CPI leader Manish Kunjam contextualises the Bastar violence

Manish Kunjam, a two-time MLA of the Communist Party of India (CPI), contexualises [the Bastar] violence:

“The area is mostly dominated by people of the Gondi Koya tribes, who rely on forest produce to sustain their livelihood. They sell mahua [a local fruit mostly processed to make liquor], tendu patta [a leaf from which bidis are made] and imli [tamarind] in the market. Historically, these people were exploited by Forest Department officials, forced into unpaid labour, and beaten up at the first sign of resistance. I am a witness to such kind of gruesome exploitation.

“They are very attached to their land, but because those lands came under the control of the state after Independence, the tribal people were suddenly seen as encroachers. This led to a great mess, the brunt of which the people are bearing even today. To add to this, the lands of these people were given away to private miners and local contractors. The naxalites fought against this injustice and became the leaders of the tribes here.

“In a phase where all the mainstream Left parties were concentrating only on workers’ issues and parties such as the Congress and the Jana Sangh [later on, the Bharatiya Janata Party] were party to the exploitation of tribal people in Bastar, the naxalites were the only force that spoke up for them and filled that political vacuum.”

He said even today the government did not have a plan to address the real livelihood issues of the tribal people. The implementation of the Forest Rights Act, 2006, which should have given forest-dwellers their historical right to land, was in disarray, he added. “There was a show of distribution of pattas [land ownership documents] in the beginning but even that is not happening now.”

He pointed to the two major memorandums of understanding (MoUs) that have been signed with the Tatas and Essar Steel, which will permit them to extract minerals here. He said: “The Bastar region has an abundance of minerals such as bauxite, tin and dolomite. Apart from this, it is also rich in timber. Instead of empowering the tribal people and giving them their right to these resources, the government is interested in shipping the resources out. In a place like Bastar, which has seen no development since Independence, a reaction against the state’s forces is bound to happen. The naxalites are just the one force but the problems of the tribal people are real. In this spree of violence, however, the naxalites do not realise that the jawans they killed were also poor people working for a livelihood and not class enemies as such. They only assist the class enemies bound by their duty.”

He felt that the increased deployment of security forces to counter the naxalites was a disguised attempt to enter those villages where Salwa Judum (an anti-Maoist vigilante group, meaning people’s peace movement in the local Gondi language) could not enter. “Every day, we see false encounters and physical torture by the police. In such a case, a villager has no choice but to retaliate either with the Maoists or alone.”

Excerpted from Frontline’s report, “In the war zone” by AJOY ASHIRWAD MAHAPRASHASTA (Volume 27 – Issue 09 : Apr. 24-May. 07, 2010)

Public Meeting: Indian State’s War on People and the Assault on Democratic Voices (April 24)

FORUM AGAINST WAR ON PEOPLE

Public Meeting
Indian State’s War on People and the Assault on Democratic Voices

3PM-8PM, 24TH APRIL 2010
Gandhi Peace Foundation, Deen Dayal Upadhyay MARG, ITO, DELHI

SPEAKERS: Randhir Singh, Justice Rajender Sachar, PK Vijayan, Madan Kashyap, Sumit Chakravorty, Neelabh, B D Sharma, S A R Geelani, Aparna, Kabir Suman, Darshanpal, Arundhati Roy, Ravinder Goel, Karen Gabriel, N Venuh(NPMHR), S R Sankaran(to be confirmed), Kalpana Mehta, Rajkishore, Varavara Rao, G N Saibaba, Mrigank, Ish Mishra, Radhika Menon, Shivmangal Sidhantkar and others

Operation Green Hunt is an unprecedented military offensive on the people: Indian government has been at war with the people of Kashmir and the North East for decades. In the name of ‘national security and integrity’ and ‘national interest’, the government has been trying to crush the democratic aspirations of these oppressed nationalities with state terror. Through Operation Green Hunt, the government has brought its war on people to the heart of India. If the total number of government forces presently engaged in this Operation is taken in its entirety (including the paramilitary forces and the state police) it comes close to a quarter of a million (2.5 lakh). This is more than double the US forces presently deployed in the occupation of Iraq —approximately 1.2 lakh— and bigger than the armies of Australia, Netherlands and South Africa put together. The war preparations alone speak volumes about the real intentions of the government. Air Force helicopters equipped with guns are used against the adivasis, airstrips are constructed in Raipur and Jagdalpur, tens of Jungle-Warfare schools are established to train the forces in special operations, new barracks and bases to station armed forces are prepared all over the war zone, and public buildings such as schools, panchayat houses and health centres are converted to camps for the Security Forces and torture chambers. In the name of fighting Naxalites/Maoists, new armed forces such as the CoBRA, Jharkhand Jaguar, C-60, etc are raised with public money to unleash terror on the adivasis. With a heinous intent, special emphasis is given by the government to recruit adivasi youths into government forces and state-sponsored vigilante gangs to instigate a bloody internecine war. To top it all, army commanders are deputed to oversee the war operations while the US is providing ‘advisors’, military intelligence, satellite surveillance and overall ‘tactical guidance’.

The hidden objective behind this unprecedented military offensive is to crush all forms of people’s struggles and revolutionary movements so as to clear the way for the giant multinational companies, with whom hundreds of MoUs have been signed by the government. Till September 2009, MoUs worth of Rs.6,69,338 crores have been signed in the adivasi regions of these states (which is 14 percent of the total pledged private investment in the entire country). Arcelor Mittal alone is planning to invest $24 billion for the production of iron-ore in the mineral-rich regions of Jharkhand and Orissa. Likewise, the financial worth of the unexplored bauxite deposits of Orissa alone is estimated to exceed $4 trillion. The powerful foreign and Indian corporations are lying in wait for the government clears the land of the adivasis and smash their resistance, so that they can move into the land with earth-diggers and empty the land out of its minerals. The stage has been set to undertake what has been termed by a Government-appointed committee as the “biggest land-grab after Columbus”. The target this time is not the indigenous inhabitants of North America, but the adivasis of central and eastern India.

The ongoing War on People leaves a trail of devastation and death: In the wake of this war imposed by the government on our own people the death-count in mounting. In a region where 40 people are said to be killed every week on an average (Outlook, 22 February 2010), what the corporate media has missed or has deliberately overlooked is the sheer number of adivasis who died in the hand of the government’s armed forces. Whereas the government has claimed success in killing around 170 ‘Maoists’/‘Naxalites’ during the joint operations under Operation Green Hunt till now, whereas the media quoted the Maoists saying that none of the killed were the members of their organisation. There are reasons to believe that a great part of the dead were unarmed and defenceless villagers killed in cold blood by the joint forces in fake encounters. The killing of adivasis in Gompad, Singanmadugu, Tetemadugu, Dogpadu, Palachelim, Palad, Kachalaram and scores of other villages in Chhattisgarh seems to have followed such a pattern.

An attack on democratic voices: By these acts of fascist repression, the government has made it very clear that the Naxalite movement is not the only target of its war operations. Any movement, organisation or individual that fights for people’s demands and against government policies, is to be branded as a part of the Naxalite/Maoist movement and suppressed by the government through Operation Green Hunt. Swapan Dasgupta, the editor of the journal People’s March in Bengali and owner of Radical Publications was arrested. He died in police custody on 2nd February 2010 even before his trial began due to police torture. He has become the first martyr to fall under the draconian UAPA. Lalmohan Tudu, president of People’s Committee against Police Atrocities (PCAPA) in Lalgarh was picked up from his house and shot dead by the paramilitary forces on 23rd February, 2010. On 20th November 2009, Wadeka Singana, the president of the Chasi Mulia Adivasi Sangh (CMAS), Narayanpatna in Orissa along with another activist was shot dead by the police during a rally to protest against the atrocities committed on women by the government’s armed forces. Two of the CPI(ML) leaders Ganapati Patro and Tapan Malik have been arrested on numerous trumped up charges. In Kalinganagar 28 platoons of special police were used to attempt to forcibly acquire land for a road in service of Tatas. When the Bisthapan Birodhi Janmanch Sukinda led adivasis protested, police firing on 30th March 2010 led to bullet injuries to 16 tribal people. Repression is intensifying in the anti-land acquisition movements of Niyamgiri and Jagatsinghpur and against movements under Lok Sangram Manch in Rayagada of Orissa.

The Vanavasi Chetna Ashram of Himanshu Kumar, a Gandhian social activist working in Dantewada for the past 18 years among the adivasis and fighting against the atrocities of Salwa Judum, was razed to the ground on 17th May 2009. In three eastern districts of Uttar Pradesh no mass activity is allowed by declaring these districts as ‘Naxal-infested.’ Two PUCL activists, Sheema and Vishwa Vijay were arrested in Utter Pradesh. Hundreds of leaders of farmers’ organisations in Punjab were arrested to prevent their democratic right to protest against state killings of farmers and other leaders. Thousands have been imprisoned in jails all over the country and tortured for allegedly being Naxalite/Maoist ‘sympathizers’. People’s organisations like PUCL, IAPL, PUDR, RDF, PDFI, CRPP, APDR, DSU, etc. and their activists have been falsely implicated by the government. This is an attempt to unleash state terror in order to curtail our democratic rights and to silence all voices of dissent against this genocidal Hunt of the Adivasis. A climate of undeclared emergency now prevails in the country in the wake of this war on people and the assault on democratic space by the Indian State.

