Showing posts with label P V Narsimha Rao. Show all posts
Showing posts with label P V Narsimha Rao. Show all posts

Monday, 10 August 2015

From FDI ‘threat’ to Bhujia to ‘Pepsi Tomatoes’ in Parliament!

  • Mule in a Turf Club-IV
  • A Communicator’s experience - Licence Raj to Economic Reforms



This TVC just about sums up PEPSI story in the reforms saga!

By S.Narendra

(Former Information Adviser to PM, Principal Information Officer
and Government Spokesperson)

Continuing the series ‘Mule in a Turn Club’ on challenges faced by communication machinery during the transition from License Raj to Reforms and how one dealt with stubborn officials and politicians when some sections feared that FDI would mean direct threat to homemade Bhujia...

If we want to eat bhujia  with  our meals as a side dish  or mix it with  ‘Bhelpuri’ or just munch, we go to a corner ‘Halwai’ shop or a ‘Kirana’ shop,  tear off a  packet with the  salty stuff dangling  from   a string of air-tight packets. Often the packet bears the familiar names like Haldiram, Bikanerwala or MTR. No one in India had imagined in 1990s  that some Indian  city specific ‘Halwais’ would become international brands with a huge range of packed ready-to-eat food stuff successfully competing with MNCs like PEPSI. It may sound strange when I recall that in 1992, our Parliament was discussing a dire threat to the Indian Bhujia coming from FDI .
Another East India Company?: India seems to have begun her economic development journey with a deep suspicion of  foreign  firms, especially MNCs. This was somewhat natural because the nation was fighting off its memories of an exploitative East India Company that had morphed into a colonial empire that had systematically underdeveloped its colonies. Mrs Indira Gandhi had launched an all out fight against transnational or multi-national corporations painting them as predators. PEPSI  that had entered Punjab in 1988-89  as a joint venture  with Indian firms such as Voltas and RPG group ,with  promises of  2,50,000 jobs in militancy –hit Punjab itself and an equal number outside,  but  reneged on its  promises. The political system reacted adversely when P.V.Narasimha Rao government liberlaised the FDI guidelines and FIPB was discussing the PEPSI proposal to up its investment to $100 million and diversify its operations  from selling sweet bottled water to food processing,
On the one side, the government was  desperately trying to attract foreign investment by  mounting   road shows for foreign investors,  and simultaneously assuring  the domestic political  and public opinion that it would allow only such foreign investment that does not hurt Indian businesses. Ironically, the sections that were bitterly opposed to FDI were twitting the government that it had nothing to show as FDI one year after liberalizing the economy. The government was looking upon this as an ‘anchor’ investment in the sense that once a transnational corporate like PEPSI show confidence in India, the move could encourage other biggies  to follow suit. The Opposition parties along with some business houses had picked PEPSI’s plans to introduce Bjujia as the ordinary person was familiar with it and, therefore, his (or her) ire could be aroused .  
PEPSI Public Affairs in Play: As per a study by a management school alumni, there were 20 Parliament debates spread over half a decade, and  monumental PR campaign, including  a rare concession by a powerful PEPSI to alter its brand name to Lehar PEPSI. India was not yet allowing foreign brand names. The company’s ‘public affairs’ was working overtime to win its sub-continental  game. This  strategic public affairs campaign  was  moving on three fronts  but had kept the rich and large  ‘contract farmers’,  as its core ( Indian land ceiling law  was a hindrance  to  food processing companies like PEPSI  that wanted to  partner with and procure  from single or  few farm producers. This was overcome by ‘contract farming’.  It had engaged the contract farmers through agricultural extension work including provision of seeds and farm technology for growing imropved varieties of Tamatoes, chillies, potatoes and other farm produce needed for its pizza hut and other eateries. PEPSI also claimed that it was offering remunerative prices to contract farmers. By initially making the Punjab government’s Agro –Industries Corporation as partner, it had co-opted the state government, with the approval of the centre. P.M. Sinha   as  CEO of its Indian arm was keeping the government in good humour. At the other end, through aggressive market research, PEPSI had reached out to the young consumers as well as a long supply chain of service providers, transporters, small and big retail outlets). The MNC had organised regular visits by MPs, MLAs and media to contract farms in Punjab. In its own business interest PEPSI had effectively implemented a very successful CSR (of sorts).
