Followers

Monday, February 22, 2016

Gandhi and Ambedkar, a false debate

It is part of a broader political narrative, one from which it cannot be detached and for which it is in fact accountable. More than the intimacy that exists between opposing accounts of them, it is the uncomfortable familiarity among Gandhi’s enemies that needs considering

Enemies often share more than friends, and may even enjoy a closer relationship. This is certainly the case with those would-be rivals who attempt either to oppose or to reconcile Gandhi and Ambedkar, seen as representatives of caste thinking on the one hand and its repudiation on the other. Instructive about this increasingly vocal rivalry, among activists as much as academics, is the fact that neither side questions the pairing of Mahatma and Babasaheb, which serves as a stereotyped way of joining the two in ideological debate. But while such a relationship makes pedagogical sense in a classroom, I want to argue here that it is not true to history, and dangerously misguided in the context of today’s politics.
Those who would reconcile Gandhi and Ambedkar acknowledge their many disagreements, but point out that Babasaheb’s resignation from Nehru’s cabinet, rejection of the Constitution he had played such a large part in drafting and turn to religion brought him closer to the Mahatma, who also placed more emphasis on faith and social reform than he did upon the state. For his part, Gandhi is said to have approached Ambedkar in his acceptance of intermarriage, the forsaking of caste occupations and legal measures against discrimination. But how different is the intimacy of this reconciliation from that which insists on opposing the two men in such a way as to make Babasaheb the real father India’s freedom, and so nothing more than the Mahatma’s replacement?
Part of a political narrative

The emphasis on paternity and so political legitimacy is a fundamentally conservative one, and part of a narrative that includes the courtroom statement by Gandhi’s assassin, who accused him of being Pakistan’s true founder and therefore India’s illegitimate father. Yet this narrative is also revolutionary, displacing legitimacy from the figure of the son to that of the father, so destabilising paternal authority altogether. To replace Gandhi with Ambedkar, or as Godse did, with Subhas Chandra Bose and Vallabhbhai Patel, is also to mimic those who had sought to replace British by Indian rule. For without renouncing the kind of violence exercised by the colonial state, claimed the Mahatma, these revolutionaries wanted the tiger’s nature without the tiger.
Now the British had also portrayed themselves as paternal rulers, and Gandhi describes them as impotent as much as carnivorous fathers in Hind Swaraj. These were the very characteristics of feebleness conjoined with ferocity that eventually came to define the Mahatma himself in the eyes of his rivals across the political spectrum. If all this tells us anything, it is that the Gandhi-Ambedkar debate is part of a broader political narrative, one from which it cannot be detached and for which it is in fact accountable. More than the intimacy that exists between opposing accounts of the Mahatma and Babasaheb, in other words, it is the uncomfortable familiarity among Gandhi’s enemies that needs considering.
Why is it the case that Muslims, who comprised the Mahatma’s chief political rivals in his own lifetime, are today absent from the ideological battles that pit the self-proclaimed supporters of Ambedkar and Godse against him? And do the latter share anything in common despite their very real differences? After all Godse had argued that unlike Gandhi he was opposed to caste prejudices, and his political heirs have gone further to claim Ambedkar not only against the Mahatma, but also the Muslims whose true father he is seen as having become. Ambedkar’s partisans in the fight against Gandhi have admittedly not gone in this direction, but by refusing to acknowledge the larger context in which their debate occurs are unable to address its implications.
Invoking the Poona Pact

