one percent.2 The main culprits, he would
say, were conflict and autarky. Disgraceful protectionism by most governments
between the Wars slowed both the world and the Indian economy.
Although the Indian economy picked up after 1950, the
neoclassical economist would argue that it performed below the world economy,
which experienced a “golden age” driven by trade expansion until 1971. Like the
rest of the Third World India did not benefit from global trade expansion
because it had closed its economy and pursued 'import substitution'. Moreover, Nehru's
socialism had shackled the economy with fierce controls on the private sector,
pejoratively called 'Licence Raj'; hence its annual GDP growth was 1.5
percentage points below even the Third World average between 1950 and 1980.3
This changed dramatically with modest liberal reforms in
the 1980s and more sweeping ones in the 1990s as the Indian economy integrated
with the world. In those twenty years it not only outperformed the world
economy significantly but it was amongst the fastest in the world.4Thus,
gradual technological diffusion, rising capital accumulation and productivity,
and gradual education expansion help economists to explain a good deal of the
story. There is also the value of time and accumulated learning through time.
“Collective learning” is Hayek's term, and he applied it to the cumulative
experience that generations build up which is embodied in the language, the
technology, and the way of doing things.5
But economic explanations are not enough. That India
adopted democracy in 1950 before capitalism (in 1991) is also significant
because democracy's redistributive pressures, such as free power to farmers and
other subsidies, have dampened growth and also explain why India's reform
process has been so painfully slow. Economists also find it puzzling why the
liberal institutions of the British Raj did not engender faster growth during
the colonial years. The rule of law, the relative peace of Pax Brittanica, a
non-dirigiste administration, the railways and canals—all these were market
friendly moves, after all.
I believe that national confidence also plays an important
role. The more damaging impact of colonialism may well have been to Indian
minds—it created an inferiority complex from which they have only recently
recovered. Douglass North has rightly emphasized the importance of beliefs.6
Businessmen understand the value of confidence in entrepreneurial success and
in creating a climate for investment; Historians too emphasize the power of
self-belief in national success--Roman history and Britain's rise in the 19th
century are examples of this. After Independence, India's confidence certainly
rose, especially as democracy took root, but flawed economic institutions of
Nehruvian socialism damaged that confidence. Once these socialist institutions
began to be replaced by capitalist ones in the Reform period, confidence
returned and young Indian minds finally became decolonized. I traveled
extensively across India in the 1990's when I discovered this changed mood, and
I think it also explains the current economic success.7
I shall now amplify my arguments by taking the reader on a
galloping tour of Indian economic history. From this story I shall draw lessons
about the role of institutions and culture in development. En passant, I shall
touch upon the great questions of Indian history: did the British impoverish
India? Why didn't the railways engender an industrial revolution? Did Nehru's
socialism dampen India's progress? What is the consequence of democracy
preceding capitalism?
Let's begin with the Mughals
India's nationalist historians have portrayed its
pre-colonial economy as a golden age of prosperity, and this fabulous wealth
set the Europeans on their great voyages of discovery.8 During the
Mughal Empire at the end of the 16th century, India's wealth did indeed sustain
more than 100 million people. With plenty of arable land, its agriculture was
certainly as productive as Western Europe's, and even the subsistence-oriented
peasant got a decent return.9 India also had a large, skilled
workforce that produced not only cotton but also luxuries for the aristocracy.
Consequently, the economy produced a large financial surplus, which was used to
support the growing Mughal Empire and finance spectacular monuments like the
Taj Mahal.10
In 1497, the Portuguese sent Vasco da Gama with a flotilla
of four ships to find India's wealth. But the two-year voyage was not a
commercial success and the Indians were not interested in European clothes and
goods for they made far ones in India. But Da Gama told King Manuel of Portugal
of large cities, large buildings and rivers, and great populations. He spoke
about spices and jewels, precious stones and “mines of gold.” He believed that
he had found India's legendary wealth.11
It took the English a hundred years to discover this
wealth. Initially, they came to plunder but soon discovered the rewards of
trade. They found that India produced the world's best cotton yarn and textiles
and in enormous quantities.12 What the Indians wanted in exchange
from the Europeans was gold and silver, for which they had an insatiable
appetite. Hence, there was a constant flow of gold to India, which absorbed a
good deal of the bullion mined by the Spaniards in the New World. Having
learned about cotton textiles from India, the English turned the tables, and
brought an industrial revolution to Britain, but destroyed the lives of
millions of Indian weavers.