PEPSI Tomatoes in Parliament:  Of the dozens of debates on PEPSI controversy that took place in Parliament, the one in 1992 was remarkable for the turnaround in the political fortunes of  PEPSI. When members from the left and BJP were attacking the government for allowing PEPSI to enlarge its operations, the Parliament members from Punjab rose in unison to counter the criticism. Some of them even produced in the  House the new varieties of Tomatoes, chillies they  were growing with assistance from PEPSI to support their argument that  PEPSI FDI was in the  long term interest of farmers. Suddenly, the debate was no longer between the  opposition and the government but was between the members of the House. In a moment, the technological benefits accruing to a backward traditional sector like agriculture from FDI got showcased. And, all the other sins of commission and omission from the PEPSI venture thus far were forgotten. When PEPSI enters a territory you can expect   Coca Cola and its  McDonalds to follow. And,20 years down the line, its  tag line ‘Dil Mange More’ has  become a  common expression. its present international CEO Indra Nooyi  presents PEPSI India as one of the most profitable arms, with sizable export earnings.
In the  first wave of liberalisation, the  government was careful to assure that FDI would be allowed only in limited number of sectors and certain sectors including defence were designated as “strategic’ and no FDI was permitted and yet the government  faced fierce opposition. FDI in media was an anathema then. Contrast this with 2014, when NDA government announced FDI in defence and Railways,. there was not even a murmur of protest.
A Budget Surprise: Outside the government there is an incorrect  impression that the prime minster and the cabinet would be privy to all major budget annoucnements. The reality is that the cabinet, sometimes even PM ,come to know of the  key budget  proposals an hour or two  before the presentation of the  budget in Parliament. Mrs Gandhi as PM did not know that her finance minister,  Morarji Desai, would propose to bring agriculture under the wealth tax in his 1967 budget. As Morarji Desai was concluding his budget presentation, she passed on a chit to him to withdraw it. In 1992, budget of  Dr.Manmohan Singh, there was an announcement to cut subsidies to DAP (nutrient) fertilisers and reduction in the price of Urea by 10%.The PM was taken unawares. That evening, the then agriculture minister.  Balram Jhakkar, threatened to quit.
At this time around, the farm sector was on the decline decline. The opposition, particularly BJP, had initiated a grapevine campaign that If India enters the World Trade Organisation, farmers would not be able  grow their own seeds. Widespread disquiet was   spreading against Rao’s  steps to reorient the economy to come to terms with market forces. The small cut in fertiliser subsidy , was both untimely and  impolitic as this  played into the hands of opponents of reforms who were already proclaiming the government to be pro-business and  anti-farmers and anti-poor.
This situation required some deft handling at the  political  level by the prime minister. He cleverly set up a committee under an MP belonging to the left parties to review the fertiliser subsidy and bought time. This also bailed out the finance minister who was in a hurry to cut all subsidies for reducing the budget deficit, as required under the IMF/World bank terms. In the meanwhile, on the communication front, as head of DAVP and concurrently being the government Spokesperson,  I  had to equivocate a lot for a while. I delayed publication of any print material on the subject until the concerned department gave me clear answers to a list of key questions that I had submitted. The Parliament committee report on fertiliser subsidy that came months   later led diluted the Budget proposals and a larger political consensus on the subsidy issue.
Reforms With a Human Face; Prime Minister Rao was criticised as a ‘reluctant reformer’ for not supporting some drastic reforms like conversion of the  Indian Rupee on capital account. He was also damned as a ‘populist’ for steeply enhancing spending on Rural Development and introducing several schemes like centrally funded school midday meal, Targetted Public Distribution, Group Insurance for farmers and the poor,  Employment Assuracne scheme for agricultural and migrant labour, a $500 million National Renewal Fund for retraining workers affected by disinvestment or downsizing  of PSUs and many others.