While Ambedkar seems to have promoted his opposition to Gandhi as a principled one, he continued to deploy explicitly Gandhian terms and practices like satyagraha, thus refusing to be defined by this enmity. Rather than a move towards the Mahatma, however, this suggests he recognised their relationship as being neither equal nor exclusive. For while Babasaheb was obliged by political realities to spend an inordinate amount of time thinking and writing about the Mahatma, the reverse was not true, and he is very rarely mentioned in Gandhi’s collected works. It is perhaps because of this asymmetry that those who pose Ambedkar against Gandhi are reduced to relying on a single event, the Poona Pact of 1932, for so much of their argumentation.
Ambedkar himself made of the Poona Pact the chief example of his fight with Gandhi, but at the time it was signed he was assiduous in defending it against all critics, of whom Godse’s fellow ideologues were the most vociferous. The Poona Pact was agreed after the Mahatma went on a fast unto death, ostensibly against the discrimination exercised by caste Hindus against Dalits, but also to protest the British granting separate electorates to them as part of the Communal Award — just as they had earlier to Muslims, and so by default Hindus as well. By its terms Ambedkar relinquished separate electorates for the reservations that in later years he argued were ineffectual, because they made Dalits dependent on caste Hindu votes and support.
Seen by Congress as well as Hindu nationalists as a “divide and rule” policy meant to keep India under British tutelage, separate electorates had also threatened to fragment Hindus as a community and reduce their majority relative to Muslims. Indeed, the grant of separate electorates to Dalits had come out of the Minorities Pact at the Round Table Conference in London, where Ambedkar had allied with Muslim, Christian, Anglo-Indian and other minorities who claimed to represent a plurality of India’s population, thus denying that any majority existed in the country. And if there was no majority in India, then of course there were no minorities either, which meant that these categories could now be redefined beyond the communal identities of Hindus and Muslims.
Ambedkar and others in the Minorities Pact argued that the inequalities of Indian society meant that people’s interests were permanently aligned with their castes or communities. But if Hindus were to become a permanent majority and Muslims a permanent minority after Independence, then democracy was impossible in India, since it required shifting interests that allowed all groups the chance to hold power. Hindus therefore had to be disaggregated by caste, so as to make for changing alliances that produced political rather than communal majorities. The Congress, however, questioned the legitimacy of these minority voices, and maintained that Independence would erase caste and communal distinctions, allowing people to vote along economic lines instead.
While the Poona Pact is much invoked in the battle that sets Babasaheb against Mahatma, interesting about the Minorities Pact is that it is just as regularly ignored. Is this because any acknowledgement of it would immediately reveal that the Gandhi-Ambedkar debate possessed neither autonomy nor integrity, but was instead given meaning by its triangulation with other classes and communities? For although caste relations in everyday life might exclude third parties, they have always been mediated by these latter in the arena of national politics. Thus Godse’s dedication to caste inter-dining was prompted by his fear of Hindu fragmentation in the face of what he saw as Muslim aggression.
By focussing on the relationship between Gandhi and Ambedkar, those who oppose as much as reconcile these men end up confining them to an intimacy that is premised upon caste-like exclusions. And in doing so they are unable to chart the political constellation in which Babasaheb and Mahatma belonged. For if Jinnah has more claim to be Gandhi’s chief rival, he also became an obstacle for Ambedkar, for whom the Muslim League’s domination of opposition politics pushed his Dalit cause into the background. Despite many years of cooperating with the League, Ambedkar also knew that Jinnah would come to an arrangement with Gandhi and his caste Hindu following that would leave Dalits in the political wilderness.
Dalit constituency as model

Following India’s partition and the destruction of Muslim politics there, it was the new Dalit constituency created by reservations that eventually came to serve as a model for this minority that had once claimed to be a nation. And while the high caste interests and leadership of many Muslim organisations have meant that such attempts at alliance building continue to be opportunistic, it has assumed a distinctive reality among youth movements and in student politics. The fact that Rohith Vemula and his friends were declared to be anti-national because they condemned the execution of Yakub Memon is significant in this respect, as was the subsequent and related invocation of Afzal Guru alongside Vemula himself at the Jawaharlal Nehru University.
Without any Muslim issue or organisation being involved in such controversies, this minority has again come to triangulate caste relations as well as conflict between the left and right. In both cases the Muslim issue allowed students in Hyderabad and Delhi to be accused of anti-national activities. But it is important to recognise that the same logic of mediation also permitted Godse to work for an end to caste discrimination among Hindus. In other words, this logic is a structural one, and can assume opposing political forms. And if Ambedkar is omnipresent in today’s controversies, Gandhi is by the same token absent from them. There no longer exists any relationship, let alone debate, between the two.
(Faisal Devji is Reader in Indian History and Fellow of St. Antony’s College in the University of Oxford, where he is also Director of the Asian Studies Centre.)