India was a leading manufacturer in the 18th century
India was a leading manufacturing country in the world in
the early 18th century. It had 22.6 percent share of the world's GDP, which
came down to around 16 percent by 1820, closer to its share of world
population.13 It had a developed banking system and vigorous
merchant capital, with a network of agents, brokers and middlemen. Given the
enormous financial surplus, a skilled artisan class, large exports, plenty of
arable land and reasonable productivity, the question is why didn't a modern
industrial economy emerge in India? Instead, why did India become impoverished?
Despite a dynamic and a growing commercial sector which
responded to market forces and extensive foreign trade, the truth is that 18th
century India was significantly behind Western Europe in technology,
institutions and ideas. Neither an agricultural revolution, nor a scientific
revolution had occurred, and in the long run the manual skill of the Indian
artisan could be no substitute for technological progress,”14 and
this would have needed new attitudes. Notwithstanding the surplus and the
trade, mid-eighteenth India had a “per capita product perhaps two-thirds of
that in England and France.”15
There is no easy answer to the problem that the country was
prosperous and the people were poor. One explanation is that even in the 18th
century India had a large population and plenty of cheap labor. Prosperity
comes with rising productivity and a rise in productivity depends on
technology. When the supply of labor is elastic, it is more economical to hire
people than to invest in machines. Hence, an Englishman observed in 1807, “In
India it is seldom that an attempt is made to accomplish anything by machinery
that can be performed by human labour.”16 There is no easy answer to
the problem that the country was prosperous and the people were poor. One
explanation is that even in the 18 century India had a large population and
plenty of cheap labor. Prosperity comes with rising productivity and a rise in
productivity depends on technology. When the supply of labor is elastic, it is
more economical to hire people than to invest in machines. Hence, an Englishman
observed in 1807, “In India it is seldom that an attempt is made to accomplish
anything by machinery that can be performed by human labour.”
Did the British Raj impoverish India?
India's nationalist historians have blamed the British Raj
for India's poverty. The classic nationalist case is that India had been rich
before the British came and colonialism weakened agriculture and
“deindustrialized” India, throwing millions of artisans out of work. Britain's
trade policies encouraged the import of manufactures and the export of raw
materials; finally, it drained the wealth of India by transferring its capital
to Britain.
Nationalists claimed that Lancashire's new textile mills
crushed India's handloom textile industry and threw millions of weavers out of
work. India's textile exports plunged from a leadership position before the
start of the Britain's Industrial Revolution to a fraction. The indigenous
banking system, which financed these exports, was also destroyed. Since the
colonial government did not erect tariff barriers, Indian consumers shifted to
cheaper English mill-made cloth and millions of handloom workers where left in
misery. British colonial rule “de-industrialised” India (a favorite nationalist
phrase) and from an exporter of textiles, India became an exporter of raw
cotton.17
Britain also changed the old land revenue system to the
disadvantage of the farmer, who had to now pay revenue whether or not the
monsoon failed. This led to famines. The worst one in 1896-97 affected 96
million lives and killed an estimated 5 million people. Although the railways
helped in the trade of food crops, the enlarged national market sucked away the
peasant's surplus, which he had earlier stored for the bad years. Moreover, the
British government transferred its surplus revenues back to England. Since
India consistently exported more then she imported in the second half of the
19th century and early 20th century, Britain used India's trade surplus to
finance her own trade deficit with the rest of the world, to pay for her
exports to India, and for capital repayments in London. This represented a
massive drain of India's wealth.18
In recent years some historians have challenged this
nationalist picture. They have argued that Indian industry's decline in the
19th century was caused by technology. The machines of Britain's industrial
revolution wiped out Indian textiles, in the same way that traditional handmade
textiles disappeared in Europe and the rest of the world. Fifty years later
Indian textile mills would have destroyed them. India's weavers were, thus, the
victims of technological obsolescence.19
They also found that the land tax had not been
exorbitant—by 1900 it was only 5 percent of the agricultural output or half the
average per capita tax burden. There had been a “drain of wealth”, but it was
only about 1.5 percent of GNP every year. The revisionist historians argued
that India's payments to Britain were for real military and civilian services
and to service capital investments. Also, the overhead cost of the British
establishment—the so called “home charges”—was in fact quite small.20
If India had its own army and navy it would have spent more. True, India did
have a balance of payments surplus, which Britain used to finance part of her
deficit, but India was compensated by the import of gold and silver that went
into private Indian hands.
