Price of Rice, Price of Power in India

Now that we have a Indian cabinet whose assets total close to Rs. 5 billion  (US $1 = 48 rupees) on their own declaration, with Ministers worth over Rs. 75 million each on average, it will be worth watching how they rise to the challenge of identifying with the poor and the hungry. That Rs. 5 billion figure, painstakingly compiled by the National Election Watch, a coalition of over 1200 civil society organizations working across India, covers 64 of the 79 ministers. The missing 15 are Rajya Sabha members whose updated assets are yet to be computed. True, these figures are skewed by the fact that the top five ministers alone are worth Rs. 2 billion. However, as the NEW points out, the rest are not destitute. In all, 47 of the 64 are ‘crorepatis’ (multimillionaires). And the remaining 15 won’t harm the score too much when their totals come in.

Together, they will preside over the destiny of, amongst others, 836 million Indians who “get by on less than Rs. 20  a day.”  (National Commission for Enterprises in the Unorganized Sector report, August 2007.)  This challenge will unfold in a Lok Sabha  (House of the People) where the average worth of an  MP is Rs. 51 million. Again, this average too, is skewed by a chunk of about 60-70 MPs of the 543 whose asset worth is relatively very low. On the other hand, many have notched up large gains in wealth during their first term as MPs.

In a complex and layered verdict driven by many factors, one seems clear: most governments that stressed welfarist measures  —  particularly cheap rice and  employment  —  gained in last month’s election results. This was regardless of which party was leading them  —  Congress, BJP, BJD, DMK and others. Some of these measures may not have led to large numbers of people going out to vote for those governments. But they at least lowered hostility levels amongst voters in a hungry nation.  As Dr. Madhura Swaminathan points out, the FAO’s data confirm that “no country in the world comes close to India in terms of the absolute number of people living in chronic hunger.”

The hungry have had it pretty bad. The rise in food prices over the last five years was extremely steep, one of our more adverse periods in decades. Between just 2004 and 2008, the price of rice rose by over 45 per cent and that of wheat by more than 60 per cent. Atta, edible oils, dals,  milk and even salt saw rises of between 30 and 40 per cent. Lower or ‘near-zero inflation’ has seen no drop in food prices. That the media never saw hunger and cheap food as a major poll factor says more about the media than about the issue.

In Tamil Nadu, the ruling DMK provided 20 kilos of rice per family  at Rs. 1 a kilo since September 2008. That too, for anyone with a ration card, without dividing people into Above Poverty Line (APL) or Below Poverty Line (BPL) groups. Tamil Nadu had already been providing rice at Rs. 2 a kilo for some years. It also took the National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (NREGS) seriously. The state government gained on both counts.

In Andhra Pradesh, as in Tamil Nadu, the Congress government of Y.S. Rajasekhara Reddy (YSR) was helped by the presence of a third party  —  Chiranjeevi’s Praja Rajyam  —  which drew a lot of anti-Congress votes, crippling the rival Telugu Desam Party (TDP) of Vhandrababu Naidu. But YSR’s was also a government which in its first year in power restored hundreds of thousands of cancelled  BPL cards and issued hundreds of thousands of new ones. In nine years, Chandrababu Naidu’s government issued no BPL cards till just before the elections. That in a state where hunger and food have been huge issues even in urban areas. Andhra was where rice at Rs. 2 a kilo began in the early 1980s with Naidu’s father-in-law, then chief minister N.T. Rama Rao. NTR’s charisma was never in question  –  but rice at Rs. 2 a kilo helped, more than any other factor, to convert it into votes.

Chief Minister Y. S. Rajasekhara Reddy in fact stole the TDP’s clothes when in April 2008 he brought back the Rs. 2 a kilo rice scheme  —  a year before the national polls. This was  at 4 kilos per person (or 20 kg per family of five). An earlier generation of Congress leaders had trashed NTR’s pet project as a “costly gimmick”. Reddy took a more sensible line and gained from it.

During Mr. Naidu’s  years in power, so lavishly praised  in the media for his “reforms,”  the public were repeatedly hit by massive hikes in power charges, water rates, food prices  and  other costs. Even now He has not managed to live down his record or regain credibility.

His adversary ran a decent NREGS program. In backward Mahbubnagar district, distress migrations fell as many found work under the NREGS. This was at a time  when food prices were biting, so much so that people in their 70s turned up at NREG sites for work, their Rs. 200 a month pensions blown away by the rise in food prices.  Even on that front, though, the AP government earned some credit. When it assumed power, there were 1.8 million people in the state getting old-age, widow and disability pensions  –  a paltry Rs. 75  each. This was raised to Rs.500 for disabled people and Rs. 200 for the rest. Hardly enough  –  but a lot more than earlier. And the number of people getting these pensions rose four-fold to 7.2 million. The state also has one of the country’s better pension schemes for women.

In Orissa, Naveen Patnaik chief minister and leader of the ruling Biju Janata Dal (BJD) played his cards most effectively, gutting the BJP and corralling the Congress. But he also gained hugely from giving people cheap rice. In the burning hunger zones of  Kalahandi-Bolangir-Koraput, 25 kilos of rice were offered to all families at Rs. 2 a kilo since mid-2008. In the rest of the state, this was restricted to Below Povert Line (BPL) families. The government also gave out 10 kilos of free rice to the poorest families in the KBK districts. This had a major impact in curbing starvation deaths in that region. Patnaik also increased the numbers of those coming under pension schemes  –  and housing projects for the poor  –  quite significantly. (At the same time, he implemented the Sixth Pay commission before the polls, sewing up the middle classes as well).
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Sure, these were not the only issues on which people voted, but they played a big role (In the case of YSR and Patnaik, there was another factor that helped this along. The positive measures in both states were present and visible. The negatives  —  and they are explosive, like massive human displacement, SEZs, dangerous mining projects —  are in the pipeline, as disasters waiting to happen but which will take two or three years to do so.  Unless, of course, those policies change.)

In Chattisgarh, however repugnant the ways of that government in many spheres, Chief Minister Raman Singh took a personal interest in declaring 35 kilograms per family at Rs. 3 a kg. His government then unilaterally “increased” the number of people below the poverty line to almost 15 million  —  in a population of  20.8 million (2001 census). That is, close to 70 per cent of the population were ‘declared’ BPL. This was done several months before the 2008 assembly elections. It helped the government in both state and national polls.

The Left Front in West Bengal failed on both fronts. The state saw rioting at ration shops last year as the central government quite deliberately cut allocations of grain sharply. Yet Bengal, which tops the states in rice production (itself an achievement of Left rule), moved towards provision of cheaper rice only early this year. Too reluctantly and too late. Its performance in the NREGS too, was very poor.  So hunger was also a factor in the rout of a Left Front far more focused on industrialization in the past few years.

So what should those in power read into the poll results? That they have a mandate for more liberalization, privatization, high prices and other such “reforms?”  Or that the price of rice could be the price of power? That jobs and security are vital? Food prices and cheap rice are crucial, though not the sole issues. Governments cannot bank on such moves already made to bring them perpetual gains. But the whole process is a step ahead and has raised the bar on public expectations. Sharp reversals could prove suicidal.

P. SAINATH is the rural affairs editor of The Hindu, where this piece appears, and is the author of Everybody Loves a Good Drought. He can be reached at: psainath@vsnl.com.

 

 

 

P Sainath is the founder and editor of the People’s Archive of Rural India. He has been a rural reporter for decades and is the author of ‘Everybody Loves a Good Drought.’ You can contact the author here: @PSainath_org