Source: The Hindu, 22-02-2016
 Centre of Attraction


Some people are compulsive exhibitionists. They would do anything to get noticed. At a wedding, they want to be the groom, and at a funeral, the corpse. An incorrigible egotist was kidnapped and held for a ransom of 11,000 gold pieces.Horrified, he exhorted his captors to raise the ransom amount to 2,50,000 gold pieces so as to preserve his prestige! Few people don't like being the centre of attraction. The truly great ones are those who know their weaknesses and aren't afraid to admit them.They accept their limitations and blend in the crowd, knowing that when it comes to the basics, everyone's the same.Whether rich or poor, American, Afghan or Indian, we all have the same emotions deep within us: to protect the family , educate children, provide for healthcare, to be free to walk the streets in safety , to have time for oneself, to contribute to the good of the world and to leave one's mark, however small, on history . And the last is something all human beings do -for better or for worse.
Even an ant does not go through this world without affecting its outcome in some way .From the worldly perspective, humility can be imbibed by realising that the population of the planet is more than seven billion. We ought to have equal rights. Unable to come to terms with this reality , some people behave as if they are owners of the planet. They are unable to take a back seat in any subject.The only way to overcome this ego mania is to surrender to the Divine and cultivate the virtue of humility .
Avg urban household debt soared 620% in 10 years


Outpaced Rise In Value Of Home Assets
With everything from a pair of jeans to a nose job available on EMIs these days, it's no surprise that the average Indian family is deeper in debt now than ever before. Though a household's assets have become more valuable over the past decade, its debts too have grown at times outpacing the former.In rural India where people borrow from both financial institutions and moneylenders, the average debt per rural household jumped from Rs 7,539 in 2002 to Rs 32,522 in 2012 -a hike of over 330% after adjusting for inflation. In urban areas, the average debt zoomed from Rs 11,771 in 2002 to Rs 84,625 in 2012, an inflation adjusted jump of nearly 620%.
Household debt varies widely across states: The southern states are the most indebted; over 40% rural households and over 30% urban ones live in debt.
Odisha, however, tops the debt tally . Richer states like Punjab and Haryana and those at the bottom of the economic pile have a more balanced household economy .
In Delhi, average asset value has exploded -from Rs 5.7 lakh in 2002 to nearly Rs 25 lakh in 2012. But so has its average debt -from Rs 1,441to Rs 33,130.
Both have been driven up by sky-high real estate prices in the past decade.
This data of household finances evolving in a globalizing economy emerge from a recently released National Sample Survey Organisation (NSSO), carried out in 2012-13.
Compared to 2002, the share of indebted households increased from 27% to 31% in rural areas and from 18% to 22% in urban areas, in 2012. In Telangana, the share is a shocking high of 59% in rural areas.
Richer states -Haryana, Punjab, Kerala, Gujarat, Maharashtra -have large household assets in both rural and urban areas. Himachal and J&K also fall in this category -being states where land ownership is more evenly distributed historically. The lowest assets are, ex pectedly , among poorer sta tes of Odisha, Bihar, Assam, Jharkhand and West Bengal.Andhra's the odd man out among the bottom rankers.
Trends in the growth of debt and assets can be seen in one parameter -the debt to asset ratio (DAR). If debt rises faster than value of assets, DAR increases. People rush to borrow but are losing value. A falling DAR means family budgets are healthier.
DAR in Bengal, Chhattisgarh, Maharashtra and MP's dipped since 2002, while Jharkhand and Punjab exhibit no change. Across India, DAR's increased marginally in rural areas from 2.8% to 3.3%; in urban areas from 2.8% to 3.7% between 2002 and 2012.