The Home Minister, who has been campaigning desperately to mobilise support for this US-dictated war on the poorest of the poor, has even gone to the extent of denying the existence of Operation Green Hunt! Similarly, he continues to utter the rhetoric of ‘Talks’ while refusing to take a single step towards creating a conducive atmosphere for any negotiation to take place. Such, lies, hypocrisy and double-talk by Chidambaram with the support of the Arnab Goswamis, Rajdeep Sardesais and his other wily allies in the corporate media, has not been able to hide the truth of this war. Even the Supreme Court of India, while hearing a petition on the ‘disappearance’ of 12 adivasis from Gompad village of Dantewada district during Green Hunt, castigated the government’s offensive. The court observed, “Some of the reports appearing in the media are disturbing. Over two lakh people have been displaced in this fight… Where will they go? What will they grow?” (IBN Live, 17 February 2010).

The resistance to the government’s war on people is growing: The millions of adivasis under direct attack from the state’s offensive are using all means to defend themselves and their jal-jangal-jameen. The democratic and progressive sections of the country have also come out against the government’s war on the people in the last few months. Individuals and organisations within India and abroad have in one voice condemned the government’s genocidal war. Hundreds of protest rallys, dharnas and demonstrations are being organised in different parts of the country and outside. Peasants, workers, employees, intellectuals, artists, writers, civil rights activists, students etc. have registered their strong protest against the government, and demanded an immediate halt to the Operation Green Hunt. The need of the hour therefore is to unite and build the broadest possible solidarity among the people against this war and intensify the resistance. Only an unceasing wave of mass resistance can stop government’s assault on struggles against sale of the country and plunder of resources and suppression of democratic struggles.

In memory of Pyla Vasudeva Rao, a leader of the Srikakulam Armed Struggle

Naujawan Bharat Sabha (NBS)
Delhi Committee

A memorial meeting for Com. Pyla Vasudeva Rao
Date: April 20 2010 (Tuesday), Time: 5:30 PM o
Venue: Gandhi Peace Foundation, Deen Dayal Upadhyay Marg (near ITO)

Veteran communist revolutionary of India and one of the foremost leaders of the glorious Srikakulam Armed Struggle Pyla Vasudeva Rao breathed his last at 10:00 AM on April 11, 2010 after fighting cancer. He was 78 years old at the time of his death; of these he had party life of 58 years of which the last 42 years were spent in underground.

Born in 1932 in Rittapadu village of Srikakulam dist, Com. Pyla joined the united Communist Party in 1953 when a party unit was formed in his village. Taking up a teacher’s job on the Party’s instruction, many of his students joined the revolutionary communist movement. He became a professional revolutionary in 1962 and also a member of the district committee of the party.

In response to the clarion call of the Great Naxalbari Peasant Armed Struggle, the Srikakulam Girijan Armed Peasant Struggle started on 25thNovember 1968 and on the decision of the party, Com. PV went underground. As a member of the Srikakulam leadership, Com. Pyla became part of the CPI(ML). He participated in the 1970 CPI(ML) Party Congress (first after Naxalbari). In Srikakulam movement he worked alongside Comrades Panchadi Krishnamurthy, Vempatapu Satyam, Adibhatta Kailasam, Subbarao Panigrahi and others.

Between 1969-70 many important leaders of Srikakulam leaders were martyred and the movement suffered huge losses and setbacks. CPI(ML) PC was reorganized of which Com. Pyla became the secretary. Opposing the line of individual annihilation, Com. Pyla resigned as PC secretary and joined with other Srikakulam comrades to revive CC led by S.N. Singh. Since then he was a member of the Central Committee of the Party. In 1974, APRCP led by Com. CP Reddy merged with the CPI(ML) led by Com. SN Singh and Srikakulam movement became part of the state movement. Com. Pyla was elected state committee secretary in 1976 when Com. P. Ramanarasaiah was killed in a fake encounter.

He was re-elected to the CC in the 1980 Special Congress. For long the Party in AP was identified with his name.

Com. Pyla consistently practiced and supported the revolutionary mass line and struggled against rightism and revisionism. He was an ardent votary of an armed agrarian revolution and of building areas of sustained resistance. His death comes at the time when the peasants of India are rising in many parts against the decadent rule of the ruling classes, against landlord oppression and forcible displacement. Srikakulam Armed Struggle continues to inspire the revolutionaries and struggling people of the country. Srikakulam Armed Struggle which reached the highest point in terms of resistance and people’s participation among all the struggles inspired by Naxalbari continues to serve as a beacon light for the present revolutionary movement. Com. Pyla as one of the leaders of that movement continues to live in the memory of the revolutionaries and the struggling people of the country.

The Independent People’s Tribunal Reveals the Underbelly of Indian “Development”

Deepankar Basu, MRZine

Organized by a collective of civil society groups, social movements, progressive academics, social activists, and concerned citizens, the recently concluded Independent People’s Tribunal (IPT) on Land Acquisition, Resource Grab, and Operation Green Hunt in New Delhi offers a unique perspective into contemporary Indian reality.  While the national and international media talk profusely about the unprecedented growth of the Indian economy, as measured by growth of the gross domestic product, it shies away from looking at the underlying costs of that growth: increasing inequality, forced displacement and dispossession of the already vulnerable, growing social tensions, and a rapidly growing State terror.  The IPT, by giving space to different activist voices from the grassroots, offers a much-needed alternative perspective on the growth process, a view, in a sense, of the dark underbelly of current-day Indian "development."

Running for three days, from April 9 to April 11, the IPT heard accounts of diverse grassroots activists from the states of Chhattisgarh, Orissa, West Bengal, and Jharkhand, the theater of an insidious war — nicknamed Operation Green Hunt (OGH) — that the Indian State has launched against its own people.  Supplementing activist accounts and testimonies of witnesses with critical insights and advice of social scientists, journalists, legal experts, former government functionaries, and human rights activists, the people’s jury of the IPT made its opinion known through its interim observations and recommendations, the most urgent of which was to stop OGH and initiate a process of dialogue with the local population in the affected areas.1  Other recommendations included: immediately stopping all compulsory acquisition of agricultural or forest land and the forced displacement of the tribal people; making the details of all the memorandum of understanding (MOUs) signed for mining, mineral, and power projects known to the public; stop victimizing and harassing dissenters of the government’s policies; withdraw all paramilitary and police forces from schools and hospitals; constitute an Empowered Citizen’s Commission to investigate and recommend action against persons responsible for human rights violations of the tribal communities.2

Why has the Indian State launched OGH?  Why was the IPT organized?  Who participated in the deliberations of the IPT?  To address such questions, and therefore to understand the true import of the IPT, we need to step back a little and locate the ongoing war in the context of the political economy of contemporary India.

The Context

The announcement of the IPT and the interim observations of the people’s jury set out the context in clear-cut terms.  The neoliberal turn in the economic policies pursued by the Indian State since the mid 1980s has, in line with similar experiences in the rest of the world, spelt unmitigated disaster for the vast masses of the country.  While a small section of the population has increased its income, wealth, and social power at unimaginable speed and to preposterous levels, the majority of the population has continued to live in absolute poverty, marked by widespread hunger, malnutrition, and lack of access to even the most basic health and educational infrastructure necessary to guarantee a decent standard of living.

In 2009, India had 52 billionaires, about double the corresponding number in 2007.  The wealthiest Indian, Mukesh Ambani, has a net worth of $ 32 billion; the combined net worth of the richest 100 Indians in 2009 was US$ 276 billion.  On the other side of the social pyramid, about 77 per cent of Indians spent less than $2 (in PPP terms) on daily consumption expenditure in 2004-05 and roughly 80 per cent of Indian households did not have access to safe drinking water.

Not only has the neoliberal economic paradigm meant increasing disparities; it has also meant dispossession and pauperization for already vulnerable sections of the population, noted the interim observation of the people’s jury.  This is because a key component of the neoliberal paradigm in India has been the attempt to foster unprecedented levels of State-assisted resource grab by big Indian and foreign capital.  What a Ministry of Rural Development report itself termed the biggest resource grab since the time of Columbus, has gradually encompassed arable (often extremely fertile and multi-cropped) land, forest land, mineral resources, and water and has resulted in forcibly cutting off access of the poor and marginalized sections to virtually all forms of common property resources.  Coming on top of the five-decade-long "development disaster" of the Indian state, this forcible exclusion from access to common property resources has increased the economic vulnerability of the poor to unprecedented levels.