India begins to re-industrize
Indian entrepreneurs began to set up their own modern
textile mills after 1850 and very slowly began to recapture the domestic
market. In 1896, Indian mills supplied 8% of the total cloth consumed in India;
in 1913, 20%; in 1936, 62%; and by 1945, 76%.21 Although India did
not participate in global trade expansion between 1870 and 1913, Indian
businessmen made large profits during the First World War, which they
reinvested in after the war. Thus, India's manufacturing output grew 5.6
percent per year between 1913-38, well above the world average of 3.3 percent.”
22The British government finally provided tariff protection from the
1920s, which helped industrialists to expand and diversify.
By Independence in 1947, Indian entrepreneurs were strong
and in a position to buy out the businesses of the departing British.
Industry's share in India's GNP had doubled from 3.8 percent (in 1913) to 7.5
percent (in 1947), and the share of manufactures in her exports rose from 22.4
percent (in 1913) to 30 percent (in 1947).
Why didn't an industrial revolution occur?
One of the intriguing questions of history is why India
failed to create an industrial revolution. Karl Marx predicted that the
railways would transform India and usher in an industrial revolution. Indeed,
by the First World War, some thought that it was ready to take-off. By 1914,
India had the third largest railway network, the world's largest jute
manufacturing industry, the fourth largest cotton textile industry, the largest
canal system, and 2.5 percent of world trade.23 Although a colony,
it had a very liberal regulatory regime--far more investor friendly than the
one that replaced it after Independence—and after the 1920s the infant industry
was also favored by tariffs. It had a merchant class hungry to become
industrialists. Industrialization did, in fact, pick up after the War and
industry's share in national output doubled. But it was not enough to broadly
transform an agricultural society. Modern industry employed only 2.5 million
people out of population of 350 million.
Amiya Kumar Bagchi, the Marxist economist, suggests that
the reason was the lack of effective demand during the colonial period, and
this limited business opportunity. Indians were just too poor to buy modern
goods and services.24 If the domestic Indian market was small,
couldn't the entrepreneur have supplemented it by producing for export? Morris
D. Morris, blames supply constraints.25 An Indian entrepreneur was
uncompetitive because of a shortage of technology, skilled labor, and
capital—all of which raised his cost of his production. The historian, Rajat
Ray, argues that Indian businessmen did not export because they made inferior
products, unacceptable to the world market. In his view, technological
backwardness was the single biggest failing.26 But surely, they
could have imported technology, as Jamshedji Tata, G.D. Birla, and others did.
Unlike nationalist historians, I do not think there was a
British conspiracy to deliberately under-invest in India or sabotage Indian
business interests. Bombay's textile mills were built with the credit,
technical assistance and machines from Britain although they were a competitive
threat to the Manchester's mills. I believe the industrial revolution did not
occur because Indian agriculture remained stagnant, and you cannot have an
industrial revolution without an agricultural surplus or the means to feed a
rapidly growing urban population; second, the international trading environment
turned hostile with protectionism after the First World War, followed by the
Depression; third, the colonial government did not educate the masses, unlike
the Japanese state; finally, a colonial mindset pervaded the Indian middle
class--even the hardiest potential entrepreneur lacks confidence when he is
politically enslaved.
What is the verdict on British rule?
Did the British impoverish India? There is no question that
in the 18th century it plundered and looted India's wealth, as all conquerors
have done in history. But did it create on-going institutions that were to
India's detriment? This has to do with the nature and theory of colonialism.
True, its Industrial Revolution threw millions of weavers out of work, but it
would have happened any way when the new technology reached India. British
government policy could have cushioned the impact by erecting trade barriers
and saved enormous amount of human suffering, but protecting handlooms would
have been a temporary palliative.
