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Saturday, February 27, 2016

What it means to be ‘national’

Nationalism that developed in India during the anti-colonial struggle was sui generis, an altogether new phenomenon the like of which the world had not seen earlier. It was essentially a democratic and egalitarian nationalism, as opposed to the aggrandising European form.

When students of my university are being accused of being “anti-national”, it is time to ask the question: what does “national” mean? And the answer is not as simple as many imagine. The terms “national”, “nationalism” and “nation-state” came into vogue in Europe after the Westphalian Peace Treaties in the 17th century. But European “nationalism” had three major characteristics. First, it was never inclusive of the entire population even within the territory of the “nation”. It always invoked an “enemy within” (example, the Jews). Second, it was necessarily imperialistic. Within months of the Westphalian Treaties, Oliver Cromwell had attacked Ireland (the first ever colony of conquest) and acquired for England the possession over its entire land area.
In the subsequent decades, European powers, even while “peacefully co-existing” within Europe, were engaged in bitter wars in far-off places like India, with each trying to carve out an empire for itself. Third, the “nation” was apotheosised for its own sake; the idea invariably was to make the “nation” strong. This was not just a notion of mercantilism to which it has been obviously ascribed; it underlay even classical political economy. Adam Smith’s magnum opus was titled “An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations” (emphasis added). Smith differed from the mercantilists on what exactly constituted the wealth of nations; but on the need to augment this wealth per se, no matter what it meant for the people, he had no differences with the mercantilists. European “nationalism” in short was an aggrandising nationalism.
Apogee under fascism

It is for this reason that a “nation” like Germany that got formed rather late in the day and therefore came late to the scene of aggrandisement, was even more virulent in its assertion of nationalism to further its aggrandising aims; and this entire process reached its apogee under fascism.
It is also for this reason that the progressive and democratic tradition in Europe, in more recent years, has sought to transcend “nationalism”, after the bitter experience of the two world wars, by setting up the European Union (though that too, not unexpectedly, has not shaken off this aggrandising nationalism which has become associated in modern times with the interests of finance capital and is promoted by it).
It is very important, however, to recognise that the concept of “nationalism” that developed in countries like India during their anti-colonial struggle was of an altogether different kind. Precisely because the struggle was against an immensely powerful adversary, the colonial rulers, it had to be inclusive, to mobilise every possible segment of the population for the cause. Likewise it had to develop solidarity with other such struggles, and for that reason had to have a fraternal rather than an aggrandising relation with other Third World countries. And finally, it had to put the welfare of the “people”, as distinct from the greatness of the “nation” per se, as its central focus, a fact poignantly expressed by Gandhi when he said that the objective of freedom was to “wipe away the tears from the eyes of every Indian”.
An egalitarian nationalism

This was a nationalism which was sui generis, an altogether new phenomenon the like of which the world had not seen earlier. It was essentially a democratic and egalitarian nationalism as opposed to the aggrandising European nationalism, differing from the latter in all the three aspects mentioned earlier.
To say this is not to paint it in rosy colours as a wonderful creature that emerged fully formed like Athena from the head of Zeus. There was indeed an admixture of aggrandisement even within it, but every transgression on its part into aggrandising nationalism has the potential effect, as I argue below, of damaging the project of “nation-building”. It has to be an inclusive democratic nationalism if it is to succeed at all, a proposition whose validity is not altered one iota even though colonialism as such is long over.
When Gandhi in his last days insisted, against the horrendous backdrop of Partition and in opposition to demurring Congress leaders, that India must make full payment of the amount that was due to Pakistan, he was not being “anti-national”; he was merely taking a position in conformity with the democratic “nationalism” underlying the anti-colonial struggle. Central to this nationalism is tolerance, accommodation and negotiation in the event of differences, not the use of brute force to enforce silence and assert hegemony. This nationalism demands that if people from some particular part of the country raise anti-India slogans, then, as long as no terrorism or violence or incitement to violence is involved, that should become an occasion for introspection and analysis, with a view to overcoming the contradiction, rather than for repression by invoking the infamous sedition laws inherited from the colonial era.
BJP’s substitution

