expressindia.indianexpress.com
expressindia web
HomeBlogsCricketAstrology ShoppingTendersClassifieds Reader Comments
Font Size
Expressindia » Story

National Interest: Them versus them

Shekhar Gupta

Posted: Jan 05, 2013 at 0207 hrs IST

The idea that there are two Indias is not new. For intellectual convenience, one is called India, the other Bharat. One is shining, the other declining. One lives in cities, the other in villages. One is generally upper caste Hindu, the other is Scheduled or backward caste, tribal or Muslim. One is white collar, the other in agriculture. But our thinking has become so numbed by these established notions that we are missing another division in India, in fact, in Shining India. Or, the rise of two Shining Indias, in conflict with each other on the streets, as we saw in the protests against the gangrape now, and during the Anna mobilisation earlier.

Let us call one the India of ruling elites, and the other of governing elites. Governing elites are the political and bureaucratic classes, the judiciary, the conventional or rather institutional intelligentsia and media, and, of course, the police and the armed forces. The ruling elites, on the other hand, are the economically “arrived” Indians outside of the sarkari system. The businessmen, new professionals, particularly from IT and banking, the EMI-powered, young, double-income community and, of course, the conventional old rich, and offspring of the earlier generations of governing elites, NRI returnees and the modern foreign foundation-fuelled activists. These ruling elites and our traditional governing elites now have so little in common, so little shared ground, that they have begun to look like two sovereign, alien and hostile republics. Except, they live within the same territorial frontiers. That is why one finds it natural to blame the other for whatever it thinks is going wrong. The governing class blames the ruling elite for insensitivity typical of the rich, inability to understand “real” India and for making unreasonable upper crust “give them cake”-type demands each time they come out protesting. The ruling elites, of course, have the deep belief that all of India’s governors are corrupt, inefficient, unskilled, illiterate, insensitive, out of tune with the times and out of touch with the new aspirational India, undeserving of holding the jobs and exercising the powers that they do. And therefore the “system” must change.

We have looked at two related phenomena in the past. And these, in some ways, may have been the precursors to the complex situation now. One was the way Mumbai and Delhi functioned like two entirely different, and distant politico-socio-economic entities (‘Is anybody out there?’, National Interest, January 22, 2011, http://goo.gl/Lx3Dp). You made money from enterprise in Mumbai and bought power with it. You earned power through votes in Delhi, and acquired wealth with it. So Mumbai and Delhi become a metaphor for entrepreneurial and political India. The other phenomenon was of our biggest cities — Mumbai, Kolkata, Bangalore, Chennai, Hyderabad and so on (with the exception of Delhi) — becoming “colonies” of the states to which they belonged (‘Mumbye’, National Interest, July 16, 2011, http:// goo.gl/W6ezl and ‘Liberate our cities’, National Interest, August 6, 2005, http://goo.gl/ZNzEu). Take Mumbai, for example, the political class that rules it does so by getting votes in the Maharashtrian countryside. So the phenomenon, get the votes in the village and use that power to rule and plunder the cities, can be seen in all of our big cities. This political marginalisation of metropolitan India was hastened by the rise in inward migration and slummification as the hinterland moved in, as the same politicians’ vote banks, pushing the upwardly mobile India further to the political margins. These two disparate phenomena have now expanded to make the divide complete.

Today, the ruling classes have nothing to share with their governing counterparts except contempt and anger. Their children pass their plus-two at the best schools, which are now factories that mass-produce fat fee paying Indian students for foreign undergraduate colleges. That is one of the reasons presidents of so many American universities now routinely float in India. They come looking for customers, not scholarship. Our government has created this market by assuring under-supply of quality college education. The children return from college, more or less alien to their country and its “system”, and join their parents’ expanding world of non-governmental power elites. Their social and professional circles are mostly PLU, where almost every other Indian they come across, security guards, drivers, cooks and domestic servants, taxi-men, even policemen, are all “bhaiyyas”. I say policeman with particular emphasis as he is usually their first point of contact with governance: to get a driving licence, a passport renewal verification, a traffic ticket, or a breathalyser test on a nightly drive. And this bhaiyya is usually sorted out with some cash. As the rest of the government must be. Then they compare the rotten governance with what they experience overseas.

The richer families now routinely employ a full-time fixer whose only job is to solve their “little” problems with the government, represented mainly by the police, excise, income tax and the various municipal departments, all of which are equally “corrupt and purchasable”.

Of course, nobody in these ruling classes, with the clout of cash and connections at the higher levels, and the force of idealism and impatience among the professionals in the aspirational EMI stage of life, wants to venture across the divide. They do not compete for all-India services. Check the facts with the UPSC on the socio-economic profile of the IAS officer recruits every year. The competition is too tough, too messy, and in any case, what do civil servants get paid, “unless they become corrupt”. These classes also shun politics. Particularly, again, because it is too dirty, but also because of the entry barriers. And the armed forces, forget it. Who will lead that life, and that too for so little money? Better leave soldiering for the children of India’s kisans. Maybe Shastri figured it out when he said Jai Jawan, Jai Kisan in 1965. The British royal family, which sends its boys to active military service, is no inspiration to these new royals of India. They want to have nothing to do with the government. They only want to fight it.