The current phase of this unprecedented resource grab has been concentrated primarily in the forested regions of Central India, stretching from Chhattisgarh all the way to Jharkhand and West Bengal, which house enormous amounts of mineral resources like iron ore and bauxite.  Big corporate houses with interests in mining, minerals, and power industries like Tata, Essar, Vedanta, POSCO, and others have lined up to appropriate these resources for quick economic gains, paying least attention to the enormous environmental and human costs inherent in their ventures.  The state governments have welcomed these corporate houses with open arms by signing unknown numbers of memorandum of understandings (MOUs) whose details have not been made public, despite repeated requests by activists and the local population.

But the forested regions of Central India house not only mineral resources corporate capital is desperately after; the region is also home to a large section of the roughly 100-million-strong indigenous population, referred to as adivasis, of the country.  To get at the resources, the tribal population needs to be moved, the area needs to be vacated; in Chattisgarh, according to some reports, 300,000 adivasis have already been forcibly displaced, some of whom have moved into the bordering state of Andhra Pradesh and while others have fled into the forests.  That is the source of the current conflict: the Indian State, acting clearly in the interests of corporate capital, have decided to forcibly drive out the local indigenous population from this region.

The adivasi population, quite naturally, have resisted this move of the State, using all possible means at their disposal.  Drawing on the Fifth Schedule of the Indian Constitution, which is especially devoted to delineating adivasi rights and laying out special provisions for their protection and endogenous development, adivasi activists have attempted to challenge the government’s move.  They have even taken recourse to the Panchayat Extension to Scheduled Areas (PESA) Act of 1996 and the Forest Rights Act of 2006, legislations — earned through years of arduous struggle — that have attempted to give more substance to the original impulse of the Fifth Schedule.

Instead of addressing the genuine grievances of indigenous population facing forcible displacement and dispossession, the State has, in flagrant violation of the letter and intent of the Indian Constitution, cracked down on their legitimate protests.  Peaceful resistance movements across this region have been met with police brutality and the military might of the State, forcing, in turn, the arming of the resistance movement.  State-assisted vigilante groups like the Salwa Judum in Chhattisgarh and Harmad Bahini in West Bengal were the first response of the state to the armed resistance of the adivasis.  When that failed, Operation Green Hunt, a further escalation and militarization of the State’s response, took shape.  That, in brief, is the context in which the IPT was organized.

The Participants and the Discussion

Mindful of this ominous context and after hearing the testimonies of participants from various corners of the country, the distinguished people’s jury — comprising former justices H. Suresh and P. B. Sawant, scientist and former member of the National Security Council P. M. Bhargava, former UGC chairman Professor Yash Pal, former chairperson of the National Commission for Women Mohini V. Giri, and retired IPS officer Dr. K. S. Subramanian — recommended stopping OGH and the compulsory acquisition of agricultural or forested land, making details of all MOUs public, and rehabilitating all displaced adivasis.3

While the inaugural address was presented by noted environmental activist Vandana Shiva, the people’s jury was introduced by well-known advocate Prashant Bhushan.  The inaugural session also saw presentations by Mr. S. P. Shukla and Dr. B D Sharma, a retired civil servant and ex-chairman of the SC/ST Commission.  The latter, in particular, drew attention, based on years of ground-level activism in tribal areas across the country, to the utter and long-term failure of the Indian State to uphold the rights of indigenous people as a result of violations of provisions guaranteed by the Fifth Schedule, the PESA Act of 1996, and the Forest Rights Act of 2006.

The second part of the first day focused on the current situation in Chhattisgarh marked by atrocities of the police and Sulwa Judum SPOs (members of a brutal State-supported vigilante group), regular torture, killing, rape, interrogation, and illegal detention for being alleged Maoist supporters.  Speakers included lawyer and human rights activist Sudha Bharadwaj of the Chhattisgarh Mukti Morcha, human rights activist Goldy M. George, Gandhian acivist Himanshu Kumar (whose Ashram was demolished by the administration in Chhattisgarh), world-renowned doctor and activist Binayak Sen (who had been jailed for two years in Chhatisgarh without any charges), and democratic activist Harish Dhawan of the People’s Union for Democratic Rights, and Lingaram, who had himself been tortured and forced to join the Salwa Judum.

The second day of the IPT saw presentations from Jharkhand and West Bengal.  Speakers on the Jharkhand session included: Dr. Alex Ekka, Prem Varma, James Topo, tribal rights activist Gladson Dungdung, Dr. Bani from the Azadi Bachao Andolan, Radha Krishna Munda from the Jharkhand Jungle Bacha Andolan.  Speakers at the West Bengal session included human rights activist Sujato Bhadra of the Association for the Protection of Democratic Rights, activist and academic Partho Sarathi Ray of Sanhati, and grassroots activists Montu Lal and Gajen Singh.

Running through all the days of the proceedings, there was also discussion about the attempts to silence every form of dissent, as part of the OGH, in urban areas, by clamping down especially on dissenting voices of urban activists who are opposing the neoliberal policies of the government.  Activist Abhijnan from West Bengal, Sujato Bhadra of the Association for the Protection of Democratic Rights, and Kavita Srivastava of the People’s Union for Civil Liberties spoke specifically about incidents of arrests, detentions, and human rights violations including denial of the right of activists to medical treatment while in custody (often under draconian laws).

The third and final day saw presentations on Orissa — with the main speakers being activist Praful Samantra, Abhay Sahu of the anti-POSCO movement, and Lingaraj Azad — and critical interventions by several eminent personalities including writer and activist Arundhati Roy, journalist Shoma Chaudhury, Bianca Jagger, Arun Aggarwal, civil rights activist Kavita Srivastava, and Advocate Shanti Bhushan.  The IPT ended with the presentation of the interim observations and recommendations of the people’s jury.

What Is the Message?

All the presentations, though differing in terms of details, drew attention to two closely related facts.  First, the current process of growth and "development" in India rests crucially on the forced displacement and dispossession of a sizable section of the indigenous population and peasantry; this process has key resemblance to what Marx had termed the primitive accumulation of capital.  Second, any and every resistance to this State-assisted displacement and dispossession is met with military force, again harking back to the brutalities of primitive accumulation in England.  Forced displacement, dislocation, and dispossession of the already vulnerable, systematic violations of their rights guaranteed by the Constitution, and an attack on any form of dissent which challenges the State’s policies are, thus, the festering wounds on the stinking underbelly of the current phase of Indian "development."  This is probably what the proceedings of the Independent People’s Tribunal (IPT) on Land Acquisition, Resource Grab, and Operation Green Hunt wanted to draw the attention of the world that is so enamored with Indian economic growth.

But will the government heed the advice of the IPT?  If past experience is anything to go by, the depressing answer is a resounding no.  People’s tribunals are regularly organized the world over to highlight important social, economic, and political issues that affect the lives of ordinary people.  India has also witnessed people’s tribunals in the past, the results of which have not only been totally ignored by the State but have even been used to harass their organizers.

Running for four days in Jawaharlal Nehru University, Delhi in September 2007, the Independent People’s Tribunal on the World Bank Group in Asia heard testimonies about the damage done by the policies of the World Bank across 26 sectors of social and economic development in India.4  A thirteen-member panel consisting of international jurists, renowned economists, prominent scientists, retired government officials, and social and religious leaders found the World Bank guilty of harming the environment and lowering the standard of living for most Indians.5  The findings of the people’s jury were released as a report on September 11, 2008, a year after the tribunal’s proceedings.  Did the government change course because of the recommendations of the jury?  My guess is as good as anybody else’s.

An even more outrageous case is the recent harassment and intimidation of human rights activists for highlighting the issue of custodial torture by the police.  Kirity Roy, Secretary of the Banglar Manabadhikar Suraksha Mancha (MASUM) — a human rights organization in West Bengal — was arrested by the Kolkata police on 7 April 2010, and later released on bail, for organizing a People’s Tribunal on Torture on the June 9-10, 2008 in Kolkata.6  Instead of applauding the work of organizations like MASUM, who are doing public service by highlighting human rights violations of ordinary citizens, the move to arrest its activists and harass them in all possible ways tells a lot about the real intentions of the government.  While both Human Rights Watch7 and Amnesty International8 have demanded that the Indian government drop all charges against Kirity Roy and others involved in organizing the People’s Tribunal on Torture, it is doubtful that the government will heed this sage advice unless pressured by citizens’ campaigns.

Given the absolutely negative attitude of the government in dealing with dissent of any kind, it is doubtful that it will heed the advice of the jury at the Independent People’s Tribunal (IPT) on Land Acquisition, Resource Grab, and Operation Green Hunt and call off its war on the tribal people.  If this be so, then it must also take note of the warning that the IPT ended its interim observations with:

Even peaceful activists opposing these violent actions of the State against the tribals are being targeted by the State and victimized.  This has led to a total alienation of the people from the State as well as their loss of faith in the government and the security forces.  The Government — both at the Centre and in the States — must realize that its above-mentioned actions, combined with total apathy, could very well be sowing the seeds of a violent revolution demanding justice and rule of law that would engulf the entire country.  We should not forget the French, Russian and American history, leave aside our own.