What is disturbing today is that the BJP is substituting the first kind of nationalism for the second, an aggrandising nationalism for the democratic nationalism that ideally informed the anti-colonial struggle and that constitutes the conceptual basis of the Indian state. What is worse, the very existence of the second kind of nationalism is being denied, with the terms “national” and “anti-national” being used entirely with reference to the first kind of nationalism.
No doubt, the democratic nationalism of the anti-colonial struggle is not easy to realise. For a start, untrammelled capitalism with its immanently inequalising, even impoverishing, tendencies, cannot possibly constitute the appropriate economic framework for its realisation, a fact recognised by the major leaders of that time, Gandhi, Nehru and Ambedkar (though each of them had a different perception of the requisite framework). But capitalism, albeit restricted by state regulations and surrounded by a public sector, is what came to be instituted; and in due course even these restrictions were removed as the hegemony of globalised finance capital asserted itself and neo-liberal policies were adopted.
The shift to an aggrandising nationalism is clearly linked to the emergence of neo-liberal capitalism in the country; and the BJP which promotes the former is a votary of the latter. But no matter what the circumstances that have conspired to put in office a party committed to an aggrandising nationalism, such a nationalism is fundamentally inimical to the project of building an Indian nation.
Destroying India’s finest institutions

Consider first an obvious point. Here is a government that has sought to browbeat the students at the Pune Film Institute, the Hyderabad Central University, the Jawaharlal Nehru University, and the Department of Fine Arts of the M.S. University of Baroda. These are among the finest institutions in India, and their destruction only makes the country parasitical on institutions located in metropolitan countries. In short, in the name of “nationalism”, we are, paradoxically, making our nation parasitical on advanced nations. But this inevitably follows the promotion of an aggrandising nationalism in a Third World country that prioritises repression over tolerance.
An aggrandising nationalism does not just constrict democracy and freedom of expression, with, as we have seen, lynch mobs taking law into their own hands, sedition laws being applied even to young idealistic and sensitive students, and lies and misinformation being liberally used to tarnish the innocent and discredit them in the public eye. It inevitably generates reactions that are equally extreme. Such an aggrandising nationalism, in short, sets up a disastrous dialectic, of repression generating extreme reaction, which in turn brings forth greater repression, causing even more extreme reaction, and so on.
To believe that the “nation-building” project in a Third World country can survive this disastrous dialectic is a chimera. The Third World in fact is full of so-called “failed states”. Behind these “failed states”, no doubt, one can often see the hand of metropolitan powers; but the modus operandi is invariably through the generation of internal conflicts. This is precisely what an aggrandising nationalism generates.
There is a major difference between the aggrandising nationalism of Europe and its incarnation being invoked in our context: the “enemy within” that the aggrandising nationalism of Europe had identified had consisted typically of a minuscule minority (this is true even of Nazi Germany where the Jews were only about 0.7 per cent of the population); the “enemy within” that an aggrandising nationalism will have to take on in India is far larger. The threat of social disintegration that such “nationalism” brings is correspondingly larger. If India is to avoid the fate of a “failed state” such “nationalism” must be stopped in its tracks.
(Prabhat Patnaik is Professor Emeritus, Centre for Economic Studies and Planning, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi.)
Source: The Hindu, 27-02-2016

Apply for postgraduate scholarships to study in UK

University of Southampton, UK, is offering postgraduate taught talent scholarship for 2016 entry. Scholarships of £6,000 are available for up to three students from countries including India who excel in their field.
The scholarships apply to Winchester School of Art and will not apply if the student changes his/her programme to another school/faculty. The application deadline is March 31, 2016.
Only successful students will be notified if they have been awarded a scholarship. The selected students will receive an official reward letter from the university to the email address provided on their scholarship application form.
These scholarships will be awarded by the faculty associate director of internationalisation.
If students are unable to take up your place in 2016 entry and subsequently re-apply for 2017 entry, scholarships will not automatically carry over.
Source: Hindustan Times, 27-02-2016

TISS-Mumbai next target but there will be no JNU-like situation: ABVP

Even as the row over the Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) incident moved to the Parliament, the Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad (ABVP) has set its sight on Mumbai’s Tata Institute of Social Sciences (TISS).
A statement by ABVP said that TISS will be their next target. “Of late, most of the incidents that have cropped up in education institutes across the country have been highlighting the presence of leftist organisations on campuses. We just want to make sure students don’t get into politics when they should instead be focusing on their education,” said Aniket Ovhal, Mumbai secretary, ABVP.
The ABVP, added Ovhal, will “target TISS”, but there should be no worry that a JNU-like situation will be created in Mumbai. “We just want to ensure students don’t fall into a trap, and at the same time understand the meaning of nationalism. No one will be forced, but we don’t want TISS to turn into a battleground like JNU,” he said and added that ABVP is also planning to reach out to students at the Indian Institute of Technology-Bombay (IIT-B) as well as other institutes and the University of Mumbai.
While TISS students have released a public statement, both condemning the alleged anti-national slogans raised in JNU campus as well as about the inappropriateness of the manner in which the student union leader has been arrested, currently, a video on JNU is making rounds on the campus.
“There have been varied views coming from various sources about the incident but we wanted everyone on campus to know exactly what happened in JNU, and only then form opinions,” said a student who added that the video has interviews of students from JNU Students’ Union, talking about exactly what happened on February 9.
“The entire debate of nationalism and anti-nationalism is vague because everybody is giving a different meaning to these terms. If I question the government about the falling Indian Rupee and compared the economic status of our country with another, will I be called anti-national too?” asked a student.
When HT spoke to the management of TISS, they stated that post the JNU issue, students of the institute had called for a general body meeting to discuss the concerns of student community on the developments in Delhi.
“Students and faculty members have been in dialogue and conversation on related matters allowing them to share their concerns and issues of the last few weeks. This open dialogue has helped students to discuss and understand the issues,” said Shalini Bharat, deputy director (academics), TISS.
Source: Hindustan Times, 27-02-2016
Survey Throws Up Political Challenge