And what about the governing elites? They have internalised the belief that all their problems, all the ills they are blamed for, are nothing but the imagination of these greedy, unreasonable, illiberal new Indians, whom they dismiss as the non-voting class. But when these non-voters arrive at Jantar Mantar, Rajpath, or Mumbai’s Azad Maidan, they don’t know how to deal with them. They are like an unusually well-dressed people’s army that comes in tow with a marauding cavalry, in the shape of the OB vans and camera cranes. You say these are small crowds, and that political crowds used to come in lakhs, but there is a qualitative difference. In the past, when lakhs of poorer Indians came protesting, you could gas, thrash and shoot them. The detained, injured and even killed were mere statistics on day two. This is no longer true with these smaller, niftier, smarter crowds of protesters. When an 18-year-old college student in jeans climbs a pole on Rajpath carrying a placard, she gets millions more eyeballs than a dying patient abandoned in the compound of a Hazaribagh hospital. Just as somebody on a 24-hour crash diet at Jantar Mantar would attract millions more eyeballs than Irom Sharmila in Imphal.

Each one of these protesters is more articulate than any police officer. Indian ruling elites are now media savvy and camera trained. Each TV anchor, in turn, is more articulate than any of your party spokesmen. And so many of our activists are smarter, cleverer and better communicators than all of these. This is a larger reality the governing classes cannot wish away. Whatever their judgemental view, they have to learn to live with it, find a modus vivendi.

In fact, they need to reach out to this other Shining India, embrace it and co-opt it. They have to take a leaf out of Indira Gandhi’s book and bring in some of the more talented professionals from the corporate world and liberal-global academia laterally into government. Professional India has to be given a better institutionalised role in governance.

This will mean bringing in more of these successful professional classes into politics. Just one Nandan Nilekani is not enough. And yet you can see how he can solve problems, sell innovative new ideas and processes that conventional politicians and bureaucrats never could. This applies to all major political parties, not just the Congress. Even the bureaucracy and judiciary have to find ways to bring this ruling elite into the tent. Why do all the positions of regulators, from telecom to RBI, SEBI, insurance, competition and information commissions and so on, have to go only to retiring civil servants? The National Security Council set-up? Why not fish in a larger pond?

Over the past decade, the governing classes have become a fortress. The ruling elites, conscious of their new power now, are determined to breach it, by smashing its gates preferably. It is for the former now to throw open the gates, instead, and hug the new reality. Or condemn itself to a permanent siege. And history will tell them, there is only one way sieges usually end.

sg@expressindia.com

Print
 
Post Comments
Name* Email ID*
Subject* Country*
Message*
Characters remaining
 
TERMS OF USE: The views, opinions and comments posted are your, and are not endorsed by this website. You shall be solely responsible for the comment posted here. The website reserves the right to delete, reject, or otherwise remove any views, opinions and comments posted or part thereof. You shall ensure that the comment is not inflammatory, abusive, derogatory, defamatory &/or obscene, or contain pornographic matter and/or does not constitute hate mail, or violate privacy of any person (s) or breach confidentiality or otherwise is illegal, immoral or contrary to public policy. Nor should it contain anything infringing copyright &/or intellectual property rights of any person(s).
I agree to the terms of use.
Middle class not 'ruling elite', but 'elite slaves' by Ranjeet on 12 Jan 2013

I disagree with your analysis. Just as 'articulate' doesn't mean smart, it doesn't mean 'ruling' either. There is only one elite in India: the governing elite. And this governing elite consists of big business, dynasties and criminals. The mistake in this article is typical of the middle class delusion - that they have indeed 'arrived'. It is the mistake of lumping together the super-rich who can buy power and live comfortable lives, and middle-class aspirants who are still struggling for livelihood. These 'elite slaves' work for big business, selling all of their waking hours, their personal lives, their intellect and creativity to contribute to the much vaunted 'GDP growth'. In reality, there is nothing elite about them - they're just slaves who happen to be useful to the unholy trinity today. Their only consolation is that they are better off than their rural cousins, the 'slave slaves', whose only destiny is to lose their land, freedom, and often lives to the same unholy trinity.

Arrogance of "Ruling elites" by RAHUL on 09 Jan 2013

When Author writes that "Ruling elites sees every other Indians with contempt ,by calling them bhaiyas" It itself revealed the mindset of ruling elites.As far as assessment of competence is concerned,only being articulate doesn't mean that you are talented.It just shows that "your" grooming in the elitist culture.Had they being talented,they would have secured admission in Indian universities(IITs n IIMs),cracked the civil services examinations.Having failed to do so,they want to gatecrash in Govt. through backdoors(and supported by media through these articles).As far as Social background and profile of candidate selected in IAS is concerned,the topper of this year is Gold medalist from AIIMS(Shena Agrawal),She had also topped her MBBS entrance exam(when these ruling elites were flying to US,as they had failed to pass entrance test and secure admission in good institutes here).I know I will not get reply to my post,still I will request IE to publish it,so that nation knows the facts.

