First it was a Time magazine cover that heaped coals of fire on Manmohan Singh‘s head by calling him an ‘underachiever’.
The report which said Singh needed to get out of his ‘personal and
political gloom’ to set India back on the growth path, created huge buzz
in the country as the media, government and opposition all pounced on
it in their haste to react.
The Time magazine report, truth be told, said nothing new.
Local media had already been pointing out the same problems with Singh’s
administration and the opposition parties had been shouting ‘policy
paralysis’ to anyone who would listen.
But somehow an ‘established’ and ‘international’ magazine saying it,
suddenly made the issues seem more real and more problematic. It had
become embarrassing. Singh was a national shame, letting down India’s
good name in the international arena.
And now another one of those ‘international’ publications has got in on the act. The UK based newspaper The Independent has run a report titled, “Manmohan Singh: Saviour or Sonia’s poodle?”
“Once credited with rescuing India, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh
is now criticised as a weak underachiever”, it says, explaining that
while Singh may be the architect of India’s liberalization, his seeming
inability to act, coupled with blind fealty to Congress President Sonia Gandhi may just be his downfall.
Again, no big secret. Political analysts have been telling us all
just that for months now. But is calling Singh “Sonia’s poodle” in an
international publication justified? While the facts on which they
criticize him may be true, he is still the Prime Minister of India and
surely the position deserves some respect?
Apparently not.
While it may still be something of a shock to see the picture of the
Prime Minister splashed across an international publication with
‘underachiever’ or ‘Sonia’s poodle’ emblazoned across it, we’re at a
point of time where the media does not shy away from calling a spade a
spade, foreign protocol be damned.
And in this age of international news in real time, everyone is fair game.
The British themselves are notoriously irreverent about their own
leaders. Former Prime Minister Tony Blair was publicly called Bush’s
lapdog, especially during the hugely unpopular decision he made to back
the US ‘war on terror’ against Iraq and Saddam Hussein.
And Indian media are not overawed by the Prime Minister’s position either. The media famously debated whether or not Manmohan Singh
was a ‘lameduck’ Prime Minister, while others have called him a
‘Doormat’. So much so in fact, that he has even stopped reacting it.
But perhaps the international criticism could serve as a wake up call to the premier. The Independent
report quotes a close aide of the Premier as saying that he felt the
international criticism was unfair. It’s high time he actively did
something about it then.
Manmohan Singh - India's saviour or just 'the underachiever'?
Once credited with rescuing India, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh now finds himself accused of abject failure
He was hailed as the man who saved India. Twenty-one years ago, with
the authorities in Delhi obliged to fly 47 tonnes of gold to London to
be secreted within the vaults of the Bank of England as collateral for
an emergency loan for food and fuel, Manmohan Singh, then serving as
finance minister, got to his feet in the country's parliament to deliver
a budget that broke, shatteringly, with the past.
"We shall make the future happen," said Mr Singh, announcing a series
of liberalising measures that cut away India's notorious red tape and
ended the so-called Licence Raj. "Let the whole world hear it loud and
clear - India is now wide awake."
The reforms introduced on 24
July, 1991 - the privatisation of some government companies, the
reduction of import duties and the introduction of foreign investment -
are credited with sparking the economic regeneration of the country and
improving the lives of millions of people. In something of an
air-brushing of history, Mr Singh received the lion's share of the
credit, while the role of the prime minister of the day, PV Narasimha
Rao, was omitted.
But two decades on, the quietly-spoken Mr Singh,
who studied by candlelight in a small village to secure a place at
Oxford University and then the World Bank, finds himself accused of
abject failure. Critics from business say his reforming zeal has
evaporated and slowed the country's growth, while political opponents
say he has overseen an administration that has revealed itself to be
mired in corruption. From within his ruling Congress Party there are
repeated, if oblique, demands for him to step aside ahead in favour of
his presumed successor, Rahul Gandhi.
Last week, in the latest
insult heaped up the 79 year old premier, Time magazine, which only in
April placed him 19th in its list of 100 most influential world figures,
splashed the front cover of its Asia edition with a forlorn image of Mr
Singh and the headline "The Underachiever". "India is stalling," the
magazine claimed. "To turn it around, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh must
emerge from his private and political gloom."