Narasimha Rao was  first one in PMO to have faced the political dilemmas of an economic reformer in a transitional society and  an economy with people at  several economic levels. He was under pressure from his own finance minister who was pressing for faster market orientation of the economy with its  greater integration with the  global scenario. While offering full political backing  to  Dr. Singh,  and  commerce minister P.Chidmabaram, the prime minister chose to cede the title of ‘reformers’ to  these gentlemen, while he set out to address the larger constituency of the poor and the disadvantaged who were likely to bear immediate costs of  economic changes. As he explained to me, this was not due to electoral compulsions alone but a genuine concern for large sections of fellow citizens who could be left behind by market forces. In his own  words, reforms must be ‘calibrated’ to suit each politico-economic situation in order to make them sustainable.
As mentioned in the previous article, he used the AICC session held at Tirupati in April,1992 for propounding his view that the government will take on a new role on behalf of people who are outside the market forces. He accepted my suggestion to use Gandhiji’s description of the disadvantaged as Daridranarayan who would become the government’s main concern.
Reforms with a Human face: Giving a briefing to me and his junior minister for Rural Development, Rameshwar Thakur, for ‘publicity’, the prime minister told us that our job was to convince the rural India  and the poor that the government was not about to abandon them. He said that he wanted to create a ‘social safety net’ that was to be the main focus of our publicity. Rao also gave the title to this campaign as  Reforms with a Human Face. That message was to be woven into all his public speeches.
Following such  instructions, I   travelled  to states frequently to get a firsthand account of the progress of  pro-poor schemes and arrange for human interest stories that could be used in TVCs and advertising campaigns.  There were more than 60 odd schemes spread over several ministries with low disposition to  officiai information. It was also a fact that very often they did not possess the latest information and were unfamiliar with the  requirements of  a  sustained campaign. We began to compile   a monthly report of progress  of schemes and  sent out our own teams  for gathering human interest stories which could be used in  media.  My orgationisation, PIB,   had earmarked funds for arranging  group or individual media persons field visits. My advantage was that the PM was not put off by media reports of misuse of government schemes and he took them as vital feedback. However, his worry was that the states were using the central schemes for deriving political benefit but the blame of ineffective implementation of programmes was laid at his door. This was a political problem that had to be dealt through political communication whi h was failing. In order to make the village Panchayats aware of the funds available for various schemes in their jurisdiction, we tried to use village walls as media but it needed local cooperation.
  The author                 
         sunarendra@gmail.com    
My attempts to introduce fellowships for interested media persons in reporting social and rural development   got caught up in bureaucratic red- tape. For the first time, we organised a three-day Social Development Conference for Media by inviting representatives from all ovber the country for interaction with policy makers in Delhi. This first attempt clearly showed that regional mediapersons’ professional inadequacy in reporting social change issues. As such change takes place over time, it was not breaking news. Both Doordarshan and Radio, as a result, became the principal vehicles for mounting programmes on such vexed themes. As audiences began to access satellite channels and other media, such public service programmes on official channels made the latter less and less popular. Communication is politics in the sense that it tries to influence people in one way or the other and the practitioner can be surprised by unintended outcomes from his efforts.
All in all, the communication attempted for the human face of reforms left us with mixed results. Writing about my experiences now in 2015, make me wonder about the political fortunes of Chandrababu Naidu, the new AP CM,  who is re-enacting a Narasimha Rao act; and, so also that of the present Prime Minister Narendra Modi who is projecting pro-poor stance, shedding his label as a pro-business CEO of Gujarat. 
(www.https//Spokesperson.blogspot) 

