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Anatomy Of A Middle-Class Electorate: Neither Forward Nor Backward, Just Awkward

The Indian middle class feels ­entitled to political opinion like no other social strata yet shies away from electoral action. Why?

Anatomy Of A Middle-Class Electorate: Neither Forward Nor Backward, Just Awkward
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The Marxist expression 바카라sack of potatoes바카라 about peasant political consciousness could well be true of the Indian middle class. This is a class which remains ­indecisive when it comes to getting their index finger marked going by the voting behaviour in the ongoing general elections. But the same people will use their index finger to point out where political flaws exist. They crib about what all is not going right with the political system throughout the year, but when it comes to plunging into the political system by way of ­action, they appear to be neither here nor there. They are fence-sitters, not willing to join any side.

In Bangalore, where the Lok Sabha polls took place on April 18, the low voter turnout yet again led to questions of which voting block was snoozing. The city바카라s urban middle class is the top suspect. This, despite the fact that polling day in the city this year was nestled in between an extended weekend and hence there were various initiatives by the authorities to ensure Bangaloreans inked their fingers. One of them was an appeal made to weekend holiday destinations in the vicin­ity not to take in bookings. Banga­lore바카라s turnout (Bangalore South recorded the lowest in the city at 53.48 percent) was low, but still higher than Hyderabad바카라s 44.75 percent.

바카라Why voter turnout is low is an eternal mystery,바카라 says Prof Trilochan Sastry of the Association for Democratic Reforms. 바카라In all urban areas and metros, it has ­always been low. It바카라s low in New York and in London.바카라 Blaming it entirely on urban voter apathy, or specifically the middle class, isn바카라t very convincing either. So, could it be to do with the voter rolls? Many reckon so. 바카라I think they have imp­roved but I don바카라t think they have succeeded hundred percent. The job of getting the rolls right is always a work in progress,바카라 says Sastry.

The class divide is more sharp in the rural areas, with only two major classes, haves and havenots. Hence, the middle class is not associated with rural India that much, or in any case, it is present in small numbers there. It is in cities that the middle class exists within a whole spectrum: upwardly mobile, lower middle class, upper middle class, etc. Hence, when a middle class is being referred to, it is this vast urban collection of subsets. Middle class support or participation making a difference in elections varies from constituency to constituency. There is no general rule about it.

Going by trends in Bangalore, Narendar Pani, School of Social Sciences, National Institute of Advanced Studies, points out that urban constituencies see the lowest voting. 바카라I can바카라t say whether it is the lower or upper middle class that votes in low numbers, but the urban constituency knows it can influence the policies without the electoral processes. Essentially, the influence on policy comes through people like Nandan Nilekani and groups like that. It has very little to do with the electoral process,바카라 says Pani. 바카라They don바카라t have to go through the tedious process of voting and holding the elected representatives accountable. The rural middle class is different. They generally tend to vote more, vote in groups and then ensure that the group negotiates with the electoral representatives,바카라 he adds.

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Photograph by Getty Images

So, the middle class is politically active, but this idea of politics is a more broad-based one where they try to influence power and policies and generate groupings. They can be very ­active in creating influence groups, but they are not very active in the electoral process. Low voter turnouts in cities reveal that despite being eng­rossed with politics, middle class groups have shown a distaste or contempt for elected representatives.

The last time someone from the middle class stood for elections, like Nandan Nilekani, he lost by a wide margin. This shows he had little support from his class. Others like M.J. Akbar stood as representatives of a political party and not as independent middle class candidates.

It is a class that looks primarily for economic status: 바카라what will make a profit?바카라 they think. The middle class also has no problem in taking extreme nationalist positions while, at the same time, being the group with the largest number of ­aspirants for jobs and migration abroad.

The middle class바카라s electoral apathy, however, is not a one-sided affair. A cursory look at the manifestos of the main political parties for this election hardly makes space for specific middle class iss­ues. This has always been the case if you ask Arun Kumar, owner of Ludhiana-based MK Printing Press and member of Ludhiana Printing Press Association. 바카라The middle class has never been a part of manifestos because they never specifically demanded it. You ask any middle-class family, they would say poll issues are inflation, infrastructure development and government facilities. Our classes have never gone beyond these three-four factors, and have become persona non-grata,바카라 says Arun.