Source: Times of India, 22-02-2016

Thursday, February 18, 2016

LSE offers first-of-its-kind Experiential Entrepreneurship Course -



Lemon School of Entrepreneurship (LSE) has announced the launch of its Spring 2016 Programme in “Global Programme in Experiential Entrepreneurship and Innovation” at Nagpur Campus. India’s first experiential entrepreneurship programme launched last year by Lemon School of Entrepreneurship, been fairly successful in terms of launching new start-up organisation.
Deepak Menaria, Mentor, Innovator and Idea-Change Catalyst, Founder & Chief Idea Farmer, LEMON School of Entrepreneurship said, “Last year our Monsoon 2015 batch was first-of-its-kind of experiential entrepreneurship course launched by any Institute in India. We were fairly successful in creating new breed of entrepreneurs, who are already into action and piloting their own start-ups as they complete their course. We are happy to look at more such candidates who have a passion to run their own ventures and committed to take a plunge, though in a systematic, guided and structured manner through Lemon School of Entrepreneurship.”
Entrepreneurs at LSE have started working on their start-up ventures within 4 months of the program. Some of these start-ups and their areas of interests are as follows:
  • Upleap is working on career decision and passion discovery problem for school children;
  • Happily Grounded team plans to use unused residential accommodation for travellers aligning their interest and flexible living options;
  • CreatiFox is Design Studio and building platform for crowd sourced Indian images;
  • Praccelerator is a software coding school for practical and application oriented coding;
  • Pyrophyte is working on new fire retardant threads for fire safety gears;
  • Flying Penguins is already catering to multiple clients for technology services;
  • I-Yatra is building a new learning pedagogy through convergence of Education and Travel for specific domains through real life exposure; and
  • Crafts katha is a platform for providing unique gifting options in form of handicrafts suiting the occasion.
Dr Rajeev Roy, Entrepreneurship Educator and Chief Gardener with LSE says, “Lemon School of Entrepreneurship is fairly exclusive and uses different pedagogies as compared to the best B-Schools in the world. A unique course delivery approach that focuses on doing and self-discovery rather only reading or teaching through traditional methods provides a closest to reality training and simultaneously creates an opportunity to develop one’s own venture. This USP of Lemon School of Entrepreneurship, we hope will continue to add aspiring entrepreneurs into our fold.”
Lemon School of Entrepreneurship also announces the admission for the prestigious Spring 2016 batch for GP E2I (Global Program in Experiential Entrepreneurship & Innovation) at LSE. The programme would address various aspects of venture creation, ideation, validation and real life immersion, technology usage apart from knowledge based management subjects. Lemon programmes have no qualification restrictions and are open for Indian as well as International candidates. Admissions are open for the new batch and the last date to apply is February 29, 2016.


Source: Digital Learning, 17-02-2016

Dalits still left out

Discrimination against Dalits is rising despite stronger laws. Attitudes of police, judiciary must change

