The Rediff Special /Nani Palkhivala
'Education is the rock on which India must build her political
salvation'
Bill Gates could have referred to the fact that at an international
conference in the United States held some years ago to decide
which language is most suitable for the computer, Sanskrit was
chosen as the one language which seemed to be the most suitable.
It is lucid, unambiguous and a language in which the most intricate
steps can be expressed easily and precisely. No country can wish
for a higher tribute to its ancient, basic language which is the
foundation of its heritage.
There is a debt side to the balance sheet, which has been there
for years, and which needs to be highlighted in fairness to foreign
investors.
First and foremost, in the words of Bill Gates, the first necessity
is to spread education more widely among our people. Today, India
is competing, with only half its manpower, with the rest of the
world, -- since half on the Indian population is literally illiterate.
We must make education the priority of priorities. The real resource
of any country today is knowledge.
Instead of capitalists and
the working class, we are today having knowledge workers and service
workers. Even in America, the Morgans, the Rockefellers and the
Carnegies have been replaced by professional managers. Today,
the well established pension funds increasingly control the supply
and allocation of money in developed countries. These funds own
in the United States half of the capital of the country's largest
businesses.
The pension funds are run by a new breed of 'capitalists'
-- the faceless and anonymous employees who run the pension funds,
and investment analysts and portfolio managers. As Peter Drucker
observed, we are living in a new era which is both non-socialist
and post-capitalist.
Investing in education is to the 1990s what nationalisation was
to the 1940s and privatisation was to the 1980s -- the universal
panacea of the day. All thinkers are agreed that in our times
human capital is the most precious form of capital there is. The
skill and calibre of corporate manpower can never appear in any
balance sheet; but it is widely acknowledged throughout the world
that the greatest resource of a company is trained manpower. In
a book published recently by the famous economist, Julian Simon,
the human resource is rightly defined in the title of the book
as The Ultimate Resource.
Among the nations of the world. India ranks very high in innate
intelligence, but abysmally low in wisdom -- what the ancient
rishis called buddhi. This is both the cause and the effect of
our total indifference towards education. The criminalisation
of politics and the deplorably low moral tone of our public life
are the direct consequences of the failure to impart value-based
education. When Indians are better educated, they will know how
to behave better as workers and to discharge with greater responsibility
their duties as citizens.
Liberty without accountability is the freedom of the fool. Our
concept of freedom will remain an impoverished one, until it is
rounded and deepened by liberal education.
Education is the rock on which India must build her political
salvation. Our country will be built not with bricks but with
brains; not with cement but with enlightenment. If we cannot afford
education, we cannot afford to remain a civilised society.
Secondly, we must privatise the public sector units. Privatisation
means that the majority of shares should be allowed to go into
public hands, while the government may only retain a minority
interest. In India, there is no political will to privatise any
of the industries which are today in the public sector -- the
utmost the government is willing to do is to offer a minority
shareholding in public sector enterprises to private parties.
However, the present government has appointed in August 1996,
a Disinvestment Commission with Mr G V Ramakrishna as the chairman.
Though the programme has not yet started, the target has been
set around Rs 50 billion. (This year's Budget mentions that
the disinvestment programme will be selectively done through the
Commission).
Take, for example, the subject of life insurance and general insurance.
The then finance minister, Dr Manmohan Singh, did nothing for
the deregulation of the insurance sector. In his Budget Speech
of 1993, Dr Manmohan Singh had rightly referred to it as one of
the urgent tasks of liberalisation. The Malhotra Committee was
appointed and it made a very balanced, well-thought-out report
as one would expect from a man of the calibre of Mr R N Malhotra.
After that report, Dr Manmohan Singh in his Budget Speech in 1994
again reiterated his proposal to deregulate the insurance sector
and to create a competitive and financially strong insurance industry
functioning under an independent authority. But in the Budgets
of 1995 and 1996, nothing was done. Kingsley Amis was not wrong
when he said, 'There is always a gap between an idea and its execution,
but in India it is the widest.'
In this year's Budget (1997-98), the finance minister, Mr P Chidambaram,
has made a modest opening of one segment of the insurance sector
-- viz the health insurance business. Only a few Indian companies,
which are Indian-controlled and with majority Indian ownership,
will be permitted to enter the health insurance business.
Thirdly, India has vast infrastructural gaps. It has to add 100,000
megawatts of power capacity in the next ten years. It has
to upgrade, both quantitatively and qualitatively, telecommunications
network. The state-run telephone monopoly took 110 years to instal
eight million telephones, but it has taken
private cable operators just three years to instal 20 million
satellite television hook-ups. About two-thirds of the country's
500, 000 villages still do not have a telephone.
Fourthly, we should change our labour laws instead of aiming at
populism all the time. Five years ago, the government promised
an exit policy, but no action whatever has been taken in that
direction. India will find it impossible to compete with the rest
of the world so long as our law forbids even a humane exit policy
and prohibits closure of sick units without the government's permission.
Fifthly, if there is any one political factor which is bound to
impede the forward march of India, It is the resurgence of the
age-old curse of casteism. In no other country in the contemporary
world is there anything comparable to our casteism except perhaps
tribalism in Africa. Reservations for the backward classes in
different Indian states have resulted in the substandard replacing
the standard, and the reins of power passing from meritocracy
to mediocrity.
Casteism and religion are the two powerful divisive forces in
India. Some critics have gone to the length of saying that the
Indian people is not a nation but a collection of communities.
Winston Churchill said in 1931, 'India is a geographical term.
It is no more a united nation than the equator.' Reservations
on caste considerations in the Maharashtra state have climbed
to 73 per cent.
Under a democratic set-up like ours, there is no short-term solution
whatever to the problem we are facing. The only solution is a
long-term one. We have to educate our people on the essential
unity of all religions. Instead of letting them remain cultural
illiterates.
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