There are seven of them. Seven finance ministers, who comprise a financial band of magnificent men and women (India had the first independent woman FM in 2019), and who changed the course of India바카라s economy. Between 1991 and 2021, through policy vehicles, which included 31 main Budgets, and a few interim ones, they defined and refined, imagined and re-imagined, discussed and debated how the market바카라s invisible hand could deliver discernible results.
They were both idealists and pragmatists. They were social philosophers and economic scientists, welded into one. They were driven by not what was, but what could be, as also the electoral realities. They steered the country by taking sharp and blind right turns, and sometimes lost their way and took random left cuts. They raced ahead with their ideas on a few occasions, and were forced to turn back at a few crossroads. These FMs married market mantras with socialist slogans.
In effect, they changed us and our society. Three or four generations went through sweeping, far-reaching and mind-altering conversions because of these passionate proselytisers. Ever since the Congress바카라s Manmohan Singh presented his first Budget and laid down the capitalist commandments in the new industrial policy on July 24, 1991, life was never the same again. Three decades later, as the seven FMs stoked our desires and aspirations, our attitudes towards wealth, consumption, entertainment and connectivity have become vastly different.
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High GDP growth was their overriding priority and goal to get rid of the plague of poverty, and push people towards prosperity. In the 1996 speech, P. Chidambaram (United Front), who presented the largest number of Budgets during three stints, loftily claimed: 바카라Growth will be our mount, equity will be our companion, and social justice will be our destination.바카라 A year earlier, Manmohan had echoed a similar thought, when he said that 바카라growth and restructuring are not ends in themselves바카라.
Manufacturing was the tool to employ more individuals, raise incomes and living standards, and remove the curse of poverty. In his various speeches, Manmohan said that if industry, which was free from the shackles of the licence-quota-permit raj, was competitive, it would help the farmers. He added in 1995 that the 바카라changes바카라 related to industry 바카라will be far more significant바카라than any programme of special subsidies바카라. Jaswant Singh (NDA-1; 2003) wanted to rekindle the citizens바카라 creative genius to convert the 바카라liability of want into the asset of ability바카라.
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The focus remained on the poor and deprived. In his 1998 speech, Yashwant Sinha (NDA-1) was emotional: 바카라I have recalled to myself the face of the poorest and weakest man I바카라ve seen, and made sure that this Budget is of use to him.바카라 In 2014, Arun Jaitley (NDA-2) was categorical that the poor too wanted to be a 바카라part of the middle class바카라. In her first speech in 2019, Nirmala Sitharaman claimed that her government바카라s 바카라signature was in the last-mile delivery (to the people)바카라.
As Pranab Mukherjee (UPA-2) said in his 2010 speech, 바카라Growth is only as important as what it enables us to do.바카라 If it generates employment across castes, classes and communities, improves incomes, and allows us to access basic and other amenities and lead better lifestyles, it is desirable. But if it enhances inequalities, starves millions and leaves a sizable percentage unemployed, it is a wasteful exercise. As Singh had astutely observed, growth is only a means, and not an end.
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Manmohan SIngh, Budget 1991 (left); Nirmala Sitharaman, Budget 2021
Higher farm incomes and viable farming as well as more and lucrative employment options were two essential ingredients for a development-prosperity recipe. The seven FMs tried to inject new policy doses to energise agriculture. Their attempts culminated in the three recent farm acts, which led to an uproar and protest among the croppers. We will explore why this happened, as we flesh out the half-baked and ill-thought-out interventions in the earlier years.
One of the three recent acts was related to the 바카라one-nation, one-market바카라 theme to give freedom to farmers to sell their produce across the country. The logic was that the growers can sell in markets where prices are higher. But Manmohan Singh first talked about a 바카라unified national market바카라 without 바카라administrative restrictions on movement of agricultural products바카라. Sinha aimed for 바카라free inter-state movement of foodgrains바카라. He allowed some growers to sell directly to the food processors.
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A second act dealt with the dismantling of the Essential Commodities Act (ECA), which allowed the Centre to control prices and monitor distribution of certain crops. However, since 1991, the FMs diluted the provisions of this law, as they took products out of its purview. The reason is that if market forces influence prices, the croppers are likely to earn more. Past FMs initiated several experiments with corporate farming, which formed the essence of the third act.


However, as the farmers discovered, past policies hurt them more. The concept of 바카라one-nation, one-market바카라 remains a non-starter as the majority of land-tillers don바카라t have the financial means to reach the nearest marketplace, forget about selling across the nation. The dilution of the provisions of ECA over the years led to wild and weird price fluctuations, which destroyed rural families. Corporate or lease farming yielded inconsistent results; it harmed as well as benefited the growers.
Despite these failures, apart from the successes in annual production and exports, the FMs remained gung-ho about how they could, and would, revolutionise agriculture. In 1992, Manmohan Singh hoped to start a 바카라new chapter바카라 for farmers and, in 2002, Sinha spoke eloquently about 바카라Kisan ki azadi (freedom of the farmer)바카라. During his tenure, Jaswant Singh visualised a 바카라second revolution, to follow the earlier Green Revolution (which led to both gains and losses)바카라.
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As far as urban employment is concerned, it peaked in the 1990s and plummeted thereafter. In this century, we witnessed a long period of jobless growth, i.e. an era that created minimal jobs, followed by years of less-jobs, i.e. a reduction in the number of opportunities. Even in the pre-Covid scenario, the unemployment rate was the highest in the past four decades. Today, it is possibly the highest since independence, even as GDP growth has behaved haphazardly in the past 8-9 years.
What is worse is that unemployment is possibly understated. It is calculated as a percentage of people without jobs among the working-age population that is in the job market. Hence, if a person doesn바카라t work and is not a job-seeker, she is not statistically unemployed. But the reason for her opting out may be varied바카라lack of preferred jobs, family and social pressures, and meagre salaries. Sadly, a growing proportion of Indians, especially women, shun work. Between 2015 and 2018, the number of women in the 15-59 age bracket who opted out of the job market ballooned by a steep 20 per cent. They didn바카라t wish to work.
The seven brave FMs will wish to sweep these negatives under the carpet. They will claim that despite growth glitches, immense inequalities, unusual unemployment and agriculture anxieties, the number of poor nosedived. Data shows that the figure tumbled from 500 million in 1991 to 50-200 million; the latter number depends on which statistician one believes. If it is around 200 million today, it is still too high. Add to it the 200-300 million in the low-income group. Imagine the weight of this mass of people that needs to be lifted up바카라soon.
(This appeared in the print edition as "Remaking of Free India")
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