Odd as it may seem, I believe that Britain did not
“exploit” India enough. Had it made the massive investments in India that it
did in the Americas, India would have become more prosperous and a much bigger
market for British goods. A richer India would have been a better customer, a
better supplier, and a firmer basis of Empire.27 Britain's main
failure was not to educate the Indian masses—hence 83 percent of Indians were
illiterate at Independence. Britain's education system in India produced only a
thin upper crust of extremely well educated Indians, while the masses remained
illiterate.28
Although Britain could not lift Indians out of poverty, nor
avert famines, it did give India the institutions of democracy--the rule of
law, an independent judiciary and a free press. It built railways, canals, and
harbors. It gave India almost a hundred years of peace—the Pax Britannica.
Although it gave modern values and institutions, it did not interfere with its
ancient traditions and religion. Hence, India has preserved its spiritual
heritage and the old way of life continues. Many despair over the divisiveness
of caste, but the hold of the Indian way of life is also a bulwark against the
onslaught of the global culture.
Independence and 'License Raj'
After Independence, democracy took root in India and
gradually the masses acquired a stake in the system, periodically electing
representatives even from the lowest castes. The rulers also adopted a Fabian
socialist economic path, and Indians did not turn to capitalism until 1991,
although there was modest liberalization of the economy in the 1980s. Thus,
India embraced democracy before capitalism, which makes its journey to
modernity unique and explains a good deal.
Jawaharlal Nehru and his planners did not trust private
entrepreneurs; so they made the state the entrepreneur, and not surprisingly,
they failed to create an industrial revolution. Instead, India experienced an
agricultural revolution in the early 1970s. It thus had an important
pre-condition for the industrial revolution—an agricultural surplus—but the
industrial take-off eluded it. Its investment rate also rose from 6 percent to
well over 20 per cent, and yet it did not engender a take-off. Why?
I think there were at least six things wrong with India's
mantra: one, it adopted an inward-looking, import-substituting path rather than
an outward-looking, export-promoting route; it thus denied itself a share in
world trade and the prosperity that trade brought in the post-War era. Two, it
set up a massive, inefficient, and monopolistic public sector to which it
denied autonomy of working; hence, its investments were not productive and it
had a poor capital-output ratio. Three, it over-regulated private enterprise
with the worst controls in the world, and this diminished competition in the
market; four, it discouraged foreign capital and denied itself the benefits of
technology and world class competition. Five, it pampered organized labor to
the point that it has extremely low productivity. Six, it ignored the education
of its children.
Nehru's strategic planner, P.C. Mahalanobis, made two wrong
assumptions. He assumed that there were no opportunities for rapid export
expansion in the 1950s, and this turned out to be wrong. India discovered that
tiny Hong Kong could earn more from its exports than the whole of India, as
India's share of world trade declined from 2.2 percent in 1947 to 0.5 percent
in 1990. He also assumed that competition was wasteful, and this was also a
flawed idea because there can be little improvement in productivity without it.
Even more damaging were the creeping controls on the
private sector. The most bizarre was the licensing system. It began with the
Industrial Licensing Act of 1951, which required an entrepreneur to get a
license to set up a new unit, to expand it, or change the product mix. A huge
number of untrained clerks, engineers, bureaucrats at the Directorate General
of Technical Development, operating on the basis of inadequate information
vetted thousands of applications on an ad hoc basis. These low level
functionaries took months in the futile, micro-review of an application and
finally sent it for approval to the administrative ministry. The ministry again
lost months reviewing the same data before it sent the application to an
inter-ministerial licensing committee. After the Minister's approval, the
investor had to seek approval for the import of machinery from the capital
goods licensing committee. If finance was needed from a State financial
institution, the same scrutiny had to be repeated afresh. The result was
enormous delays, sometimes lasting years with staggering opportunities for
corruption.
Large business houses set up parallel bureaucracies in
Delhi, to follow up on their files, organize bribes, and win licenses. If the
entrepreneur did finally get started and made a success of his enterprise, he
was again in trouble. It was an offence punishable under the law to manufacture
beyond the capacity granted by the license. India became the only country in
the world where the production of sorely needed goods sorely was punishable by
law.29
The system ended in thwarting competition, entrepreneurship
and growth, without achieving any of its social objectives. It fostered
monopolies and it proliferated uneconomic-size plants in remote, uncompetitive
locations, employing second-rate technology. Bureaucrats who did not have a
clue about the basics of running a business made the decisions on the choice of
technology, the size and location of plants.
