Why
Modi, Jokowi will need
more
than 100days to bring change?
Curtin S Chin and Meera Kumar ;
Curtis S.
Chin, a former US ambassador to the Asian Development Bank, is senior fellow,
Asia, at the Milken Institute and a managing director of advisory firm
RiverPeak Group, LLC. Meera Kumar, a former staff member of the ADB, is a New
York-based freelance writer and communications consultant
|
JAKARTA
POST, 11 September 2014
Although
Indonesia president-elect Joko Widodo’s inauguration is still some two months
away, he may well want to take a lesson from what is happening to the north,
in India as a dynamic new leader there faces incredible expectations.
How
fitting for the world’s largest and perhaps most free-wheeling democracy that
is India that with only 100 days having passed since Narendra Modi was sworn
into office as prime minister, critics and supporters alike are already
vocally weighing in on his performance.
Jokowi, as the president-elect is better known, get ready.
Hope
remains high that Modi will bring change to his own traditions-bound nation,
but as Russell Green, a former US Treasury attaché to India and Clayton
Fellow at Rice University’s Baker Institute, puts it, “[Modi] has yet to
explain his big economic reform vision in enough detail to revive corporate
investment and pull the public onboard.”
It
is of course too early to meaningfully judge Modi’s long-term impact. Here
though are several key benchmarks by which global investors and India’s own
citizens should measure the country’s new leadership. Indonesia, also take
note of these four critical areas: job creation, corruption, infrastructure
and socioeconomic divide.
With
50 percent of India’s population under the age of 30, job creation must be
foremost in the minds of the nation’s leaders. Nothing, after all, is more
dangerous than educated, unemployed youth roving the streets, their
frustrations rising and, sooner or later, finding expression in public disharmony.
It
is estimated that a million job aspirants enter the labor market each
month. Economic growth will have to
keep pace with this reality, and Modi will be wise to focus on agricultural
and education reforms, vocational, technical and professional training, and a
continued opening of the economy to help drive job creation and growth.
According
to India’s Labor Bureau’s “Third Annual Employment & Unemployment Survey
2012-2013,” the nation’s unemployment rate among “educated youth” was 19.4
percent in 2011-2012 and increased to 32 percent during 2012-2013.
For
the past five years, and particularly from 2012-2014, the Congress Party has
allowed growth to slip and investment plummeted. The new prime minister must
remember that growth is not India’s birthright; not something that will
automatically happen unless nurtured. Investor confidence must be restored
and capital inflows
improved.
Concurrent
with the emphasis on growth is the need for macro-economic stability. The
past government’s breathless attempts to win the population’s goodwill
through subsidies and by creating welfare programs have had a serious impact
on the coffers.
Subsidies
have absorbed such a large proportion of the government’s budget that capital
expenditures by the government have fallen to 6 percent of GDP. Such populist
programs are unsustainable and open the window to increased corruption. It is
time for India’s leaders to come to terms with economic fundamentals and
budget deficits, and restore macroeconomic stability.
India
has adopted the institutional structure of a modern democratic state; now it
is important to ensure these institutions function in an honest and credible
manner. In the recent past, governance has weakened, and institutions have
been hollowed out by corruption and rendered dysfunctional.
If
the public cannot trust the judiciary, or have faith that the police force
works in their interest, they will resort to unfair means to achieve its
goals.
If
business, domestic and foreign, are to invest in the India described so
eloquently on India’s independence day at the Red Fort, Modi must address
head-on a plethora of issues that relate to the high level of corruption and
poor governance, which keep the nation low on the ranks of the World Bank’s
annual Doing Business survey. (India dropped from 131 to 134 in the latest
World Bank ranking of 189 economies.)
Such
ills have eaten into the very core of Indian society, with tales of the
unpunished and hubris among the ruling class now legion.
After
all, if no one gets punished for wrongs when evidence is clear, documented
and apparent, it can only lead to a disregard for the very institutions
without which a modern democratic state cannot survive. Such was the hubris
among the elite and powerful that they could subvert any law or regulation
merely by calling on those who had the power to protect them.
From
our perspectives based on our time at the Asian Development Bank,
insufficient change has come to India’s core infrastructure despite hundreds
of millions of dollars from numerous development agencies and banks.
In
the India of today, much like the India of yesterday, even in urban areas
access to water and to reliable electricity cannot be counted on. Grandiose
promises already have been made by the prime minister, which would require an
investment of US$2 trillion, but details are sparse, and no one has
articulated where the capital would come from.
Toilets
on a per capita basis are deplorably low; many rivers are little more than
sewers and school children cannot do their homework because there is no power
in the evenings. Health and morbidity directly affect productivity; human
dignity is the basis for building a cohesive society that thinks for the
nation, not just for itself.
An
urgent task awaiting the new government is the need to build cohesion out of
diversity. The Muslim population of India is close to 15 percent and this
community is a vibrant part of India.
Yet,
on every economic and social measure, this segment of the population ranks
low. While the reasons for this are complex, the reality of their weaker
economic and political power has rendered many disgruntled and with a sense
of being marginalized.
The
new government must focus on this community’s grievances and demonstrate an
approach that is inclusive and credible to the Muslim population.
One
can always believe in one’s virtue; what counts is that others believe in
you. Governments are often defined by their failures, and given what was seen
by many as anti-Muslim rhetoric during the Modi campaign, real progress in
addressing this community’s specific needs, as part of an “all India”
economic drive can help prove naysayers wrong.
In
India, democracy defines itself by its ability to “get the government”. The
Modi government should continue to bear that in mind as it moves forward to
manage, if not meet, the incredible expectations that its election has
engendered among not just foreign business leaders but its own people. All
that will take well more than 100 days.
And
there too is a message for Indonesia and its new leaders as the countdown
continues to inauguration day. ●
|
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar