Saturday, 10 October 2015

Of poverty, Radio Rice, farm revolution, Mahalonabis Plan

  • Political Communication-Part IV


By S.Narendra
Former Information Adviser to PM, Principal Information Officer
to Government and Spokesperson

The socio-economic agenda of the political leadership from 1952, when the first five-year plan was launched, until the economic reforms of 1991 was articulated in the Plans. Planning and five-year plans were considered as something like a magic wand for delivering the dreams of millions of Indians. And, thus began the halcyon days for development communication, serving as the oxygen of political communication…….and official propaganda. Read on the 4th Installment.

Nehru - the brain behind Five-Year Pans
that shaped dearly days of Independent
India's economic development
It began as an era of unimaginable scarcity and deprivation. Rationing of food, fuel, firewood, cloth and other essential commodities continued for several years after independence. As an eight-year-old boy, I remember, I had to stand in a queue for collecting mere 6 to 8 pieces of firewood. That was the weekly quota! My four older siblings were detailed at other queues for basic items like rice, sugar, wheat (a rare commodity), and cloth. On many days, after waiting for hours in the line, we would return empty handed, as the ration shop was short of supplies. Poverty was something that was shared by the majority of people. The advent of freedom and the promise of INC during the freedom movement that it would address poverty issues on a priority had kindled a faint hope among the people.
Agriculture, though of subsistence kind, dominated the economy. Overcoming scarcities, especially of food (the foodgrain output was less than 50 million tonnes) was a political priority as well. Congress as a national movement had committed itself to abolish Zamindari and now time had come for redeeming that commitment. While public pronouncements on honouring this commitment were sweet music to the landless and the farm tenants, the party had to contend with behind-the-scene opposition from its leaders and legislators. According to studies, nearly 12% of them were landlords. The new Constitution had included private property ownership right as a Fundamental Right.
Bhakra-Nangal Dam
A British government report in the early part of 20th century had famously said that India’s agriculture was a gamble in monsoons.  And, the new government’s focus was on making farming less dependent on rains by building big irrigation projects. The core economic content of political communication in the initial days of Independence was naturally was on growing more food. After the famine of 1940s, the predecessor British government had launched a low key  grow more food campaign and it ended up only as  posters exhorting farmers to grow more food.  The campaign got subsumed and imbued with new energy in the first five-year Plan the focus of which was on improving agriculture. A large share of the  first five-year Plan of over Rs 2000 crore went to fund the grow more food campaign and multi-purpose irrigation projects.
Radio Rice Revolution: The policy makers were greatly impressed by the American  Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) that had harnessed the Colorado river for greening the arid western America. This model was adopted lock, stock and barrel by India. The political communication went lyrical while presenting this government initiative. Prime Minister Nehru, who opened the sluice gates of 700-feet tall Bhakra dam in Punjab in 1954 called it ‘the new temple (s) of India’. According to newspaper accounts of the time, people lined up for miles along the canals branching out of the dam to witness the Sutlej river water entering their area. Many more such projects such as the Tungabhandra, Nagarjuna Sagar, Damodar, Hirakud laid the foundation for the  in the ‘green revolution’, catapulting India on to the way to food self–sufficiency. But it took more than a decade for this ‘green revolution’ to come on stream.
The communication saga surrounding India’s farm revolution, especially the ‘green revolution ‘has spawned thousands of Ph.Ds in the US and India. The political leadership that spearheaded this movement showed an extraordinary vision that resonated among the farming community. A notable feature of this political communication was that it was sans party politics. This effort also created a massive country-wide machinery including innovative communication channels reaching out to the villages. One of the AIR initiatives in this field -RRF or Radio Rural Forum - has donned the folk-lore of development communication. The illiterate farmers who were taught by participatory radio programmes to grow a high yielding rice (IR-8) associated it so much with the radio, they termed it  ‘Radio Rice’. I was a very, very small part of this farm revolution machinery when I started my career. I had the privilege of writing a series of feature articles on the green revolution that was taking place in the Kosi river command area in Bihar. 
Planning as an instrument of national development was, however, embraced by the Indian national Congress in as early as 1938, and Jawaharlal Nehru had headed the party’s committee on Planning. And, the National Planning commission was set up very soon after India became a Republic in 1950 and the first five-year plan was rolled out in 1951. Its first chairman was PM Nehru himself, who was also its foremost spokesman. The 1952 general elections was the first poll campaign in which INC showcased many of the five-year plan programmes. The party manifesto declared: “it is Not possible to pursue a policy of laissez –faire in industry....it is incompatible with any planning. It has long been Congress policy that basic industries should be owned or controlled by the State...State trading should be undertaken...A large field is left for private enterprise... Thus, the economy will have public sector as well as a private sector’.
Tungabhadra Project
The concept of this mixed economy progressed further for addressing the prevailing wide  income  disparities. In 1955, the All India Congress Committee session held at Avadi decisively moved for controlling the commanding heights of the economy. Its resolution said: “In order to realise the object of the Congress,...to further the objective of the Preamble (of the Constitution of India), and Directive Principles of State Policy ...Planning should take place with a view to establishing a socialist pattern of society, where the principal means of production are under social ownership or control, production is progressively speeded up and there is equitable distribution of national wealth’.
The IDRA or Industrial Development and Regulation Act (1951) had already anticipated such a political stance.
On the political front, the party Resolution not only reflected  Prime Minister Nehru’s own economic thinking but it was also a response to the criticism by stalwarts like Acharya Kripalani, Narendra Dev and Jayaprakash Narayan that the Congress was not sufficiently socialistic. These persons had left the Congress and formed new political parties. In fact, there was some discussion within the party at this stage whether farm land should be owned by communities but it did not go further. The Avadi session was a watershed moment in India’s economic history and decisively influenced the later official industrial policy.
A year later, the II five year plan, known as the Mahalonabis Plan- was unveiled. (Per Wikipedia, The Feldman–Mahalanobis model is a Neo-Marxist model of economic development, created independently by Soviet economist G. A. Feldman in 1928, and Indian statistician Prasanta Chandra Mahalanobis in 1953. Mahalanobis became essentially the key economist of India's Second Five Year Plan, becoming subject to much of India's most dramatic economic debates.)
The Plan fully embraced the Avadi philosophy, with the government getting into running of big heavy industry enterprises such as steel. The political communication that emanated was somewhat jingoistic in the sense that India would build some of the world’s ‘biggest’, world’s ‘first’, ‘largest’ projects. While the policy of import substitution, self-sufficiency, had not yet appeared in political parlance, there was a definite  stress on ‘self-reliance’. This was also the period when Nehru had given his famous call for inculcating ‘a scientific temper’ among the people and had  laid the ground for setting up various institutions for scientific research and higher education like CSIR, Atomic research, IITs and others. But India had not closed its doors to foreign technology, expertise and enterprise. Media reports about projects were highly appreciative accounts of government policies. There was a spirit of ‘we can do it’ in the air and the impact of this spirit can be felt even to this day. 
Foreign Media watch on India: From the II Plan onwards, the Planning Commission became almost a supra-body that overshadowed the cabinet. The Plan document itself with its grandiose schemes was something like a post-dated cheque. It was an invaluable companion of government publicists. The newspapers gave prominent coverage to announcements of Plan schemes and the Plan document served as a great source for news stories spun out by economic journalists, especially on days when the news fall was thin.   
A largely illiterate population (85%) adopting the democracy based on universal franchise had excited the western developed countries and their media. No such example existed in political history. A poverty-ridden India’s experiment to push planned development in a federal democracy was another factor that came to be watched with keen interest. The compulsions of World War II had made the western capitalist countries also to accord a dominant role for the state in running the economy. Leading captains of Indian industry had come out with their own Plan document known as the Bombay Plan that had strongly argued for the state to take a lead in economic development, and had visualised a supplementary role for the private sector.  And, therefore, the Indian government declaring its intention through Planning to control and manage the economy for the greatest good of the greatest numbers was not contested either at home or abroad. The sheen of freedom movement had not left the Indian national Congress and the credibility of the prime minister was unquestioned. He spoke for the government and the nation on almost on all matters and dissenters were seen as an aberration.

One had to wait until 1959 for major political dissent on economic policy to surface in the form of the Swatantra party founded by C.Rajagopalachari, a close associate of Gandhi and Nehru. Minoo Masani had set up his Forum of Free Enterpise. The editor of Current weekly, D.F.Karaka was a trenchant critic of Nehru and had begun his free enterprise crusade. Around this time, there was also some disquiet on on Nehru’s foreign policy, especially with regard to China and its actions in Tibet. The first biggest scam of independent India -Mundhra Scandal- was coming to light. But let me not jump into another period.

The author
sunarendra@gmail.com
Returning to 1950s, a remarkable facet of political communication on economic development in the early years of independence was that the political leaders who had suffered incarceration at the hands of the colonial power, did not hark back to the economic havoc brought upon India by the colonial masters. This was in stark contrast to the content of political communication on the same theme that took   place in the recent past. Political parties at the centre and the states come to power by blaming the predecessor regime.
When several Afro-Asian countries gained independence from the colonial masters, very soon after India became free, the leadership of those countries kept blaming the predecessor regimes for their under-development and used this theme as an excuse for them not making economic progress. But Indian leadership, in contrast, was more far- sighted and kept focus on what it could do to remedy the aborted economic development of India under foreign rule. (To be continued)




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