The Dalit mobilisation that is gaining momentum in the wake of Rohith Vemula’s suicide reflects structural issues that he was well aware of. Certainly, reservations have given birth to Dalit entrepreneurs and a Dalit middle class benefiting from government jobs. But in spite of this, or because of this, anti-Dalit attitudes have been on the rise.
The number of registered cases of anti-Dalit atrocities, notoriously under-reported, jumped by 17.1 per cent in 2013 (compared to 2012) according to the National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB). The increase was even more dramatic between 2013 and 2014 — 19.4 per cent. The word “atrocities” needs to be fleshed out here, otherwise it will become another bureaucratic, abstract euphemism.
The Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Act, 1989 (the PoA act), gives a list of “offences and atrocities”.
Someone is guilty of one of these “offences and atrocities” if he or she forces a Dalit or an Adivasi “to drink or eat any inedible or obnoxious substance”, “forcibly removes clothes from the person of a member of a Scheduled Caste or a Scheduled Tribe or parades him [sic] naked or with painted face or body”, dispossesses him “from his land”, compels him to do “bonded labour”, “exploits her sexually”, “corrupts or fouls the water” he or she is using, denies him or her “right of passage to a place of public resort”, forces him or her “to leave his house, village or other place of residence”, etc.
This list is surprising, not only because of its detail but also because the Constitution drafted by Ambedkar had already taken care of most of these issues. Article 17 abolishes untouchability, Article 23 prohibits bonded labour and Article 15(2) stipulates that no citizen should be subject to restriction with regard to access to shops, public restaurants, hotels and places of entertainment, the use of wells, tanks, bathing ghats, roads and places of public resort on the grounds of caste. In 1955, the Untouchability (Offences) Act reasserted that Dalits should not be prevented from entering any public place. Then, in 1976, the Bonded Labour System (Abolition) Act was passed. In 1989, why did a new, detailed law have to be made that listed instances of “offences and atrocities”? Because none of the previous legislation had made any difference.
The PoA Act has not made a huge impact either, as evident from the figures mentioned above. Atrocities have continued, unbearably. In October 2014, a 15-year-old boy was burnt alive by an upper-caste man in Mohanpur village (Rohtas district) because his goats had eaten his paddy crop. In June 2015, two Dalit boys were killed in an altercation because they were short of Rs 4 in a flour mill of Allahabad. In October 2015, two kids of three and eight were burnt alive in their house in Ballabgarh village (Haryana) after an argument with local Rajputs. In May this year, a 21-year-old Dalit man was killed in Shirdi (Maharashtra) because he was playing a song in praise of Ambedkar.
In parallel, Dalit women continue to be victims of violence and rape, the same way as Mahasweta Devi, who turned 90 this month, described them decades ago in her short stories.
What has been the response of the state, lately? A new law was passed. Last month, the Indian Parliament made the existing
legislation even more sophisticated. This law provides stringent action against those who sexually assault Dalits and Adivasis and occupy their land illegally; it also declares as an offence garlanding with footwear a man or a statue, compelling to dispose or carry human or animal carcasses or do manual scavenging.
Will that make any difference? Not if the police and the judiciary do not change their attitude. In spite of the fact that the PoA Act has introduced special courts for speedy trials, the conviction rate under this act has remained very low and has declined even — from 30 per cent in 2011 to 22.8 per cent in 2013 (more recent data are not available). And the percentage of “pending cases” has increased from
80 to 84 per cent.
But to have a case registered under the PoA Act is in itself a problem. On average, only one-third of the cases of atrocities are registered under the PoA Act. The police is reluctant to do so because of the severity of the penalties likely to be imposed by the act.
Many Dalits do not know their rights anyway and cannot fight a legal battle that is costly in terms of time and money. The 2011 Census offers a poignant picture of the socio-economic condition of the SCs, which explains their vulnerability. Out of the 4,42,26,917 Dalit households in India, 74 per cent live in rural areas, where the per-household land area they own on an average is less than 0.3 ha — most of them are landless. A total of 2,06,16,913 Dalit households live in one room and 1,39,24,073 in two rooms. Only 22 per cent of the Dalit households live in larger homes. And only 34 per cent of them have toilets in their premises. More than 50 per cent Dalit households use firewood as their main fuel for cooking.
The literacy rate among Dalits is rising, though. In 2011, their literacy rate crossed the 66 per cent landmark (8 percentage points below the non-SC/STs). But educated Dalits want more — to join the university system. Some of them have succeeded in doing so, but they often face frustrating experiences when they are discriminated against in the very institution that should promote social mobility. Rohith Vemula was one of them. There are many others. Take the case of Senthil Kumar from Jalakandapuram (near Salem). This son of a pig-breeder joined Hyderabad University, just like Rohith Vemula, and got a PhD scholarship in physics in 2007. But he committed suicide in 2008 — victim of the local atmosphere — after failing his exams and losing his scholarship. Today, the children of his family don’t want education — his mother even “hates education”. But can a country progress if a fifth of its population does not have full access to higher education? What kind of development (today’s key word in India) will that be?

Christophe Jaffrelot- The writer is senior research fellow at CERI-Sciences Po/ CNRS, Paris, professor of Indian politics and sociology at King’s India Institute, London, and non-resident scholar at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
Source: Indian Express, 18-02-2016

