Editorial: Gains vs. aspirations

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Business Standard New Delhi
Last Updated : Jan 29 2013 | 12:59 AM IST

However, neither economics nor politics is about taking things at their face value. On the first, there is no question that the growth performance of the economy over the past five years (since the final year of the NDA government) has given India a prominent place on the global investment list. Five years ago, the world talked about India's economic potential; today, that potential has been converted into reality. Even on the infrastructure front progress has been visible in recent times. Airport privatisation and the ultra-mega power plants are important examples, even if their benefits are not immediately in hand. But, notwithstanding these, the gap between the demand for and supply of infrastructure is widening, hurting both the growth momentum and the quality of life for the average voter. Inappropriately designed and inefficiently implemented projects will do nothing to solve the problem.

Shifting focus to the inclusiveness agenda, results are what will eventually matter, not programmes or initiatives. Perhaps in recognition of this, the government has changed tack. Recent announcements suggest a reversion to the discretionary command-and-control approach that was discredited two decades ago. This is not a good sign at all. It negates the huge benefits that the economy has obtained from the reforms that have been implemented by all the governments that have been in office since 1991.

On the political front, the past few months have not been good for the UPA. It has lost assembly elections in Gujarat, Himachal Pradesh and Karnataka, while its ally, the CPI(M), has showed significant weaknesses in the local government elections in West Bengal. As tempting as it is to attribute electoral outcomes to a whole range of local specifics, widespread rejection of the ruling coalition cannot but be interpreted as increasing frustration with the government's performance.The stark reality of contemporary Indian politics is that however significant the government's achievements may be, they seem to be perpetually several steps behind people's aspirations.

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First Published: May 26 2008 | 12:00 AM IST