Saturday, 4 July 2015

Reportage of a Water War Correspondent: From swirling Kaveri crisis


S.Narendra

(Former Information Adviser to PM, PIO of  Govt of India, 
and Official Spokesperson)

The hour hand on the clock in the meeting room was closing towards 9 pm. Hesitatingly I passed on a chit to PM Narasimha Rao : “Sir,my New Year party to media is about to start. Can I be excused?’ The ever gracious Rao surprised the ministers and officials attending the meeting with this remark: “Oh! Narendra, I am sorry....you come with me...No... You wait here...I will get you the files”. And then he handed over to me a thick bundle of files and said: “call me as soon as your party is over”. What happened subsequently is history. Read on PRapport exclusive:

The Iron Lady of TN
The year 1995 was about to end, with the Christmas and New Year holidays round the corner. A stormy parliament session had ended without transacting much business, a familiar experience (even now?!). Out of the blue, a political storm  originating in Tamil Nadu, had hit the government of P.V.Narasimha Rao. The Supreme Court was hearing a petition of Tamil Nadu government to direct Karnataka government to release 11 tmc of Kaveri water, as per the interim orders of the Kaveri Tribunal. Instead of adjudicating the petition, the apex court issued an order directing the Prime Minister to find a political solution, that too within a week, to the seasonal river water dispute between Tamil Nadu and Karnataka. In a way, the apex court had hoisted the politicians on their own petard, because politics had prevented a settlement of the dispute.
This was an unprecedented political tangle. The parliamentary elections were only a few months away and Rao as the congress party president was casting his net wide seeking poll allies. But suddenly he found himself between the blades of political scissors. On the one side was a tempestuous political ally, AIDMK’s Jayalalithaa as Tamil Nadu chief minister and on the other side was a potential ally from Janata party, H.D.Devegowda  of Karnataka. A few months earlier, when he was an  MP, Devegowda  had voted for Rao government in a ‘No Confidence’  motion moved by BJP in 1994.  As a state leader, with a reputation as a farmers’ champion, he wanted to appear as uncompromising as the iron lady from Chennai.
Truant Rainfall: In a nutshell, the problem was this. Whenever the North East monsoon (from September to December) plays truant, the two states fight over the depleted water available in Kaveri. Tamil Nadu historically has more acreage under Kaveri irrigation than Karnataka and depends upon the abundance of Kaveri water as well as the North East monsoon. This was one of those years  when the North East monsoon had been deficient, thus reducing the  quantity of river water. And Karnataka  had not  released 11 tmc of  water  to Tamil Nadu, claiming  that the river water was barely adequate to meet its own drinking water needs.