The rationale of India’s drug policy

The Supreme Court’s description last year of India’s drug pricing policy—irrational and unreasonable—is unfortunately accurate from several angles. There have been two contradictory developments over the past few days: there is now a possibility that stents (a small mesh tube used to treat narrow or weak arteries) will become a component of the National List of Essential Medicines (NLEM). And a fortnight ago, customs duty exemptions on a number of drugs were lifted. Both are instances of the juggling act any government must carry out to achieve the twin objectives—interdependent and yet often pulling in opposite directions—of enabling broad access to reasonably priced medicines and allowing the marketplace to function well enough for pharmaceutical companies to invest in innovation. No administration in New Delhi has quite managed to pull it off yet.
The chequered history of drug price control in India, in fact, shows the extent to which it has failed to maintain that balance. Two decades ago, the Drug Price Control Order (DPCO) 1995 was introduced, covering 74 bulk drugs and their formulations. The result was not quite as hoped. Half the products were discontinued after their producers exited. Indian production of something as vital as penicillin shifted to China.
Its successor, DPCO 2013, hasn’t fared much better. Since its introduction, no new investments have been seen. Instead, there has been a shift—unsurprisingly—towards non-controlled products. Consequently, as a study by IMS Health shows, the average number of incumbent brands and new introductions of drugs in the DPCO 2013 list has reduced compared to the non-DPCO 2013 list. This “strengthens oligopolistic behaviour and reduces the choice set of doctors and patients”, says the study.
State inefficiencies compound the problem. As the Justice T.S. Thakur bench pointed out last year, the cost of the drugs in the NLEM—which feeds the DPCO—remain above the maximum retail prices offered in some states (retail price margin goes as high as 4,000%), defeating the avowed purpose of access and cheap availability. In the context of the possible addition of stents to the list, this means that there is a broad range of potentially unintended consequences—from there being none of the intended control on prices to a decrease in supply and fewer introductions of technologically advanced stents in India.
The answer, however, is not to abandon any attempt at regulation. Leaving it to the market would create efficiency, certainly—but the benefits will be skewed towards pharmaceutical companies. In a context where public health and well-being is so substantially at stake—with inelastic demand and high barriers to entry skewing the balance further—to do so would be as counterproductive as the DPCO, simply in a different fashion. The US is a good example of this, with rocketing healthcare costs and the highest drug prices in the developed world leading to what is commonly understood as a healthcare crisis.
Instead, a multi-pronged approach that has the NLEM and DPCO, pared to an essential minimum and implemented with a transparency they have often lacked, as one of several tools is more likely to be effective. Overhauling India’s intellectual property rights (IPR) regime, for instance, is a priority here. In the context of the pharmaceutical industry, the courts have done well to clamp down on the practice of evergreening patents and protecting the country’s vital generic drug industry—but at the other end of the spectrum, impediments to legitimate patents have had high costs. As per an IndiaSpend (a data journalism initiative) report, on average, a patent application takes six years to get approval in India. This is unsustainable in an industry where long development cycles and multiple research dead-ends already raise costs and delay pay-offs. The soon-to-be-announced National Intellectual Property Rights Policy will, hopefully, have a positive impact here.
Expanding insurance coverage is another aspect. A Rand Corporation study, Regulating Drug Prices, shows that financing consumer price reductions via insurance has several long-term benefits over imposing price controls. But India is one of the least penetrated insurance markets in the world. As of March 2014, only 17% of the population had any health insurance coverage, as per the Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority. The raising of the foreign direct investment cap in the insurance sector to 49% last year should, ideally, introduce benefits. But so far at least, there has been little in evidence.
Successive administrations have relied for decades on price control to increase public access to medicines. The results have not been optimal. It’s time to look for a new balance.
Source: Mint epaper, 18-02-2016
Give the Self a Chance


We all have a higher Self within; we were born with it. Sometimes we get a fleeting glimpse of the Self when we spontaneously act out of unconditional love. Recall a sudden wave of empathy engulfing you at the sight of a man shivering in the cold that prompted you to give him clothes; picking up a wounded animal on the road; the deep sense of fulfilment on rescuing someone in trouble. These arouse an incredible flow of energy and feelings within.Momentarily , you rise from an ordinary state of being to an extraordinary one. The shift is spontaneous, unintentional and instinctive. You forget who you are: your status, position, your miseries; you act without assigning reason and logic. Neither do you expect reward or recognition in return.These are moments when your higher Self takes over.
The Self is a vast storehouse of positive energy that propels us to extend ourselves unconditionally . We drop our masks: our ego-self, the finite, entrenched in inhibitions, doubts, hesitations. But no sooner than the ego takes over, we again restrain ourselves from reaching out. Our conditioned mind constitutes our ego-self that endorses judgements, evaluations, biases, prejudices, predispositions. We gathered all this ignorantly and continue this way out of sheer habit, impeding manifestation of the Self.
The Self is the internal abundance that can be realised at our will any time. It has the power to nourish, nurture, absorb and inspire. All we need is to have faith and surrender our ego-self to the higher Self.