 

1  "Independent Tribunal Wants Operation Green Hunt to Stop," Indian Express, 12 April 2010.

2  "’Stop Operation Green Hunt,’"The Hindu, 13 April 2010.

3  Announcements, daily press releases, and the text of the jury’s interim observations and recommendations can be found on alternative media forums like Sanhati and Radical Notes.

4  "Independent People’s Tribunal on World Bank Gets Underway in Delhi," Bank Information Center, 22 September 2007.

5  "Independent People’s Tribunal Report Charges World Bank," BanglaPraxis, 29 October 2009.

6  "Kolkata — Prominent Human Rights Activist Kirity Roy Arrested," Sanhati.

7 "India: End Harassment of West Bengal Activist," Human Rights Watch, 9 April 2010.

8  "India: Government of West Bengal Must Drop False Charges against Activists Campaigning against Torture," Amnesty International, 9 April 2010.

 

I would like to thank Partho Sarathi Ray and Pinaki Chaudhury for useful comments on an earlier version of this article.


Deepankar Basu is Assistant Professor of Economics at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst.

Courtesy: MRZine

University Struggles at the End of the Edu-Deal

George Caffentzis

We should not ask for the university to be destroyed, nor for it to be preserved. We should not ask for anything. We should ask ourselves and each other to take control of these universities, collectively, so that education can begin.

From a flyer found in the Vienna Academy of Fine Arts, originally written in the University of California

Since the massive student revolt in France, in 2006, against the Contrat Première Embauche (CPE), and the ‘anomalous wave’ in Italy in 2008, student protest has mounted in almost every part of the world, suggesting a reprise of the heady days of 1968. It reached a crescendo in the Fall and Winter of 2009 when campus strikes and occupations proliferated from California to Austria, Germany, Croatia, Switzerland and later the UK. The website Tinyurl.com/squatted-universities counted 168 universities (mostly in Europe) where actions took place between 20 October and the end of December 2009. And the surge is far from over. On 4 March, 2010 in the US, on the occasion of a nationwide day of action (the first since May 1970) called in defense of public education, one of the coordinating organisations listed 64 different campuses that saw some form of protest. (Defendeducation.org). On the same day, the South African Students’ Congress (SASCO) tried to close down nine universities calling for free university education. The protest at the University of Johannesburg proved to be the most contentious, with the police driving students away with water cannons from a burning barricade.

At the root of the most recent mobilisations are the budget cuts that governments and academic institutions have implemented in the wake of the Wall Street meltdown and the tuition hikes that have followed from them, up to 32 percent in the University of California system, and similar increases in some British universities. In this sense, the new student movement can be seen as the main organised response to the global financial crisis. Indeed, ‘We won’t pay for your crisis’ – the slogan of striking Italian students – has become an international battle cry. But the economic crisis has exacerbated a general dissatisfaction that has deeper sources, stemming from the neoliberal reform of education and the restructuring of production that have taken place over the last three decades, which have affected every aspect of student life throughout the world.(1)

The End of the Edu-Deal

The most outstanding elements of this restructuring have been the corporatisation of the university systems, and the commercialisation of education. ‘For profit’ universities are still a minority on the academic scene but the ‘becoming business’ of academe is well advanced especially in the US, where it dates back to the passing of the Bayh-Dole Act of 1980, that enabled universities to apply for patents for ‘discoveries’ made in their labs that companies would have to pay to use. Since then, the restructuring of academe as a money-making venture has proceeded unabated. The opening of university labs to private enterprise, the selling of knowledge on the world market (through online education and off-shore teaching), the precarisation of academic labour and introduction of constantly rising tuition fees forcing students to plunge ever further into debt, have become standard features of the US academic life, and with regional differences the same trends can now be registered worldwide.

In Europe, the struggle epitomising the new student movement has been against the ‘Bologna Process’, an EU project that institutes a European Higher Education Area, and promotes the circulation of labour within its territory through the homogenisation and standardisation of schooling programs and degrees. The Bologna Process unabashedly places the university at the service of business. It redefines education as the production of mobile and flexible workers, possessing the skills employers require; it centralises the creation of pedagogical standards, removes control from local actors, and devalues local knowledge and local concerns. Similar developments have been taking place in many university systems in Africa and Asia (like Taiwan, Singapore, Japan) that also are being ‘Americanized’ and standardised (for example, in Taiwan through the imposition of the Social Science Citation Index to evaluate professors) – so that global corporations can use Indian, Russian, South African or Brazilian, instead of US or EU ‘knowledge workers’, with the confidence that they are fit for the job.(2)

It is generally recognised that the commercialisation of the university system has partly been a response to the student struggles and social movements of the ’60s and ’70s, which marked the end of the education policy that had prevailed in the Keynesian era. As campus after campus, from Berkeley to Berlin, became the hotbed of an anti-authoritarian revolt, dispelling the Keynesian illusion that investment in college education would pay down the line in the form of an increase in the general productivity of work, the ideology of education as preparation to civic life and a public good had to be discarded.(3)

But the new neoliberal regime also represented the end of a class deal. With the elimination of stipends, allowances, and free tuition, the cost of ‘education’, i.e. the cost of preparing oneself for work, has been imposed squarely on the work-force, in what amounts to a massive wage-cut, that is particularly onerous considering that precarity has become the dominant work relation, and that, like any other commodity, the knowledge ‘bought’ is quickly devalued by technological innovation. It is also the end of the role of the state as mediator. In the corporatised university students now confront capital directly, in the crowded classrooms where teachers can hardly match names on the rosters with faces, in the expansion of adjunct teaching and, above all, in the mounting student debt which, by turning students into indentured servants to the banks and/or state, acts as a disciplinary mechanism on student life, also casting a long shadow on their future.

Still, through the 1990s, student enrollment continued to grow across the world under the pressure of an economic restructuring making education a condition for employment. It became a mantra, during the last two decades, from New York to Paris to Nairobi, to claim that with the rise of the ‘knowledge society’ and information revolution, cost what it may, college education is a ‘must’ (World Bank 2002). Statistics seemed to confirm the wisdom of climbing the education ladder, pointing to an 83 percent differential in the US between the wages of college graduates and those of workers with high school degrees. But the increase in enrollment and indebtedness must also be read as a form of struggle, a rejection of the restrictions imposed by the subjection of education to the logic of the market, a hidden form of appropriation, manifesting itself in time through the increase in the numbers of those defaulting on their loan repayments.

There is not doubt, in this context, that the global financial crisis of 2008 targets this strategy of resistance, removing, through budget cut backs, layoffs, and the massification of unemployment, the last remaining guarantees. Certainly the ‘edu-deal’, that promised higher wages and work satisfaction in exchange for workers and their families taking on the cost for higher education, is dissolving as well. In the crisis capital is reneging on this ‘deal’, certainly because of the proliferation of defaults and because capitalism today refuses any guarantees, such as the promise of high wages to future knowledge workers.

The university financial crisis (the tuition fee increases, budget cut backs, furloughs and lay-offs) is directly aimed at eliminating the wage guarantee that formal higher education was supposed to bring and at taming the ‘cognitariat’. As in the case of immigrant workers, the attack on the students does not signify that knowledge workers are not needed, but rather that they need to be further disciplined and proletarianised, through an attack on the power they have begun to claim partly because of their position in the process of accumulation.

Student rebellion is therefore deep-seated, with the prospect of debt slavery being compounded by a future of insecurity and a sense of alienation from an institution perceived to be mercenary and bureaucratic that, in the bargain, produces a commodity subject to rapid devaluation.

Demands or Occupations?

The student movement, however, faces a political problem, most evident in the US and, to a lesser extent, in Europe. The movement has two souls. On the one side, it demands free university education, reviving the dream of publicly financed ‘mass scholarity’, ostensibly proposing to return to the model of the Keynesian era. On the other, it is in revolt against the university itself, calling for a mass exit from it or aiming to transform the campus into a base for alternative knowledge production that is accessible to those outside its ‘walls’.(4)

This dichotomy, which some characterise as a return to the ‘reform versus revolution’ disputes of the past, has become most visible in the debate sparked off during the University of California strikes last year, over ‘demands’ versus ‘occupations’, which at times has taken an acrimonious tone, as these terms have become complex signifiers for hierarchies and identities, differential power relations, and consequences for risk taking.

The contrast is not purely ideological. It is rooted in the contradictions facing every antagonistic movement today. Economic restructuring has fragmented the workforce, deepened divisions and, not last, it has increased the effort and time required for daily reproduction. A student population holding two or three jobs is less prone to organise than its more affluent peers in the ‘6os.