Although it was becoming clear that India was on the wrong
path by the late sixties, instead of changing course after Nehru, Indira Gandhi
introduced more controls. She nationalized banks, discouraged foreign
investment, and placed more hurdles before domestic enterprise. Hence,
industrial growth plunged from 7.7 per cent a year between 1951-1965 to 4.0 per
cent between 1966-1980. Productivity of Indian manufacturing declined half a
percent a year from 1960 to 1985.30
“1966-1980 is effectively the dark period for the Indian
economy.”31. It is harder to blame Nehru for adopting the economic
wrong model for socialism was the wisdom of his age and dozens of economists
visited India and hailed his bold experiment.32 It is right to blame
Indira Gandhi, for by then Japan's miracle was evident, and Korea and Taiwan
were following its footsteps. However, ideology is only one part of the story.
An important reason for non-performance was poor implementation. Even Nehru's
socialism could have delivered more and did not have to degenerate into
“License Raj”.
India after the Reforms
Although there was modest liberalization in the 1980s, the
decisive turning point came in July 1991 when the minority government of
Narasimha Rao announced sweeping reforms. It opened the economy to foreign
investment and trade; it dismantled import controls, lowered customs duties,
devalued the currency and made the rupee convertible on the trade account; it
virtually abolished licensing controls on private investment, dropped tax rates
and broke public sector monopolies. As a result growth rose to 7.5 percent a
year for three years in a row in the mid-nineties, inflation came down from 13
percent to 6 percent by 1993, exchange reserves shot up from $1 billion to $20
billion by 1993, and had crossed $100 billion by end 2003. This was as
important a turning point as Deng's revolution in China in December 1978.
Surprisingly, the elected coalition governments that succeeded Rao continued
the reform process, and despite its slow, incremental pace, it has made India
one of the fastest growing major economies in the world.33
Indians have traditionally not accorded a high place to
making money. Hence, the merchant or bania is placed third in the four-caste
hierarchy, behind the brahmin and the kshatriya, and only a step ahead of the
laboring shudra. After the economic reforms making money became increasingly
respectable and the sons of brahmins and kshatriyas began to get MBAs and
wanted to become entrepreneurs. The business pages of newspapers became
livelier; chief ministers in the states scrambled for private investment;
judges became more even-handed in industrial disputes. As a result, India is in
the midst of a social revolution rivalled, perhaps, only by the ascent of Japan's
merchant class during the 1968 Meiji Restoration.
There has also been mental revolution. And a changed
attitude to English illustrates this new mindset. Ever since the British left
Indians constantly carped against the English language. But in the 1990s this
carping seemed to die, and quietly, without ceremony English became one of the
Indian languages. English lost its colonial stigma, oddly enough, around the
time that the Hindu nationalists came to power. Young Indians in the new middle
class think of English as a skill, like Windows. This is why Hinglish (Hindi
mixed with English) is spreading. Encouraged by flourishing private television
channels and supported by their advertisers, the newly emerging middle classes
avidly embrace this uninhibited hybrid of Hindi and English, and this popular
idiom of the bazaar is rushing down the socio-economic ladder. The purists
naturally disapprove, but people are more comfortable and accepting of it today
because Indians are more relaxed and confident as a people. Their minds have
become decolonized.
The world, meanwhile, also changed from an industrial to
the information economy, and it seemed to speak to India's advantage,
symbolized by its success in software and business process outsourcing. These
“Bangalores” have given Indians confidence and they reflect a new social
contract. The new entrepreneurs did not inherit wealth; they have risen on the
back of their talent, hard work, and professional skills. A new self-belief has
emerged among urban youth that doesn't need approval from others, especially
from the West. Music composers like A.R. Rehman display an exuberant
nonchalance, as do the new young Bollywood pop stars. So do new fiction writers
like Arundhati Roy, designers of fashion clothes, beauty queens and cricket
stars.
Some lessons
Neoclassical economic theory explains a great deal about
why the Indian economy that was stagnating in the first half of the 20th
century went on to become one of the fastest growing by the end of the century.
It tells us, for example, that disgraceful protectionism by governments in the
inter-war years in the first half of the 20th century dampened world trade and
slowed down the world and the Indian economies. It also explains why India
performed below the world average between 1950-1980: thinking that trade had
impoverished her in the colonial period, India closed its economy and denied
itself the fruits of a “golden period” in world trade between 1950 and 1970;
“License Raj” and other institutions of Nehru's socialism also suppressed
growth. Finally, neoclassical economics explains how by dismantling controls
and integrating the economy with the global economy, the Indian economy has
become more competitive and is growing rapidly after the reforms.