It바카라s only a few times that the middle classes have come forward and used the ballot box to express their angst. Emergency, the Dalit agitation and the Anna Hazare movement in Delhi are a few such times over the last several decades. Today, when there is lingering angst over policies like demonetisation and GST, which are believed to have killed many small enterprises and led to job losses, there hardly seems any enthusiasm for the electoral verdict.

바카라Middle-class work is limited to the city바카라s municipal councillor or corporator, which involves issuing of birth certificate, death certificate, attesting documents, sewerage, road and parks. Beyond this, the middle class doesn바카라t really engage with politicians,바카라 says Akshay Rathore, a government employee. Citing the example of unfinished flats in Noida-Gurugram, Rathore expresses anguish that no politician has been able to resolve that crisis.  바카라It바카라s one of the reasons why urban middle classes don바카라t engage with politicians. We are neither part of political rallies nor the political discourse,바카라 adds Rathore.

Jagdeep Chhokar, professor at IIMA and co-founder of Association for Democratic Reforms, India, emphasises that the middle class is not an organised monolith. 바카라It is very dispersed and div­erse. The pattern of middle class behaviour changes from tribal to rural to semi urban to peri urban to metros. 바카라That is what political parties take advantage of. My middle class community will vote for me while yours will vote for you,바카라 says Chhokar. He points out that generalising the middle class is very difficult. The lower sections of the middle class are more worried about their bread and butter than its upper strata. The upper strata are under the impression that they can play or manipulate the system to their advantage. So if there is anything wrong in the system, it doesn바카라t bother them as they are confident of getting their work done whether it is a drivers바카라 license or power or a water connection.

Unlike the upper middle class, the lower middle classes are not able to play the system to their advantage so they take the elections more seriously. 바카라I don바카라t think many people think elections make a difference because we have reduced them to a farce. We no longer talk about governance in the elections or about how the society should organise itself during elections. We only talk about who has not done what and who is corrupt and not corrupt,바카라 says Chhokar, adding that he is happy that the lower strata of the middle class is more serious about the elections than the upper strata.

Jayati Ghosh, who teaches at JNU, points to the whole new level of aspirations driving both the poor and the middle classes. 바카라When those aspirations are not met, people tend to blame others. Life has become more insecure and difficult for almost everybody in the middle classes. Very few of the well-off and high salaried are benefiting while everybody else is feeling the pinch,바카라 says Ghosh.

While there may be nothing overt in the election manifestos, Ghosh states that a lot of the government policies are framed to curry favour with the middle class: for instance, the constant increase in dearness allowance for government employees or the raising of income tax limits, all are middle class gestures. Except in a few southern states like Kerala and Tamil Nadu, the middle classes have not been taught to demand good public facilities. They have only been taught to go for privatisation of public services and utilities.

In Delhi, AAP바카라s policies have been dir­ected towards the urban poor through facilities like mohalla clinics, better government schools, etc. But does that make the Delhi middle class feel neglected? Not quite, as the middle class has generally been the beneficiary of most government policies. For instance, low inflation benefits the middle class.

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Window Seat

The daily grind in a Calcutta bus

Photograph by Sandipan Chatterjee

One big debate is that farmers are losing out while the middle class benefits. The Modi government바카라s failure to address growing unemployment or farmer distress does not appear on the ground to impact the middle class바카라s day-to-day life. But then, what awakens them are issues like GST. For a large number of middle class families spoken to for this report, the negative impact of GST on their house-owning dreams is a matter of great anguish. 바카라Look at the registration fee after adding the GST levied on a 2 BHK flat. For a Rs 70-80 lakh flat one has to pay more than Rs 7-8 lakh tax. If this is not burdening a middle-class man then what else is?바카라 asks Lakshman Rao, a government ­employee in Telangana.