Indians are not
unique in being more sensitive to criticism from afar than that directed
at them domestically, but the magazine article hit a particularly
tender nerve and the party's representatives took to television studios
to defend the prime minister. Manish Tewari, an MP and spokesman for the
Congress party, said the story had "deliberately" overlooked the solid
and concrete achievements of Mr Singh's two terms including consistent
high growth averaging more than eight per cent, a flow of foreign
investment and a flurry of social programmes. "Stories that break on
Sunday evening…acquire a certain momentum of their own," he said.
Meanwhile,
the main opposition, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), with its eyes on
a general election scheduled to be held by 2014, seized on the
controversy. Spokesman Ravi Shankar Prasad said: "We are clearly of the
view that in terms of economic management, inflation and our sense of
direction, the government has failed. We did not need the verification
of a foreign journal."
In truth, the article contained nothing
that was new but it refocused people's attention on a man whose
reputation is at risk of being permanently damaged. Along with his
ministers, Mr Singh, who first became prime minister in 2004 and is now
in his second term, has received increasing criticism from various
quarters as the country's growth has slumped from a soaring nine per
cent in 2007-08 to a "mere" 5.3 per cent in the first three months of
this year, the lowest since 2003.
The administration has been
accused of sitting on reforms that could bring in new foreign direct
investment (FDI), such as the opening of the food retail sector, and
failing to create a sufficiently stable investment, leading to a plunge
in FDI of up to 38 per cent in the first part of the year. A decision
this spring by the then finance minister, Pranab Mukherjee, to allow
retroactive taxation of companies was seen as particularly harmful. Last
month, the ratings agency Standard and Poor's threatened to downgrade
India's investment category and pondered whether it could become the
first "fallen angel" of the so-called Bric nations. Inflation is high
and there is a trade deficit of around $13bn.
A Delhi-based
business source who works with both Indian and international firms, said
India had slipped in the last couple of years from being a priority
destination for any foreign firm looking to expand its business, to one
of several potential locations including Indonesia, Brazil and Turkey.
"It is still at the point where India can turn it around," said the
source, over a pot of Assam tea in the lobby of a hotel. "[But] there
has been no growth and no reforms but there is corruption and
uncertainty."
Observers say one of Mr Singh's problems is that he
has no genuine political power. Rather, he owes his position to Sonia
Gandhi, widow of former prime minister Rajiv Gandhi, mother of Rahul and
Congress Party chairwoman, who to the delight of India's middleclass
selected him for that role when her party won a surprise victory in
2004. This has meant he has sometimes been unable to even control his
cabinet and his failure to more quickly address the actions of a
coalition minister, accused of defrauding the country up to $40bn in a
telecom licence scam, led to him being accused of further weakness.
Those
who defend the prime minister say he is caught in a difficult position.
Against a challenging international climate, he has sought to continue
his party's policies of reform while also trying to provide for the
country's poor, overseeing employment, education and health programmes.
They point out that for all the stories of "Shining India" that adorned
magazines such as Time during the first half of the decade, the country
still has hundreds of millions of people living in utter poverty. "The
criticism of him in the media comes from one section of society, the
business community, which thinks it should be given everything," said
one former official who has worked closely with Mr Singh.
If
anyone is to salvage Mr Singh's reputation in the two years he likely
has remaining, it can only be him. While he may unfairly have become the
target for criticism of an entire administration, it is he who needs to
do something if he wants to secure a favourable place in history. He
says he intends to do so. As Foreign Policy magazine reported, on 27
June, a day after he handed himself the finance ministry portfolio
following the resignation of Mr Mukherjee, who is now the party's
candidate for head of state, Mr Singh's official Twitter feed claimed he
intended to "revive the animal spirit in the country's economy".
The
monsoon rains have finally arrived in Delhi, creating a sticky backdrop
to this latest political heat. In the cool interior of the red
sandstone office on Raisina Hill, Mr Singh is said to feel that the US
magazine article was "unfair". Aides have declined to comment directly
on the controversy but a spokesman, Pankaj Pachauri, said the prime
minister was confident he could turn the situation around. "There is
unanimity that for the inclusion of India's poor in development, you
have to have growth," he said. "How to achieve that growth is the
challenge."
The Path To Power
1982 Appointed
Governor of the Reserve Bank of India, holding the post until 1985.
Later becomes the deputy chairman of the Planning Commission of India.
1991 Elected to the upper house of parliament. Named Finance Minister by Prime Minister PV Narasimha Rao.
1998 Leader of the opposition in the upper house of parliament while the Bharatiya Janata Party holds office.
2004
The United Progressive Alliance coalition – formed after the 2004
elections and led by the Congress party – nominates Dr Singh as Prime
Minister.
-Independent
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