But this is not the whole story, and we must turn to
institutions and attitudes to understand the incentive structure of the Indian
society.60 Indians blame colonialism for impoverishing them. But we have seen
that colonialism is a more complex tale. For example, it did not 'de-industrialize'
India as the nationalists argued; handloom textiles died in India (and the
world) because of technological obsolescence. Colonialism's bigger damage was
to the loss of Indian confidence, which inhibited Indian entrepreneurs. This
confidence began to grow with Gandhi's freedom movement in the first half of
the 20th century, and industrialization did pick up. However, its impact on
society was insufficient to create an industrial revolution.
After Independence, India's confidence certainly rose as
democracy took root, but flawed economic institutions of Nehruvian socialism
acted as a damper. Once these socialist institutions began to be replaced by
capitalist ones in the Reform period, self-assurance returned to the Indian
marketplace. Today's mood in India is opposite to what existed a hundred years
ago. Insecurity and inferiority filled colonial India, which is all too
apparent in the writings of Bengali writers of the 19th century, such as Bankim
Chandra Chatterji. Today, writers like Salman Rushdie and Arundhati Roy exhibit
a matter of fact assuredness (almost a cool) that is a reflection of changed
national mindset.
India embraced democracy first and capitalism afterwards
and this has made a difference. India became a full-fledged democracy in 1950,
with universal suffrage and extensive human rights, but it was not until 1991
that it opened up to the free play of market forces. For the rest of the world
it has been the other way around. In the West, suffrage was extended gradually
in the last century, and as mass political parties developed, democracy began
to impinge on capitalist institutions and practices.
India's democracy has an overwhelming majority of poor
voters--70 per cent still live in rural areas; organized labor constitutes less
than 10 per cent of total labor; and the middle class is around 20 per cent of
the population. Because of democratic pressures, India tried to redistribute
the pie before it was baked. It set up intricate regulatory networks before the
private economy had transformed a rural into an industrial society. It began to
think in terms of “welfare” before there were welfare-generating jobs. The
result, as we have seen, was a throttling of enterprise, slow growth, and
missed opportunities. It is the price India has paid for having democracy
before capitalism—or rather too much democracy and not enough capitalism.
Since politics is a short run game and growth is a long run
one there will never be a situation that is completely optimal. This explains
why Indian politicians do not bother about education because results take a
long time to come. When a politician promises rice for two rupees a kilo when
it costs five rupees in the market, he wins the election. Since the mid-1960s
politicians have vigorously competed in giving away free goods and services to
voters. When politicians do that, where is the money to come for creating
schools or improving old ones? India's damaging fiscal deficit (around 10
percent of GDP for the center and states combined) is a testimonial to the
downside of competitive politics, and it teaches that the demand for publicly
provided goods and services is insatiable in a democracy.
But India's problems of governance go far beyond the need
to appease interests. The weakening of its democratic institutions since Indira
Gandhi in the 1970s has caused widespread corruption, political violence,
populist giveaways, and a paralysis of problem solving. Conspicuously absent
are disciplined party organizations, which help leaders in other democracies to
mobilize support for specific programs. Hence, there is an excessive reliance
on the personal appeal of individual leaders to win elections. When in power
leaders tend to take the easy way out, which is not to act at all.
Will capitalism, and its cousin globalization succeed in
establishing a comfortable place for themselves in India? The answer depends on
their ability to deliver prosperity broadly. It also depends on leaders in the
government and in business to champion the classic liberal premises of free trade
and competition. It needs leaders to come out say that (1) some people will not
fare as well in the competitive market place; (2) the winners will far
outnumber the losers; (2) capitalist democracy is the best arrangement we have
found; (4) globalization is not only a good thing, it is a great leap forward
in history. My fear is that capitalism's success in India is threatened not so
much by the leftists or protectionists but by the timidity of its defenders.
The curious historic inversion between democracy and
capitalism means that India's path into the future is evolving through a daily
dialogue between the conservative forces of caste, religion and the village,
the leftist and Nehruvian socialist forces which dominated the intellectual
life of the country for 40 years, and the new forces of global capitalism.