Midnight moves: Hectic parlays took place in PM’s house from December 25 with the ministers and officials of the water resources and agriculture ministries for assessing various options. In one such meeting that lasted right up to mid-night, the PM expressed his displeasure over the facts presented to him by the officials. According to the facts on paper, there should   not be any shortage of water for irrigating the crop acreage under cultivation in both the states. Suddenly, he turned to me and said: “Narendra, find out from your media friends what the problem on the ground is, and let me know in the morning”.
It was a tough challenge. My media friends in both the states obliged and I could give their assessment of the problem to Rao by 8 AM. The problem was that in both the states the acreage under water intensive crops like sugarcane that requires water for 18 months had substantially gone up and in Tamil Nadu in particular, the  Kaveri delta farmers were sowing  3 to 4  paddy crops in a year, irrespective of the vagaries of the monsoon.
Big Rounds of Meetings: In response to PM’s invitation, the Tamil Nadu chief minister arrived by a special place loaded with several suit cases and her counterpart came by a commercial plane. The media visuals played up the contrasting pictures. The prime minister met the two state leaders separately several times to thrash out a compromise formula that does not antagonise either of the contending parties. As the general election was near at hand, neither of the state leaders wanted to be perceived as weak and to be giving up the cause of their political constituencies.
The PM’s meetings with the CMs were going round and round, even as the calendar had moved to December 31st.  Meanwhile, both the chief ministers’ offices   were leaking to the media their versions of the   parleys with PM that was complicating the latter’s role. I came to know that the Karnataka CM was planning a press conference. This news had travelled to Tamil Nadu side as well, and they were planning a proper response after hearing the Karnataka salvo. I immediately got in touch with the   offices of the two CMs aides and informed them that any discussions with the media of the likely formula for sharing of water would make the PM’s decision to go against them. I also held out the threat that if they went ahead, PM may go back to the court, reporting failure of negotiations and put the problem back before the judiciary.  Diplomatic that Rao was, he authrorised me to convey to each side that PM appreciated the particular state’s stand, and therefore, the final award could be in its favour.  
During the day of the New Year eve, the PM had discussed with me the various formulas he had suggested to the CMs and told me to give him a draft letter to the two CMs, along with a one page background. Rao told me that he would have one last meeting with the water ministry officials at 7 pm , after which he would hand over the papers. That particular meeting dragged on right up to 9 p.m. At this point I sent him a chit stating that my New Year party for media was to begin. The ever gracious Narasimha Rao, got up and said: “Narendra I am sorry. You take the files.”
Rao then took me to the residential part of 7 Race Course road, went to his bed room and brought out a huge bundle of files and said; “When  does your party end’. I said: Sir, around 2 AM. 
He said: Alright. Call me around 3... After you have gone through the files.
Cold Shower in December Night! I used to host a New Year eve parties for media friends in the lawns of my residence for media, their families including children, diplomats and colleagues in the government and ministers. About 800 invitations would be sent to attend the party between 9 pm and 2 a.m. This was within the knowledge PM. On this particular ‘Kaveri’ day I was late for my own party. The party lasted well past 2 a.m. I  took a  cold shower although it was a December night and began studying the files. Promptly at 3 AM, the PM called me to find out my progress in drafting the letter. I requested him to give me time until early morning and  Rao asked me to meet  him at 6 am and have a cup of tea. As I was fairly familiar with the subject, and the PM’s parleys, I prepared a rough hand written draft and called my personal assistant Ravichandran to my residence around 5 am for typing it on the computer. For some reason, the computer had gone out of order and we rushed to my office in Shastri Bhavan.
Kaveri flows in Shastri Bhavan: Literally, we felt that Kaveri had come to the gates of Shastri Bhavan. The entry to the building was barred with fire engines that had pumped a huge quantity of water to douse a fire in the building. Power had been switched off.
Accompanied by Ravi, I rushed to PMs residence  and managed to get the letter and the background note typed. The prime minister had obviously spent a sleepless night and was waiting for me. I said ‘Happy New Year’ and presented the draft. The prime minister expressed his satisfaction and told me that he would be having two more rounds of meetings with the chief minsters.
At this point, I suggested to him that his final   letter of water allocation to be sent to the concerned CMs should be faxed late in the night (January1st 1996), after the CMs had boarded the aircraft for home. The prime minister smiled.
Those were the days when Doordarshan and AIR ruled supreme and there were no mobile phones and no noise channels either! The fastest and latest mode of communication was through the trusted Fax.
By mid-day, I had a copy of the PM’s letter of water allocation. The whole day the media was bombarding me with calls to know the outcome of PM’s discussions with the CMs. I   got the news that the two CMs had boarded the aircraft after 7 pm. The PM’s letter was faxed to them around 10 pm (when their planes were about to land) and a little later I released the letter to media. The media was unable to get the CMs’ reaction (that was bound to be critical)  to the award. We wanted the award to be in media focus, not the adverse reaction of the quarrelling duo.
Much Ado: The award was a fair one, allocating 6 out of 11 tmc of water to Tamil Nadu. It
The Author
 (sunarendra@gmail.com)
was somewhat funny that the award should have involved such torturous and inconclusive negotiations. From the  beginning it was clear that politically the prime minister could not have allocated anything  but  a little more than half of 11 tmc demanded by Tamil Nadu. As part of his award, the prime minister set up a one-man  committee under Prof Y.K. Alagh to study the problem and come up with a feasible solution to the  dispute. He also decided to convene later a meeting of the National Water Council that had not met for decades to deliberate on unresolved inter-state river water disputes.     
The year 1996 had dawned with a clear hint of what the next 12 months held.  It was going to be politically turbulent, with regional players dominating the national scene and a nation adrift in troubled waters.



Friday, 1 May 2015

Narendra None-3: Unshakling An Elephant (Indian)!