As for Modi바카라s drive against black money, Rao says that while electronic payments might have been made mandatory, most of the black money is parked in land purchases in benami names by politicians, bureaucrats, and the influential. At the same time, Minakshi Shailendra Kumar, Vice Principal of Secunderabad Public School, is happy that the 바카라payment of teaching staff salaries, or their additional payment for evaluation work, or students paying their fee, all have become hassle-free with 바카라digitalisation바카라 or 바카라electronic payments바카라.바카라

Ajitabha Roychoudhury, professor of economics at Jadavpur University, says while small manufacturers have been adversely affected by demonetisation and GST, the salaried-class have also not benefited much over the last few years, exc­ept for a small income tax relief in the last budget. 바카라The BJP came to power by promising to fight corruption at all levels but failed to deliver,바카라 Roy­choudhury says. 바카라The dream of the educated middle class is to get better-paying jobs or start a small or medium entrepreneurship but successive governments have failed to address this sector바카라.

G.K. Karanth, ex-professor at the Bang­alore-based Institute for Social and Economic Change, states, 바카라The middle class has become a somewhat cynical class which has lost any fair hope of things happening by plan. Somehow the middle class has not only been the classic Marxian opportunist but has also hoped that opportunities will sink in place.바카라

In the absence of proper data on either job creation or tax collection, political parties are fooling the people, says Roychoudhury adding that dole culture is no answer to unkept promises to boost the education and healthcare.

For an informed middle class person, there are no issues engaging voters this time. If you study the political manifestos, parties seem like dream merchants. There is either NYAY or some waiver and more promises of those kind. Everybody seems to be ­offering the moon. But no political party is talking about how they are going to ­improve civic amenities, tackle waste management and improve environment, all common middle class talking points.

One can say that the middle class today is so much a part of the selfie cult­ure바카라that focuses on itself in a private frame 바카라that where it matters, they are not in the frame. And elections surely warrant their participation in larger numbers.

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Sunil Gaychare

Sunil Gaychare, 38, is a manager in the fin­ance department of a private company. In the past four to five years he has witnessed many changes in his personal life as well as in society. 바카라Over all, prices have increased, most importantly petrol prices. It has actually affected my moving around as I commute a lot for work,바카라 says Sunil. 바카라Not to mention the traffic snarls all over Mumbai because of the ongoing metro work.바카라 He points to economic slowdown because of which increments are hard to come. 바카라The job market is very tight. My wife left her job to take care of our child three years ago but now it is hard for her to get a job.바카라

Sunil has also been disillusioned by the government바카라s schemes. 바카라Initially, I thought demonetisation was good for curbing black money but after RBI바카라s report came out saying 99 per cent of scrapped money had returned to banks, I realised it had flopped,바카라 he says. Sunil says that while the Congress바카라 NYAY may help temporarily, both the public and private sector need to ensure minimum wages for the poor and the middle class.

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Dhananjay Joshi

Dhananjay, who sells farm equipment, recently opened a café in Nashik. He has weathered several storms in his ­entrepreneurial life바카라he first entered the business in partnership in 2002 and then went solo in 2011. 바카라I think earlier people didn바카라t realise how much tax they were paying with VAT and other indirect taxes, which is why there was so much criticism against GST. But if you ask me, people who were not meticulous or were having some sort black transactions, faced difficulties during demonetisation and GST. We had no trouble. In fact our business has grown by 30 to 35 per cent.바카라

Dhanan­jay is of the opinion that one must be  ready to undergo some difficulties for the improvement of the country. He vehemently opposes the idea of subsidy or any financial help such as loan waivers or the Congress바카라s NYAY scheme, 바카라I have seen ext­remely wealthy farmers, who make profits and don바카라t repay their loans because of loan waivers. When you give ­anything for free, people take it for granted. I don바카라t think any of these schemes are a good idea.바카라

By Lola Nayar and Jyotika Sood with inputs from Ajay ­Sukumaran in Bangalore, M.S. Shanker in Hyderabad, G.C. Shekhar in Chennai, Prachi Pinglay-Plumber in Mumbai and Probir ­Pra­manik in Kolkata

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