Its sensible ideas demand strong political will
The Economic Survey is evolving from its past avatar as a narration of what has been and a wild stab at what ought to be into a lively discussion of policy . This is welcome. There is a downside, however: it bears the imprint of one man, the chief economic adviser, rather than of institutional consensus. It will take strong administrative and political leadership for the vision emanating from one location to guide the conduct of the entire government. Provided the vision enjoys buy-in from the political leadership, in the first place.The Economic Survey is upbeat, inevitably , on growth sans inflation and raising public investment without wide departure from the accepted path of fiscal discipline.It strikes new ground in focusing on the budgetary bounty routinely paid to the well-off, suggesting a way for the government to prune spending without pain for the poor.If the government does slash subsidies for the rich on gold, savings, air travel, rail travel, cooking gas, kerosene and electricity , it would both enhance fiscal space and defy the label of champion of the sui ted and booted. As would focus on re juvenating the rural economy . The su ggestion to extend direct cash trans fers using Aadhaar to fertiliser subsi dy and other government benefits wo uld also call for a huge amount of poli tical capital. Marshalling the well-understood metaphor of Chakravyuha -the battle formation you can enter but not exit -to discuss the urgent need for an exit policy is simply brilliant. The caution on engaging the World Trade Organisation with greater reciprocity is well taken.
While the Survey is quite clear about the need for India to adopt a goods and services tax (GST), it is welcome that it does not make the GST the basis for better tax collections in the near future -the political consensus on the tax remains as amorphous as ever. While discussing India's fiscal capacity, the Survey could have taken into account India's developed information technology capability , out of line with other countries with a similar per-capita income. But it is welcome that the Survey points out that a more gradual fiscal consolidation will do no harm.

Source: Economic Times, 27-02-2015
The Right Balance


The Bhagwad Gita emphasises the importance of serenity even in the thick of action. Krishna discusses the characteristics of the stithaprajna, the person of stable temper, the epitome of human virtue. Arjuna asks Krishna how a stithaprajna conducts himself; he is told that such a person's conversation is joy to the ears; that he speaks the truth yet does not hurt anyone's feelings; that he does not bring an illusory pleasure through flattery .The stithaprajna is stable: he is not prey to random gusts of passion but sticks to righteous behaviour, having overcome all desires. At the same time, he does not surrender himself to inertia or inactivity but throws himself into action; he is not driven by the psychological burden of the goal, but rather by the imperative of effort.
Since he is nishkama, without desire, he is neither shattered by failure nor elated by success. To him, victory and defeat, pleasure and pain, honour and dishonour, friend and enemy are all alike -he judges himself, not by the fickle opinions of others, but by whether or not he has fulfilled his dharma, the ethical path that he has laid down for himself.
To strain every nerve in the cause of right effort, but never to be attached to its fruit, is the Gita's preferred way for there is no happiness for one whose mind is disturbed by fears, anxieties and tensions. The stithaprajna, having rid his mind of blind craving, is no slave of passion. The Gita says that happiness runs away from one who desires it; happiness runs after him, who wants nothing.