By S.Narendra 

(S Narendra,  former Director  General, DAVP & ex- Executive  Director, R.K.Swamy-BBDO and 
later Spokesperson, Government of India)

India’s impressive economic growth rate since the 1991 economic liberalization has attracted world -wide attention. Now most economic commentators while referring to this development, compare India to an elephant and the Indian establishment has come to relish this. But this was not so initially and it required quite a push to persuade the political establishment
The author
that India’s economic stride should be compared to the elephant’s measured gait (Gajagamana) rather than to a tiger’s sprint, given its size and the ponderous democratic processes pushing the economy. A headline given to a PM speech:  “India to be Asia’s Growth Engine” invited protests from external affairs ministry, as the Mandarins thought that such aspirations would hurt sentiments of Asian neighbours. Many influential persons were upset that in July 1991, the government advertising  displayed  an “Unshackled Elephant” as the mascot for  the dramatic, dismantling of 34-year-old official controls( (IDRA or Industrial Development & Regulation Act) on business and industry.  Read on how   the tiger lost out   to the elephant.......

Background:  India’s industrial policy was laid down under the Industrial Development Regulation Act (IDRA) of 1956. It was over laden with   a philosophy of import substitution, self reliance, with quantitative restrictions on the amount of goods to be produced by an  industrial licensee entrepreneur. FDI or foreign direct investment was not allowed to own enterprises but could provide licensed technology.  Almost anything to do with business and industry was overseen by some or the other government authority.  This came to be referred to as the ‘licence-permit raj’ (as described by Dr Rajagopalachari,). A few business houses managed to corner licences for new industries and capacities for production in order to restrict supplies and control both the market and the price. And the private sector came to loathe competition, as it benefitted from a sellers’ market.

The political instability prevailing from October 1989 to 1991 in New Delhi had sent the national growth rate and nation’s morale to southwards as never before. Reportedly, there was a considerable flight of capital from India fearing a financial collapse. I was privileged to have access to the internal confidential briefings given to PM and select top leaders of the previous two governments bringing home the dire situation and steps to save the economy. Both the governments ignored such warnings, resulting in India having to pledge abroad its gold reserves to save its reputation.
A Caged Tiger: The London based Economist weekly in its April 1991, in a special section on India, depicted it as a caged Tiger. The Ambassador car that was ubiquitous on Indian roads in many ways symbolized the controlled economy in which quality and competition mattered little. It recounted the many lost economic opportunities due to inward looking Indian policies and contrasted this with the spectacular growth rates registered by East Asian economies like, Malaysia, Thailand, Singapore and Hong Kong, (as South East Asia Correspondent for five  years, I had reported their progress)  and even China which had opted for open trading and investment policies.  They came to be known as ‘Tiger Economies’.  Indian policy makers wanted the Tiger branding, even while wedded to policies of a bygone era.
New Congress Government: P.V. Narasimha Rao became prime minister in late June 1991 and his first few statements clearly indicated that the government had no option but to initiate drastic steps for saving the economy. Taking such statements and the hints in the poll manifesto, I prepared a note on a communication strategy outlining the tasks to be undertaken by Doordarshan, AIR, DAVP, PIB and other media units of the Information and Broadcasting ministry, in the wake of any bold policy changes and sent it to the Secretary of the ministry. In response, I received it back with a mild rebuff!

Meanwhile, I was summoned to attend a meeting in Prime Minister’s Office convened by his special  secretary, Surinder Singh, and attended by officials of the finance ministry including N.K.Singh. I was asked to be ready to launch a campaign for educating the people about the economic crisis and the likely unpopular measures the government will take. But no one knew what those steps were at that stage.
Having attended such meetings held during previous governments, I was not sure that this government would bite the bullet and, therefore, asked: “Are you sure the government would act? How much bad news can we give the people?”
N.K. Singh shot back: “What other alternative the government has?  Work on   a publicity plan,  don’t  ask questions”.

Elephant Unshackled”: Few persons expected Rao and his  minority government to unleash politically heretical   measures such as drastic devaluation of  the Indian rupee by a whopping 27%, and  scrapping of  the  Industrial Development Regulation Act.

The 26th of July 1991 was a red letter day, when the Indian entrepreneurial spirit won its freedom. The announcement of abolition of IDRA by the Industry ministry headed by prime minister Rao, came in the afternoon, taking everyone by surprise, as it meant reversal of  Nehruvian model of economic development.