At the same time there is a sense, among many, that there is nothing more to negotiate, that demands have become superfluous since, for the majority of students, acquiring a certificate is no guarantee for the future which promises simply more precarity and constant self-recycling. Many students realise that capitalism has nothing to offer this generation, that no ‘new deal’ is possible, even in the metropolitan areas of the world, where most wealth is accumulated. Though there is a widespread temptation to revive it, the Keynesian interest group politics of making demands and ‘dealing’ is long dead.

Thus the slogan ‘occupy everything’ – building occupation being seen as a means of self-empowerment, the creation of spaces that students can control, a break in the flow of work and value through which the university expands its reach, and the production of a ‘counter-power’ prefigurative of the communalising relations students today want to construct.

It is hard to know how the ‘demands/occupation’ conflict within the student movement will be resolved. What is certain is that this is a major challenge the movement must overcome in order to increase in its power and its capacity to connect with other struggles. This will be a necessary step if the movement is to gain the power to reclaim education from the hands of the academic authorities and the state. As a next step there is presently much discussion about creating ‘knowledge commons’, in the sense of creating forms of autonomous knowledge production, not finalised or conditioned by the market and open to those outside the campus walls.

Meanwhile, as Edu-Notes has recognised,

already the student movement is creating a common of its own in the very process of the struggle. At the speed of light, news of the strikes, rallies, and occupations, have circulated around the world prompting a global electronic tam-tam of exchanged communiqués, slogans, messages of solidarity and support, resulting in an exceptional volume of images, documents, stories.(5)

Yet, the main ‘common’ the movement will have to construct is the extension of its mobilisation to other workers in the crisis. Key to this construction will be the issue of the debt that is the arch ‘anti-common’, since it is the transformation of collective surplus that could be used for the liberation of workers into a tool of their enslavement. Abolition of the student debt can be the connective tissue between the movement and the others struggling against foreclosures in the US and the larger movement against sovereign debt internationally.

George Caffentzis is a member of the Midnight Notes Collective. Together with the collective, he has co-edited two books, Midnight Oil: Work Energy War 1973-1992 and Auroras of the Zapatistas: Local and Global Struggles in the Fourth World War. Both were published by Autonomedia Press.

Acknowledgements

I want to thank the students and faculty I recently interviewed from the University of California, the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna and Rhodes University in South Africa for sharing their knowledge. I also want to thank my comrades in the Edu-Notes group for their insights and inspiration.

Footnotes

(1) Edu-factory Collective, Towards a Global Autonomous University, Brooklyn, NY: Autonomedia, 2009

(2) See, Silvia Federici, George Caffentzis, Alidou, Ousseina, A Thousand Flowers: Social Struggles Against Structural Adjustment in African Universities, Trenton, NJ: Africa World Press, 2000, Richard Pithouse, Asinamali: University Struggles in Post-Apartheid South Africa, Trenton: Africa World Press, 2006 and Arthur Hou-ming Huang, ‘Science as Ideology: SSCI, TSSCI and the Evaluation System of Social Sciences in Taiwan’, Inter-Asia Cultural Studies, Volume 10 2009, Number 2, pp. 282-291.

(3) George Caffentzis, ‘Throwing Away the Ladder: The Universities in the Crisis’, Zerowork I, 1975, pp. 128-142.

(4) After the Fall: Communiqués from Occupied California, 2010, Accessed at http://www.afterthefallcommuniques.info.

(5) Edu-Notes, ‘Introduction to Edu-Notes’, unpublished manuscript.

Courtesy:MUTE

Budget 2010-2011: An Exclusivist Agenda of the UPA

Rohit

Presentation of a budget is generally assumed to be indicative of the financial statement that a government makes. But what is often lost sight of is that the budget is more a political statement than a financial one. It clearly exposes the socio-economic policy orientation of the government. The class orientation of this government was made very clear by the Finance Minister in his speech when he argued,

The Union Budget cannot be a mere statement of Government accounts. It has to reflect the Government’s vision and signal the policies to come in future. With development and economic reforms, the focus of economic activity has shifted towards the non-governmental actors, bringing into sharper focus the role of Government as anenabler. An enabling Government does not try to deliver directly to the citizens everything that they need. Instead it creates an enabling ethos so that individual enterprise and creativity can flourish. (Emphasis added)

Unlike the earlier stint of the UPA government, this term has rid them of the ‘baggage’ of carrying the left on whose critical support they were sustaining their government in the last term. We need to remind ourselves of the euphoria that was generated among the big corporate houses and the apex industrial institutions like the FICCI, CII and ASSOCHAM after the victory of the UPA in the last general elections. Vijay Mallya represented this opinion very clearly when he said “[t]he UPA need not worry about hotchpotch partners. The Congress can clearly pursue its policies without the need to convince the Left”.  Echoing similar opinion, Prime Minister’s economic advisory council chairman, Suresh Tendulkar said, “Economic reforms would certainly be on top of the agenda of the government”. The second union budget of this government plays to this gallery in its bid to woo the neo-rich sections of the Indian population. This budget is no different in essence from the ‘India Shining’ politics of the NDA except for a facade of a ‘human face’.

The essence of this budget is conveyed in Pranab Mukherjee’s statement when he said that the government instead of being the provider in the economy should be an ‘enabler’ for individual enterprises (read, big corporations). What this essentially means is further withdrawal of the government from the economic activity except from the sphere of military expenditure. It is surprising that during an economic downturn, our Finance Minister has argued for ‘fiscal consolidation’, which means decreasing fiscal deficit. What is required is an increase in the government expenditure which would add to the demand, and thereby, in employment and total output of the economy. His position is a clear reflection of the class bias that the UPA government has. The financial and corporate interests always want the government’s role in the economy to be passive and to keep the fiscal deficit low. This bias becomes even clearer if we look at the way in which it has been sought to be lowered. He has proposed to increase the indirect taxes, which increases the price of common goods, to mobilize revenue without increasing the expenditure in similar proportion. On top of that, he has proposed tax sops to the neo-rich sections of the Indian population, which means that the burden on indirect tax revenue would ipso facto be higher to compensate for the decline in direct tax revenue. This budget is a clear indicator of the pro-rich and anti-poor political strategy of this government.

This paper will analyse the basic tenets of this budget by placing it in a broader economic perspective. It is divided in four sections. Section one deals with the issue of fiscal deficit. The second section deals with the revenue aspect of the budget and the third section with the expenditure side of it. The last section attempts to draw some conclusions from this budget and where the government is headed in its second term.

Fiscal Prudence: The Humbug of Finance

The treasure view: It has now become a mantra for the powers that be to declare that government should minimize the expenditure that is not financed by its tax revenue, i.e. balance its budget. This view is an old one going back to the famous treasury view which was held during the Great Depression of the 1930s by the then governments in the advanced capitalist countries. To put this argument in a nutshell, let us see what the treasury of the British government during those times had to offer (1),

Any increase in government spending necessarily crowds out an equal amount of private spending or investment, and thus has no net impact on economic activity.

It is surprising that despite a cogent rebuttal of this argument by Keynes, an English economist and Kalecki, a Marxist economist, it remains alive and, worse still, dominates the policy making. It seems as if Keynesian revolution did not take place in the history! Before we present a critique of this view, let us present the arguments put forth in favour of such a policy.  This argument has three aspects.

First, it is argued that a high fiscal deficit means low private investment, which is the driving force in the economy. Proponents argue that if the government garners a higher share of savings of the economy, less would be left to finance private investment. Therefore, according to this view, the very purpose of increasing growth through fiscal deficit gets defeated.

Second, it is argued that a high fiscal deficit means a higher indebtedness of the government in the future which puts financial burdens on the exchequer. Even if government expenditure boosts demand in the economy, interest payments for past borrowings do not contribute to this process.

Third, a high fiscal deficit means pushing the economy beyond its limits which eventually results in inflation. They argue that a higher fiscal deficit financed by government borrowing from the RBI means an increase in the money stock which would result in inflation since the supply of goods remains the same.

Why is this view wrong? Let us examine each of these points to show why they are wrong. First, the view that government expenditure ‘crowds out’ private investment because it depletes the pool of savings assumes that the pool itself is a given. Whereas any increase in activity in the economy ipso facto generates savings. This can happen in two different ways. First, an increase in government expenditure could generate higher real output (and possibly higher employment) if the economy is not functioning at its full capacity. This increase in output, and thereby of income of workers and capitalists together, generates higher savings than earlier. Second, even if the economy is working at full capacity, it would generate savings by squeezing the share of wages of workers through inflation in prices even as the money wages remain constant. Thus, there is no economic logic for why the ‘pool’ of savings would remain constant.

Second, an increasing share of interest payment out of the fiscal deficit is only possible if the rates of interest are rising. The treasury view assumes again that since the government is increasing the demand of credit, its price (interest rates) is bound to shoot up. The truth, however, is that the interest rates are not decided in the economy through equalisation of demand and supply of credit. It is instead fixed exogenously by the central bank, i.e., RBI in our case. Now, if the interest payments increase at a higher rate than the fiscal deficit, it is because the RBI keeps increasing the interest rate and not the other way round. This increase in interest rate in itself is a result of the process of liberalisation of the Indian economy which requires wooing international finance capital to come and invest in the Indian stock markets.

Third, fiscal deficit is not necessarily inflationary. First, as explained above, if a larger amount of goods can be produced, especially when the economy has idle capital and unemployed labour, the increased amount of money stock chases an increased amount of good. Hence, it would not result in inflation in the economy. Second, if the economy is running at its limit (resources are fully employed), it is not just the fiscal deficit but any expansionary activity, including private investment, becomes inflationary. So, there is no reason why fiscal deficit should be made out to be a villain. In fact, under capitalism, this is the only stable source of providing some respite to the common people facing the brunt of the pro-rich economic policies.

Most importantly, when an economy faces a downturn, any attempt to balance the budget or to put the fiscal deficit within a certain limit puts the burden of adjustment primarily on the working class. A declining economic activity means declining tax revenue for the government because both wages and profits go down. In such a situation, a commensurate downward revision of the government expenditure closes up even the limited opportunities of getting alternative work for the poor and the unemployed. Thus, there is a strong class bias in favour of the rentiers and capitalists in such a policy framework.

After placing the issue of fiscal deficit in a theoretical perspective, let us now concentrate on the specific proposals in this regard in the current budget. This is what Pranab Mukherjee had to say in his budget speech on ‘fiscal prudence’,

I am happy to report that in keeping with my commitment, I have been able to present the Budget for 2010-11 with a fiscal deficit of 5.5 per cent. In the Medium Term Fiscal Policy Statement being presented to the House today, along with other Budget documents, the rolling targets for fiscal deficit are pegged at 4.8 per cent and 4.1 per cent for 2011-12 and 2012-13, respectively… The improvement in our economic performance encourages a course of fiscal correction even as the global situation warrants caution. [emphasis added]

It is interesting to note that he says that although the global situation warrants caution, which means stimulus packages should not be withdrawn abroad, India should do just the opposite. Contrary to his claim, this is not the time to claim any consistent improvement in India’s economic performance since the economic crisis broke out. In fact, growth figure for the last quarter shows a decline in the GDP growth rate (see fig. 1 below).

Fig 1

What remains to be seen is whether the government strictly follows these targets. In case it does, it will be disastrous for the economy in general and the poor in particular. This would be particularly so because government expenditure would have to be scaled down in the event the revenue estimates are not realised. This is a very likely possibility given the nature of tax proposals the current budget proposes.

Pranab Mukherjee’s roadmap for achieving this target comprises of the following strategies:

  1. Increasing tax revenue through higher indirect taxes even as sops are doled out to the upper middle class and the rich through tax concessions or revisions.
  2. Decreasing crucial expenditure or at best increasing it marginally in the social sectors to ‘rationalise’ the fiscal policy.

Let us now examine these two aspects in some detail.

Resource Mobilisation: A Pro-rich, Anti-poor strategy

Taxes are of two kinds: direct and indirect. While direct taxes are levied on the income of the individuals and business enterprises, indirect taxes are levied on individual commodities. Direct taxes are also used to counter the rising income inequalities resulting from the spontaneous functioning of a capitalist system. This can be done through progressive taxation for higher income groups and using this fund to provide relief to the poor. Indirect taxes on common commodities on the other hand do exactly the opposite. It takes the same tax from the poor as well as the rich. This would obviously affect the poor more because their tax payment as a proportion of their income in this case is much higher than the rich.

Excise Duty on Petrol and Petroleum Products: In the name of curtailing fiscal deficit, the government has proposed to increase the tax revenue through greater incidence of indirect taxes. The specific proposal is to restore the basic duty of 5 per cent on crude petroleum; 7.5 per cent on diesel and petrol and 10 per cent on other refined products. The budget also proposes to enhance the Central Excise duty on petrol and diesel by Re.1 per litre each. For all non-petroleum products, the proposal is to enhance the standard rate on them from 8 per cent to 10 per centad valorem.

The effect of fuel price inflation on the overall inflation (2) can be understood from figure 2, which measures the contribution of three categories of goods i.e. primary articles (PA), fuel, power, light and lubricants (FPL&L) and manufactured products (MP). It can be seen that the contribution of fuels etc. to the overall inflation has been rising steadily since 1999-2000. It should be clear, therefore, that any further increase in inflation of this category would have a cascading effect on the overall inflation.

Fig 2

There are specific reasons for why we are stressing on the fuel prices. First, apart from having a direct impact, fuel price inflation influences the other categories of goods dramatically. The best example of this is the food items. Any increase in the fuel prices means an increase in the transportation cost, which has a direct impact on the final prices at which we buy these goods. Since this spill over effect is strong, any increase in fuel prices should not be taken at its face value alone. Second, there is an asymmetry involved with fuel price movements. While the international price hikes in oil have a direct impact on the domestic prices, any reversal internationally does not get translated into decline in domestic prices. This has become especially true because of our integration with the international economy.

After having presented the data on inflation and its various components, let us now explore the implications of such a process on the economy in general and the poor in particular. In a capitalist economy, the adjustment between theex ante aggregate demand and ex post supply (GDP) takes place through two routes: quantity adjustment and price adjustment. This distinction is central to understanding the effect of inflation in an economy. While the process of quantity adjustment could possibly open up opportunities for the working class and the petty producers through increase in employment, price adjustment squeezes their real income to make this adjustment work. Let us see how this takes place.

We have explained above how an increase in fiscal deficit effects an increase in the GDP. Let us now generalise this process where any one or all of the components of the aggregate demand can increase. Aggregate demand has five components: workers’ consumption, capitalists’ consumption, capitalists’ investment, government expenditure and net exports. An ex ante increase in any/all of these leads to an increase in the GDP ex post. There are two ways in which this can happen. First, it can happen through an increase in the physical quantity of output which is equivalent to the quantum of increase in demand. This also has a possibility of increasing employment unless this increase is equally compensated by an increase in labour productivity.

Second, it can happen through price adjustment. Since our focus at present is on this process, let us explore this possibility in some detail. For simplicity, we assume away the government sector and the foreign demand and concentrate on the demand of the workers and the capitalists. Suppose there is only one good, corn. Its nominal value is Rs 100 where the price is Rs 10 and the real output is 10 units. Nominal wage bill of the workers is Rs 40, which leaves Rs 60 as the nominal profits. We assume that workers consume all their wages whereas capitalists consume only a part of their profits, say half of it. For the given prices, workers have a claim over 4 units of output whereas capitalist over 6 units (3 as consumption and 3 as investment).

For some reason the capitalists, instead of investing Rs 30, want to invest Rs 40 by taking a loan. This extra demand for investment could be met by an increase in output of corn but if it is not possible, then the increased demand would be met by an increase in prices of the 10 units of corn. The price would have to increase to Rs 11 to accommodate the nominal increase in investment demand. If the workers are unable to increase their nominal wages, say because of presence of a large reserve army of labour or absence of unions, their purchasing power (real wages) would ipso facto decline. Instead of having a claim over 4 units of corn, now they have a claim over only 3.6 units (40/11) whereas the capitalists’ share increases to 6.4 units (70/11). Therefore, any price inflation, without a commensurate increase in nominal wages, inevitably leads to a redistribution of real income and output in favour of the capitalists.

We could fit this simple model to the current situation in our economy. The assumption that the workers (3) have not been able to maintain their real share in output can be easily validated by data. If we take the manufacturing sector alone, which has the most organised labour force, the share of wages in net value added has been declining steadily. This decline is even more drastic if we look at wages as a ratio of profits (see fig. 3). This is especially so in the neoliberal era. One could imagine that if this is the condition of the most organised labour force of our country, the share of income of the unorganised and the poor in general would be even worse. In such a situation, an inflationary budget such as this is going to be a drastic squeeze on the livelihood of the majority of the Indian population. It is important to note that the inflation resulting from the budget proposals would be self-inflicted in the sense that this could have been controlled but was consciously decided not to. It is here that the class orientation of the present dispensation at the centre comes out starkly and so unabashedly.

Fig 3

Direct Tax Concessions: It would be interesting to contrast the proposal on indirect taxes with that on the direct taxes. The finance minister declared that the tax sops through relaxations in direct taxes would lead to a revenue loss of Rs 25,000 crores this year. One of the most important factors is the proposal of ‘broadening’ the tax slabs.

