By R Vaidyanathan
Ten years ago, America had Steve Jobs, Bob Hope and Johnny Cash. Now it has no Jobs, no
Hope and no Cash. Or so the joke goes.
Only, it’s no joke. The line is pretty close to
reality in the US. The less said about Europe the better.Both the US and Europe
are in decline. I was asked by a business channel in 2008 about recovery in the
US. I mentioned 40 quarters and after that I was never invited for another
discussion.
Recently, another media person asked me the same
question and I answered 80 quarters. He was shocked since he was told some
“sprouts” of recovery had been seen in the American economy.
It is important to recognise that the dominance of the
West has been there only for last 200-and-odd years. According to Angus
Maddison’s pioneering OECD study, India and China had nearly 50 percent of
global GDP as late as the 1820s. Hence India and China are not
emerging or rising powers. They are retrieving their original position.
In 1990, the share of the G-7 in world GDP (on a
purchasing power parity basis) was 51 percent and that of emerging markets 36
percent. But in 2011, it is the reverse. So the dominant west is a myth.
Similarly, the crisis. It is a US-Europe crisis and not a global one. The two wars – which were essentially European wars – were made out to be world wars with one English leader commenting that ‘we will fight the Germans to the last Indian’.
In this economic scenario, countries like India are
made to feel as if they are in a
crisis. Since the West says there’s a crisis, we swallow it hook, line and
sinker.
But it isn’t so. At no point of time in the last 20
years has foreign investment – direct and portfolio – exceeded 10 percent of
our domestic investment. Our growth is due to our domestic savings which is
again predominately household savings. Our housewives require awards for our
growth not any western fund manager.
The crisis faced by the West is primarily because it
has forgotten a six-letter word called ‘saving’ which, again, is the result of
forgetting another six letter word called “family”. The West has nationalised
families over the last 60 years. Old age, ill health, single motherhood –
everything is the responsibility of the state.
When family is a “burden” and children an
“encumbrance,” society goes for a toss. Household savings have been negative in
the US for long. The total debt to GDP ratio is as high as 400 percent in many
countries, including UK. Not only that, the West is facing a severe demographic
crisis. The population of Europe during the First World War was nearly 25
percent and today it is around 11 percent and expected to become 3 percent in
another 20 years. Europe will disappear from the world map unless migrants from
Africa and Asia take it over.
The demographic crisis impacts the West in other
ways. Social security goes for a toss since people are living longer and
not many from below contribute to their pensions through taxes. So the
nationalisation of families becomes a burden on the state.
European work culture has become worse with even our
own Tata complaining about the work ethic of British managers. In France and
Italy, the weekend starts on Friday morning itself. The population has become
lazy and state-dependent.
In the UK, the situation is worse with drunkenness
becoming a common problem. Parents do not have control over children and the
Chief Rabbi of the United Hebrew Congregation in London said: “There are
all signs of arteriosclerosis of a culture and a civilisation grown old. Me has
taken precedence over We and pleasure today over viability tomorrow.” (The Times: 8 September ).
Married couples make up less than half (45 percent) of
all households in the US, say recent data from the Census Bureau. Also there is
a huge growth in unmarried couples and single parent families (mostly poor,
black women). Society has become dysfunctional or disorganised in the West. The
government is trying to be organised.
In India, society is organised and government
disorganised. Because of disorganised society in the West the state has to take
care of families. The market crash is essentially due to the adoption of a
model where there is consumption with borrowings and no savings. How long will
Asian savings be able to sustain the western spending binge?
According to a recent report in The Wall Street Journal (10 October 2011), nearly
half of US households receive government benefits like food stamps, subsidised
housing, cash welfare or Medicare or Medicaid (the federal-state health
care programmes for the poor) or social security.
The US is also a stock market economy where half the
households are investors and they have been hit hard by bank and corporate
failures. Even now less than 5 percent of our household financial savings goes
to the stock market. Same in China and Japan.
Declining empires are dangerous. They will try to
peddle their failed models to us and we will swallow it since colonial genes
are very much present here. You will find more Indians heading global
corporations since India is a very large market and one way to capture it is to
make Indian sepoys work for it.
A declining West is best for the rest and also for the
West, which needs to rethink its failed models and rework its priorities. For
the rest—like us—the fact that the West has failed will be accepted by us only
after some western scholars tell us the same. Till then we will try to imitate
them and create more dysfunctional families.
We need to recognise that Big Government and Big
Business are twin dangers for average citizens. India faces both and they are
two asuras we need to guard against. The Leftists in the National Advisory
Council want all families to be nationalised and governed by a Big State and
reform marketers of the CII variety want Big Business to flourish under crony
capitalism. Beware of the twin evils since both look upon India as a charity
house or as a market and not as an ancient civilisation.
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