Wednesday, February 24, 2016

Hyderabad offers best quality of life, Chennai safest: survey

Southern
India emerged at the top for quality of life and safety in a ranking of cities released by human resources consulting firm Mercer on Tuesday.
Hyderabad offered the best quality of life in India, according to Mercer. The joint capital of Telangana and Andhra Pradesh, however, dropped one position from last year’s 138th rank in Mercer’s 2016 Quality of Living rankings because of frequent power disruptions and a heat wave that claimed 1,700 lives.
Other Indian cities to be featured among the top 230 cities across the globe are Pune, Bengaluru and Chennai, ranked 144, 145 and 150, respectively.
The rankings took into account factors such as the political and social environment, medical and health care, public services, recreation facilities and natural environment among others.
Over time, Hyderabad, Bengaluru, Pune and Chennai have emerged as the cities of choice because of factors including a relatively low crime rate, cleaner air and higher number of reputable and international English schools, said the report.
“Fewer traffic jams, a more balanced weather and the warmth in people add to the advantages of staying here in Hyderabad,” said M.R. Rao, managing director and chief executive of SKS Microfinance Ltd who has lived in Mumbai, Bengaluru and Hyderabad.
For Biocon Ltd chairman Kiran Mazumdar-Shaw, the inclusive and cosmopolitan nature of Bengaluru, a city she was born and raised in, and citizens’ engagement in policy development has played a role in making the city safe and improved the quality of life.
However, Indian cities have not made much progress on the quality of living scale, after scoring nearly the same as they did last year. In fact, none of the Indian cities made to the top 100 of the 230 surveyed.
Despite being ahead of other Indian cities in the Mercer rankings, a lot of improvement will be needed before Hyderabad, Bengaluru or Chennai can match top cities in the world.
Suresh Reddy, chairman and chief executive of digital marketing and wearable tech firm Lycos Internet Ltd, said Hyderabad’s workforce needs an upgrade. “We could use better colleges. We have very good colleges now. But we could use a few more tech colleges which are reputed.”
Bengaluru, according to Mazumdar-Shaw, has not paid enough attention to its infrastructure. “We have been underinvesting in improving roads and sorting the garbage situation. We should also aim for being the cleanest city, besides these metrics,” said Shaw.
Chennai was recognized as the safest city in India based on its internal stability, levels of crime and local law enforcement, followed by Hyderabad and Bangalore.
The cultural foundation of the city gives it an inherent stability, said Lakshmi Venu, director of Tafe Motors and Tractors Ltd. Moreover, the government and police force have also consistently focused on enforcing law and order, added Venu.
“Both as a citizen and as a business person, I find the city very secure. Even during the floods we saw that there were few thefts,” said Venu.
Globally, European cities, led by Vienna, topped the quality of living rankings. Luxembourg was found to be the safest city and Baghdad the least safe.
The quality of living and safety record of cities help employers compensate their employees fairly when sending them on international assignments. Employee incentives include a quality-of-living allowance and a mobility premium. For instance, an employee moving from Mumbai to Chicago, would be entitled to an allowance amounting to 23% of base salary on account of the cost of living, said Ruchika Pal, India practice leader, global mobility, Mercer.
Interestingly, the survey suggests that Indian cities are safer than most others in South Asia. Dhaka in Bangladesh is ranked 216 and Pakistan’s Islamabad, Lahore and Karachi are ranked 193, 199 and 202, respectively.
Yogendra Kalavalapalli and Trushna Udgirkar contributed to this story.

Source: Mint epaper, 24-02-2016

Pollution in India higher than China: Greenpeace

The green NGO said India’s NAQI network with 39 operating stations also compares poorly with the 1,500 stations in China.

India has overtaken China’s air pollution levels in 2015 and the average particulate matter exposure was higher for the first time in the 21st century, a Greenpeace analysis of NASA satellite data has shown.
“For the first time this century, the average particulate matter exposure was higher for Indian citizens than that of Chinese people.
“China’s strong measures to curb pollution have contributed to the biggest year-on-year air quality improvement on record while in contrast, India’s pollution levels continued a decade-long increase to reach the highest level on record,” Greenpeace India said in a statement.
It said as per World Health Organization (WHO), India is home to 13 out of 20 most polluted cities in the world with deteriorating air pollution levels in the past decade, particularly in North India.
Greenpeace, in its National Air Quality Index (NAQI) ranking report, had earlier said that as many as 15 out of 17 Indian cities with NAQI stations showed levels of air pollution that far exceeded the prescribed Indian standards.
The report had also revealed that 23 of the 32 stations across India are showing more than 70 per cent exceedance of the national standards, putting public health at risk.
Greenpeace observed that the most important aspect to fight air pollution is a robust system to curb air pollution in public domain that empowers people to take action to safeguard their health and the government to issue red alerts during bad air days and take policy decisions in the long term.
The green NGO said India’s NAQI network with 39 operating stations also compares poorly with the 1,500 stations in China.
“The satellite images until 2005 showed India’s pollution, while serious, was lot lower than eastern China’s.
In 2015, India particulate pollution stands higher than that of China, after increasing at an average rate of 2 per cent over the past decade,” it said.
Keywords: PollutionIndiaChinaGreenpeace
Source: The Hindu, 22-02-2016