The officials in the finance and industry ministry were very busy and did not have time for us in DAVP for offering a brief for a communication campaign. Often in DAVP we were both an agency as well as a client and cannot wait for the client ministry to give us a brief. In fact, we had to wake them up to their communication needs. More often than not, we had to scramble up a campaign overnight.

Coming up:
  • How Pak Bomb Could not Explode in Indian Press Conference!
  • PM Vajpayee Cancels His Message to the Nation
  • Should A Minister Take On a Newspaper Editor
  • PM Long Letter to Panchayats
  • Ayodhya Kanda and Advertising Provocation
  • PM’s First Press Conference and Stock Scam
  • Silence As Communication
  • Blank Camera Records PM’s Broadcast From Ogaudugu
And much more....

Watch this space!

As   I was used to this   situation,   I prepared   a brief for guiding my creative team and asked them to come up with their ideas within the next few hours for releasing advertisements and outdoor campaign as well as a folder for explaining the significance of the government’s historic decision. When I returned to office after dinner to look at my team’s ideas, they presented me a tiger and even a peacock as the mascot for the   campaign that had no precedent.
I suggested that they come out with a visual matching the tag line ‘Elepahnt Unshackled’. We toyed with the idea of two elephants, one in chains and the other breaking out of them, but settled for an unshackled elephant, with its trumpeting trunk. I took a great risk by not putting the creative ideas through the political and bureaucratic channels for approvals that would   have delayed the campaign by several weeks. I tasked my outdoor team to get to work with the creatives and put up hoardings in New Delhi before the next evening, i.e.27th of July. This was followed up with newspaper Ads and cinema slides. I was happy to note that newspapers noticed the message in the hoardings, reproduced the “Unshackled Elephant” and even favourably commented on it. I & B minister Ajit Panja complemented me for the promptness with which DAVP had moved   the campaign.
The PMO had set up a high level steering committee under the prime minister’s principal secretary for   overseeing the roll –out of economic reforms. The Secretary of I&B ministry was a member of this committee and he had been asked to attend its first meeting. He suddenly remembered my note on communication strategy for economic reforms telephoned me with a request that I should meet him with that note. We met and prepared for the steering committee meeting. I was co-opted as an invitee. I took the opportunity to get the stamp of approval (post facto, of course!) of this committee for using the elephant as the mascot   and the tagline for our communication campaign. No one paid any attention to the ad design and passed it quietly though!
I didn’t realize then that the issue of the mascot and the tag line was still an open issue. A few months later I was summoned by PMO to make a presentation to the PM himself about the work we had done and about the campaign plan for reforms agenda. (There is a separate story about this first encounter with the PM). During the presentation, I had showed the Ads with unshackled elephant released to media and no one offered any comments, making me assume that the mascot and tagline had been approved.
A few days later, the PM was taking another meeting in which several cabinet ministers were present, Out of nowhere, the Human Resource Development minister Arjun Singh (who was  expressing his opposition to PM’s economic reforms) pointed towards me and told Narasimha Rao that I was not projecting the reforms properly and  had used the elephant, not the  tiger, as the mascot. He further said that I should be asked to change the mascot. A major private Ad agency working for the Education ministry , I later learnt,  appears to  have  brought up this idea to the minister.
PV, without showing much reaction, asked me to explain my position. I clarified that tiger as   symbol of fast economic progress had been over used by south east Asian nations,   As they were small compared to India and were oligarchic not democratic like India, where processes were long.
It would be proper to use the elephant as the mascot, especially once India starts moving its impact would be global. Further, India had traditionally been a habitat of the elephant and we even have a elephant god. India should be different from east Asain story’
The Prime Minister, without even batting an eyelid, said “I agree’
I heaved a sigh of relief, as I had taken the risk of running the campaign  for several weeks under the tagline Unshackled Elephant, without subjecting it to the usual long-winding official processes.

(For those interested in reading more on how government advertising works under  severe handicaps should I recommend Pictures in Our Mind that deals with Canadian government advertising agency, a model adopted by India in setting up DAVP in 1950s).