These “million negotiations of democracy” slow down the pace of economic
reforms, but they also mean that India might have a more stable, peaceful, and
negotiated transition into the future than say China. It might also avoid some
of the deleterious side effects of an unprepared capitalist society, such as
Russia. Although slower, India is more likely to preserve its way of life and
it's civilization of diversity, tolerance, and spirituality against the
onslaught of the global culture.
Does culture matter?
Cultural explanations have been a vigorous industry in
India for more than a hundred years. Colonial officials routinely blamed
India's poverty on the otherworldly spirituality of Hindu life and its
fatalistic beliefs. Max Weber attributed the absence of development to the
caste system. Gunnar Myrdal, the Swedish economist, found that India's social
system and attitudes were an important cause of its “low level equilibrium” of
low productivity, primitive production techniques, and low levels of living.34
Deepak Lal, another economist, similarly explained economic
stagnation in a low level “Hindu equilibrium” around the caste system, which
bought stability in the context of political warfare, monsoon failure and
climatic uncertainty, labor shortage, and an under-valued merchant class.35
David Landes, the historian, blames the enervating heat, which is deleterious
to work. For this reason, rich countries lie in temperate zones and the poor in
the tropics and semi-tropics.36
While institutions and culture do matter undoubtedly, we
are all skeptical of national stereotypes and easy cultural explanations of the
sort that were common hundred years ago. In my experience, successful Hindu
entrepreneurs can be both extremely otherworldly in religion and aggressive in
business. The Indian farmer, despite being caught in the caste system, responds
quickly to market based incentives, as the Green Revolution testifies.
Brahmins, who are supposed to have contempt for manual labor, will plough their
land vigorously if they have to. And Rajput Thakurs, who never worked for a
living, will shed their feudal ways for the sake of a commercial opportunity.
Moreover, there are substantial non-Hindus in India and these communities had
also been stuck in the same rut of stagnation. Other Asian countries were
equally backward, but they had no “Hindu equilibrium” to explain away their
stagnation. Finally, the same Indians when they migrate to other countries
perform better.
Thus, I am uncomfortable with the “otherworldly values of
the Hindus” or the “immobilizing effects of the caste system” and the
“conservative habits of the merchant caste”. I believe that Sir John Hicks'
Economic Principle does trump in most cases. It states that “people would act
economically; when the opportunity of an advantage was presented to them they
would take it.”37 It explains not only the diffusion of the Green
Revolution across India but also the demographic transitions currently underway
in many states.
When seeking an explanation for a nation's wealth and
poverty, my preferred method is to begin with economic factors as proximate
causes that motivate a businessman to invest--the size of the market, the
capability of suppliers, distribution hurdles, and the state of competition. If
this does not satisfy, I seek answers in institutions, some of which are, of
course, intimately tied to culture. I have found that institutions can evolve
rapidly as incentives change in society and can be transferred fairly quickly;
for example, during the 1990s India was able to dismantle many of the
institutions of Nehruvian socialism and replace them with capitalist
institutions. Finally, if none of these factors provide a satisfactory
explanation, then I turn to attitudes and social structure.
I find Deepak Lall's distinction between material and
cosmological beliefs useful.38 The material beliefs of a
civilization are about ways of making a living and are the subject of
economics; cosmological ones are about how to live and are in the realm of
'culture'. The rise of the west was accompanied by a change in both sets of
beliefs, but East Asia's success has needed mainly a change in material
beliefs—it has become prosperous without losing its soul. In other words, it is
possible to modernize without westernizing. Ever since the British Raj material
beliefs have been changing in India unlike our cosmological beliefs.
Our continuing inability to distinguish between the
“modern” and the “western” in India is surely the cause of some of our grief.
If we could only accept that a great deal of modern western culture, especially
its material beliefs, are not the West's property, but are a universal,
critical way of thinking, which belongs to all rational human beings. We would
not waste our energies on swadeshi (protectionism) hindutva (preserving the
ancient Hindu civilization), and futile language debates (“remove English from
primary schools”). The debate between modernisation and westernisation, begun
in early nineteenth century by Ram Mohan Roy, continues to rage in India. At
the root is a fear of the loss of the Indian way of life. The older generation
fears it more than the young, whose minds are more decolonised and who are more
confident in adopting the West's material beliefs without fearing the loss in
its cosmological ones.
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