One cannot but marvel at the infinite capacity of the politicians to ruin a perfectly good growth story
By Kunal Kumar Kundu
By Kunal Kumar Kundu
Snatching
defeat from the jaws of victory - will this define India and its future? For
all the talk of favorable demography, a huge middle class and likely impetus
being provided by rapid urbanization and concomitant consumption, India is
failing itself where it hurts the most - in the quality of governance.
The
eulogies reserved for India, even a decade back, seems to have been turned on
their head as the global media space is awash with stories of never-ending
streams of corruption (mostly from the government and bureaucracy) and severe
attacks on civil liberties, especially violence against women.
More
worryingly, India’s response to these has been endless sessions of debates and
discussions and formation of committees but with very little real action on the
ground.
Not
surprisingly, the International Monetary Fund, in its latest "Regional
Economic Outlook" released on April 29, while expressing optimism about
Asian growth prospects, feels that emerging economies like India and China must
improve government institutions and liberalize rigid labor and product markets
if they wish to reach the level of developed countries.
It
clearly states that, "emerging Asia is potentially susceptible to the
'middle-income trap', a phenomenon whereby economies risk stagnation at
middle-income levels and fail to graduate into the ranks of advanced
economies."
Just
when we thought that the scandal over allocation of 2G telecom spectrum was
behind us, came the coal-block allocation scandal, the Mahatma Gandhi National
Rural Employment Guarantee Act, scandal and others.






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