Table 1

One can notice that all those whose income is more than Rs 3 lakhs per annum stand to gain from this announcement (see table 1). Let us take the example of a person who earns Rs 10 lakhs and see how his tax payment would change.  Earlier he was paying 10, 20 and 30 per cent for the portions 1.6–3  lakhs, 3–5 lakhs and remaining 5 lakhs of his income respectively, which means a total of Rs 2.05 lakhs (approx 20 percent of his total income). Now, he would pay 10, 20 and 30 per cent for the portions 1.6–5 lakhs, 5–8 lakhs and remaining 2 lakhs of his income respectively, which means 1.55 lakhs (approx 15 percent of his total income). Similarly, all those people whose income is greater than 3 lakhs gain from these new slabs and as we have shown the gain is substantial. Instead of paying 20 per cent as taxes, a person with an income of 10 lakhs pays only 15 per cent of his total income. Therefore, this is effectively transferring income into the hands of the upper middle class and the rich even as higher taxes in the form of indirect taxes are levied on the working class and the poor.

There is an important factor that we would like to bring in while discussing distribution of income between different classes in India. There is an interesting study by Banerjee and Piketty (2005) on growing income inequality in India (see fig. 4). It can be seen that after a continuous decline in income share of the top 1 per cent between 1950-1982, there has been a dramatic reversal since the early 1980s. The authors draw a significant conclusion as to why this was the case,

[T]he shares of the top 0.01 percent, 0.1 percent, and 1 percent in total income shrank substantially from the 1950s to the early to mid-1980s but then rose again, so that today these shares are only slightly below what they were in the 1920s and 1930s. This U-shaped pattern is broadly consistent with the evolution of economic policy in India: From the 1950s to the early to mid-1980s was a period of “socialist” policies in India, whereas the subsequent period, starting with the rise of Rajiv Gandhi, saw a gradual shift toward more probusiness policies. Although the initial share of the top income group was small, the fact that the rich were getting richer had a nontrivial impact on the overall income distribution. [emphasis added]

 Fig 4

It is to be noted that their analysis only covers the period till 2000, the first part of the post-reform period. However, the successive NDA and UPA governments have adopted even more pro-rich policies so this trend would have continued till present times. It is alarming to see that in such a situation the government has openly adopted an inequality-enhancing budget. So much for Manmohan Singh’s ‘globalisation with a human face’!

Disinvestment of PSEs:  Another alarming announcement made in this budget is the decision to revert back to the path of disinvestment of Public Sector Enterprises (PSEs). It will be clear in a moment why we have used the phrase revert back. While talking about revenue mobilisation through disinvestment, Pranab Mukherjee said that they expect to generate Rs 40,000 crores in the coming year from disinvestment as against Rs 25,000 in 2009-10. In his own words,

While presenting the Budget for 2009-10, I invited people to participate in Government’s disinvestment programme to share in the wealth and prosperity of the Central Public Sector Undertakings. … The proceeds will be utilised to meet the capital expenditure requirements of social sector schemes for creating new assets.

Listing of Central Public Sector Undertakings improves corporate governance, besidesunlocking the value for all stakeholders—the government, the company and the shareholders. [emphasis added]

It is startling to see that the finance minister is leaving no stones unturned to woo the corporate sector to ‘share in the wealth’ of the PSEs. The class bias in this statement becomes starker if we notice the word that he used for the corporate sector, which is ‘people’. He has made it clear that people for him (and his colleagues) stands for the rich corporate houses and not the ‘aam admi’ that the UPA keeps referring to.  This policy statement is to be seen in sharp contrast to their previous tenure when the Left parties had kept up the pressure to stall the disinvestment plans of the government. While in the first three years of the previous tenure of the UPA, it could disinvest worth Rs 4424, 1581 and 534 crores, it has already mobilised 20,000 crores for the present fiscal year and proposes to mobilise 40,000 crores for the next.

The justification for disinvestment given by the finance minister is that the proceeds would be utilised to meet the expenditures in the social sectors. The vacuity of this statement can be established from this year’s glaring disparity between the resource mobilisation from disinvestment and the expenditure proposals on the social sectors, an issue that we turn to in the next section.

Government Expenditure: Too Less to Have an Impact

On the expenditure side, this budget is a damp squib. Despite making tall claims about an ‘inclusive budget’, the increase in total expenditure is grossly inadequate. This is in line with the fiscal consolidation policy of the finance minister. Let us evaluate the budget proposals for some of the important sectors.

  • Agriculture: It is alarming to see that despite a negative growth rate in agriculture registered in 2009-10, the share of allocation on agriculture and allied activities of the total budget expenditure has gone down from 10.77 per cent in 2009-10 (Revised estimates) to 9.75 per cent this year. This complete lack of prioritisation and gross neglect of the agricultural sector especially at a time when it is witnessing one of the worst crises since independence speaks volumes about the real motive of this government. It should be kept in mind that the agricultural sector employs 56 per cent of India’s population today. At a time of dwindling income in the agricultural sector, instead of providing monetary relief to the farmers, the government has decided to decrease the allocation on fertiliser subsidies, thereby, increasing their misery through cost inflation. There has been an absolute decline in fertiliser subsidy from Rs 73660 crores in 2008-09 to Rs 52980 crores in 2009-10 and Rs 49981 crores in the current proposal.
  • Rural Development: If we take rural development as a whole, the picture remains the same. This budget allocates lesser share of the total plan on rural development as compared to the previous years. This share has been decreasing from 21 per cent to 16.79 per cent to 16 per cent in 2008-09, 2009-10, 2010-11 respectively. The allocation on Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (MGNREGS), which is the flagship programme of the government, has gone up by only 2.5 percent from Rs. 39,100 crore in 2009-10 (RE) to Rs. 40,100 in 2010-11 (BE).
  • Food Security and Nutrition: As per government’s own reports (4), 77 percent people of our country, i.e. 83.6 crore people, spend less than Rs.20 per head per day and live in poverty and hardship.  Moreover, different national and international reports have shown that around 50 per cent children are undernourished and more than 75 per cent women are anaemic in rural India. There has been a continuous decline in the per capita net availability of food grains since the early 1990s. In such a situation, the requirement was to increase the food subsidy as a step towards universalisation of the Public Distribution System (PDS). However, the government has decided to decrease even that in the name of fiscal prudence.
  • Health: The combined expenditure of Centre and States on Health, as a proportion of GDP, has increased marginally from around 1.02 percent in 2008-09 to 1.06 percent in 2009-10. This should be seen in sharp contrast to the election promise of the Congress government of raising total public spending on health in the country to 2 to 3 percent of GDP. Despite the increase in incidence of TB, Malaria and other communicable diseases, there is actually a decline in the allocation of resources on national disease control programme. There is also a decline in allocation to the premier institutes of medical education like PGIMER, Chandigarh. Allocation on National Rural Health Mission (NRHM) has been increased to Rs. 15,514 crores in 2010-11 from Rs. 14,002 crores in 2009-10. There was a large scope of increasing this expenditure if the government was serious about health coverage, especially to the poor and the disadvantaged sections of our society.

Therefore, it is more than clear that at a time in which the government could have played the role of boosting the demand and output as also help generate employment, it has focussed on the policy of controlling expenditure. Government expenditure does not only provide impetus to grow in an unemployment-ridden economy, it also has the potential to partially counterbalance the income and wealth inequalities generated as a result of the spontaneous functioning of capitalism.

Conclusion

This is probably one of the few budgets in recent years which clearly expose the class bias and strategy of the government. There is not even pretence of a ‘human face’ as the UPA government announces the economic policy that they would follow for their present term. At a time in which the working people of our country are getting doubly squeezed due to spiralling inflation and loss of jobs as a result of the global crisis, it is outrageous that the government has not only turned a blind eye to them but has burdened them further. This budget quite clearly is going to aggravate income and wealth inequality while bringing hardship to the aam admi of our country. The question, however, is whether the aam admi would be able to gather enough strength to give a fitting rebuff to these anti-people policies of the UPA government.


Rohit
 teaches Economics at the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Delhi.


Notes:

(1) Taken from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treasury_view

(2) The overall inflation in India is measured by an index called Weighted Price Index (WPI) which calculates the weighted inflation of all the commodities, where the weights are their quantitative contribution to the GDP.

(3) By workers, we do not only mean the working class but the working population, which would include the agricultural workers, petty producers etc.

(4) Arjun Sengupta Committee was set up by the UPA government to look into the condition of the unorganised workers.

References:

Banerjee, Abhijit and Thomas Piketty (2005): Top Indian Incomes, 1922-2000. The World Bank Economic Review, 19(1): 1–20

CBGA Report: Union Budget 2010-11, Which Way Now? Response to the Union Budget, Centre for Budget and Governance Accountability

Patnaik, Prabhat (2000): The Humbug of Finance. Frontline, 4 February

Union Budget 2010-11: Available at http://indiabudget.nic.in/ub2010-11/ubmain.htm

Amid Talk of Air Strikes, Struggles in the Forest Continue

Campaign for Survival and Dignity

Even as the media fills itself with war cries and debates on air strikes, the struggle for democracy in the forest areas continues. The very government that preaches the rule of law continues to violate its own laws on a daily basis, both at the State and at the Central levels. Thus, even as it continues to violate the law, the Environment Ministry has revised its terms of reference for a Committee “to study the implementation of the Forest Rights Act”; the revisions meet some concerns but ignore the most important ones. Meanwhile, the Ministry continues to pour money into illegal plantations, relocation from tiger reserves and Joint Forest Management programs that are used as tools to steal people’s lands and forests. As a group of eminent retired civil servants said in response to the formation of this Committee, “If the government is indeed serious about following the law, it should be enforcing respect for people’s resource rights.”

Meanwhile, people continue to gather and protest for their democratic rights. In Gujarat and Jharkhand, mass dharnas were held on April 7th, demanding recognition of community rights, democratic forest control, an end to repression and respect for the Forest Rights Act. In Rajasthan, as part of an ongoing drive by organisations there, 20 villages have recently issued notices against the Forest Department for criminal offences under the Forest Rights Act. In West Bengal, the National Forum of Forest Peoples and Forest Workers issued an appeal after the house of the co-convenor of the North Bengal Regional Committee was raided by the police at 3 am; he was only saved from being taken away in the night by protests by the rest of the village. The Forum has been involved in struggles to claim community forest resource rights in the area.

The media and the government would do well to ask themselves: what about democracy? And precisely which rule of law is the government defending?

Contact: 9810819301, www.forestrightsact.com

Sanhati’s Statement on Attack on Freedom of Expression in Indian Universities

Sanhati

The imposition of neoliberal economic policies by the Indian State since the early 1990’s has, much along expected lines, spelt disaster for the vast masses of the country. A key component of this paradigm has been the unprecedented levels of State-assisted resource grab by big Indian and foreign capital. Termed as the biggest resource grab since the time of Columbus by a government report, it has extended to arable land, forest land, water and resulted in forcibly cutting off access of the poor and marginalized sections to virtually all forms of common property resources. This, in addition to the five decade long development disaster of the Indian state has increased the economic vulnerability of the poor to unprecedented levels. In responding to the resistance mounted by poor people, especially adivasis and poor peasants, against this forcible dispossession and pauperization, the Government of India has opted for a military solution: Operation Green Hunt. It has chosen to wage war on the most economically vulnerable and socially disadvantaged sections of the Indian population, instead of launching a war on poverty, destitution, hunger and malnutrition.

Going hand in hand with this unstated and unjust war on poor people is a growing authoritarianism of the Indian State. Any and every dissenting voice is sought to be silenced, any opposition is sought to be crushed with force, dialogue and debate is sought to be replaced with repression. While the murder and rape of tribals continue in the “war zone” across the forested regions of Central India, any voice of opposition to this policy is brutally silenced: Binayak Sen was arrested and kept in Raipur jail for close to two years without any charges, Himanshuji’s ashram, the Vanavasi Chetna Ashram, was demolished in Chhattisgarh, human rights activists across the country are being daily harassed and intimidated by the police and intelligence agencies, Akhil Gogoi of the Krishak Mukti Sangram Samiti (KMSS) in Assam was harassed by the police, Dr. E Rati Rao, the vice-president of PUCL, Karnataka, has been charged with sedition, Prakash Korram of the Ekta Parishad was detained for several days in Gujarat. The list is growing at an alarmingly rapid rate.

The attack on the democratic rights of the people has now reached the university campuses of the country. It has been recently reported that legitimate political activity of students are coming under undue scrutiny, that the administrations of various universities are attempting to monitor and debar public meetings on “sensitive” political issues, that university teachers and students are being wilfully “picked up” by the police for interrogation. This is unacceptable, this cannot be allowed to continue.

We appeal to all democratic-minded people of India and the world to raise their voices against the unjust war of the Indian State and the concomitant attack on the democratic rights of the people. We must lend our support to the movement to protect the freedom of speech and expression, the right to democratic dissent.

Press Release on the JNU incident

Campaign against War on People

On 9th April, 2010, ‘JNU Forum against War on People’ organised a cultural programme titled ‘A Cultural Evening of Protest against Operation Green Hunt’ at Godavari Dhaba in JNU to oppose the sate-military offensive on tribals of Eastern and Central India. The programme included, as its pamphlet clearly states, a play called ‘Sadak’ written by Habib Tanvir, screening of documentary and songs, poetry, performances by students from JNU, Jamia and Delhi University. As soon as the programme started, a group of miscreants led by ABVP and NSUI leaders tried to disrupt the event by shouting slogans and abusing the organisers. Apprehending an attack on the performers, students present in the audience formed a human chain around the stage. However, the ABVP and NSUI hooligans broke this human chain forcefully, physically assaulting and injuring students, to clear their way to the stage. They disconnected the electricity, destroyed audio-visual equipments, vandalised the dais and beat-up anyone, who dared to come on their way. Number of students were injured in this attack and had to be taken to AIIMS for medical help. While ABVP-NSUI-YFE goons went on the rampage, the chief security officer of JNU, who was present at the spot, remained a mute spectator. The next day, when students were protesting against this incident, once again some ABVP-NSUI-YFE miscreants started pelting stones at the protesters and tore down the posters of ‘JNU Forum against War on People’.

In Delhi University we have seen similar attacks by fascist forces on students’ events as well. Two months ago, a mobile book store by ‘Janchetna’ was attacked by ABVP hooligans, where they tore books and damaged the van before students came out in numbers in protection of their own space. It is evident from these incidents that the fascist forces are afraid of any kind of pro people programme. They want to rob our democratic spaces by force. They want to silence any voice, which raises question on people’s misery, state repression and dismantling of democracy.

The JNU administration, instead of taking steps against these lumpens, is trying to propagate all sorts of misinformation about the incident. First, the administration raised the issue of prior permission for holding a meeting, knowing fully well that the cultural programme was hold at a ‘dhaba’ and there is no provision for and precedence of administrative permission for such events. We have experienced similar selective administrative harassment in Delhi University as well. It has become a standard practice of the university administration not to clamp down on the perpetrators of such incident. Instead these incidents have been used as an excuse to snatch away the remaining limited democratic space through official-legal measures. JNU administration has gone a step farther on this occasion by joining the ABVP-BJP-NSUI- YFE chorus of branding the event as an ‘anti-national’ protest. It is perhaps a cruel joke (and indeed a fascist strategy) that the architects of Operation Green Hunt, which has resulted in loss of life and livelihoods of millions of people, are claiming to be ‘patriots’ today!

Worldwide, universities have traditionally been a crucial space for freedom of expression, the exploration of ideas and critical debate. They have always been, and should always be, sites where even the strongest critique of the state can be – in fact, must and should be – made possible. This is an essential character, not just of the university as an institution, but of the democratic principles of the society it exists in. The JNU incident, once again, reveals the systematic way in which the democratic spaces are taken away by a nexus of fascist goons and the university administration.

We, ‘Campaign against War on People’, a community of students and teachers of Delhi University, unequivocally condemn ABVP-NSUI-YFE for the attack. We also condemn the JNU administration for their vicious propaganda campaign and for failing to take steps against the miscreants. We demand the following measures be taken immediately

1) Disciplinary actions must be taken against these goons, who are destroying the democratic fabric of our universities.

2) JNU administration must apologise for their misinformation campaign.

Event: Occupied! Workers’ Factory Occupations North and South

Film Screening and Debate

Date: Saturday, April 17, 2010
Time: 1:30pm – 5:30pm
Location: Indian Social Institute (ISI) 10, Institutional Area, Lodi Road, New Delhi (India)

We will screen two short documentaries about workers’ occupation of Visteon car parts factory in London in April 2009 and the occupation of Hero Honda plant near Gurgaon in May 2008. Marco, who has been involved in the Visteon occupation, will share his experience. We want to debate about the potentials and difficulties of workers’ struggles in Delhi’s industrial belt and about what kind of practice a revolutionary left can develop in support.

Enfield, England
“Visteon Occupation – they fight for us all” (20min)

After the crisis blow of autumn 2008 the global car industry started an attack on its work-force. The Ford subsidiary Visteon decided to shut down three plants in the UK – the workers responded by spontaneous occupation. The documentary shows the self-activity of workers and the role of state and unions. We will have the possibility to discuss with a comrade who was actively involved in the occupation.

More about Visteon Struggle

Gurgaon, India

“Interview with Hero Honda Workers” (20min)

In the last years there have been several ‘wild’ occupations of factories in Gurgaon. The occupations were organised mainly by workers hired through contractors and they remained largely unknown to the wider public: five days occupation at Hero Honda and Delphi in Gurgaon in 2006, at Medikit and Honda HMSI in 2007, at Hero Honda in Dharuhera in 2008. These struggles ask us – a revolutionary left – about our potentials of practical support. Comrades of Faridabad Majdoor Talmel will present some ideas.

More about Hero Honda and other struggles in Gurgaon