Got that right by Harris on 06 Jan 2013

Timely and on target. Nice to see an article with a sane perspective in an ocean of high emotions and media infused madness.

Marginalized have apetite and fire in the bellies by Media Matters Politics on 06 Jan 2013

Marginalized segments irrespective of Scheduled Caste, Scheduled Tribes and Minorities have appetite and fire in the belies and definitely a vision to contribute to nation. Unlike one Nilekani is not enough, Shekharbhai, one Shekharbhai in Media is not enough. Nation demand so many Shekharbhai in India and especially state like Gujarat who could pen for justice, inclusive economy and equal rights. These politicians, both ruling and opposition, bureaucracy and Media are taking a ride by making issues, ping pong them and marginalized, ghettoized the communities. Judiciary is pampered in this nation.

Movement for governance by PR Srinivasan on 06 Jan 2013

I would have used the expression Middle Class or beneficiaries of economic reform instead of ruling class or ruling elite. This has happened throughout history. A 130 years ago, the Indian National Congress was the vehicle that channelled of the energy of the Indian elite that had acquired a British education, seen some prosperity and wanted political change. Now the middle class which has seen opportunity after the 1991 economic liberalisation is seeking governance reform. We need to reform the government which still operates in the colonial mindset of controlling the natives / the central planning mindset where the government babus knew what was best. We need police reform, judicial reform, emergency services (like the 911 service) - overall governance reform. And even the rural Bharat needs it too....

Two Indias by Abhijit on 06 Jan 2013

It is agreed there are two sets of Indians. I also agree that most Indians that work in private sector are more articulate than our government sErvants. May be it is their training. I disagree people that protested following rape and murder of the young girl, are from upper middle class. These people are young, they want a better life and they face sexual assault in various forms every day as they come to work from towns nearby to Delhi. Our leaders need rural Indians for vote, and urban rich to run the country, who pay tax. However, in 60'years our leaders have not found a way to create efficient public transport system to ferry people. May be they thought it is not important.

The best of Sekhar Gupta by Hitendra Patel on 05 Jan 2013

This is the best piece written by Sekhar Gupta, a HMT. For this, he will be remembered.

Not fully accurate by Abhinav Sharma on 05 Jan 2013

The elites seen in this movement are not NRIs returning to India, they are those who have become upwardly mobile. The failure of the system is due to the fact that middle class numbers have not reached that critical stage where they can make governments become efficient enough to meet their basic demands (of education, security, and broader economic freedom) as compared to the demands of the rest of India who keep fending for their own set of basic demands (food and shelter) to be bothered by the middle class goals. The governing elite has figured out a way in which they can keep manipulating this latter class to keep getting votes from them so as to remain in power without the need to cater to middle class demands which requires much more honesty and skill, both lacking currently. The fear of a certain Narendra Modi reflects the fear of the governing elite that his method might just increase the middle class numbers rather too soon for comfort from the nice pace it's going now.

Mostly right but... by Abhinav Sharma on 05 Jan 2013

The elites seen in this movement are not NRIs returning to India, they are those who have become upwardly mobile. The failure of the system is due to the fact that middle class numbers have not reached that critical stage where they can make governments become efficient enough to meet their basic demands (of education, security, and broader economic freedom) as compared to the demands of the rest of India who keep fending for their own set of basic demands (food and shelter) to be bothered by the middle class goals. The governing elite has figured out a way in which they can keep manipulating this latter class to keep getting votes from them so as to remain in power without the need to cater to middle class demands which requires much more honesty and skill, both lacking currently. The fear of a certain Narendra Modi reflects the fear of the governing elite that his method might just increase the middle class numbers rather too soon for comfort from the nice pace it's going now.

Call for Action- widen our scope by Amit on 05 Jan 2013

The article was able to succinctly summarize the need of the hour (must read his clmn of last Sat). The time has arrived for us, the hard-working, personal-goal-oriented, time-sticklers, dreams-chasing, %u2018middle-class%u2019, to think our larger duty. The current governing elites (as noted in the column) have a certain age-old manner of approaching the needs of people of this country, as perceived correct by them. However, we fail to see, any substantial need analyses of a geographical area (say a district) in terms of status of health, economic condition, educational needs, urban planning needs, rural growth prospects, etc. We also hardly get to see, a tangible plan of action, to deal with and improve those gaps, over period of time that a certain political party proposes to achieve. We need results, against the stated problems, point by point, in a given time frame. Perhaps, the time has arrived to gradually widen our scope.

Excellent article by Vinayak on 05 Jan 2013

A succinct presentation of a very complex idea.

Powerful, articulate piece by Rohan on 05 Jan 2013

Brilliantly written. Couldn't agree more. Add the division of the 'ruling' class complete with their DLF/ Jindal societies and even the territorial division is complete from Janpath. But then the economic ruling class is new. Created of the governing class after the rubberband-like economic release 90s. The governinng class isn't used to being questioned thusly. They too shall learn. This too shall pass.

Latest News

Business

Showbiz

Sports

For peace in BJP ranks, Narendra Modi meets L K Advani

Uttarakhand worst hit as rain, floods kill at least 60 in north India

Rajnath Singh, man in the hot seat, is guest at Express Adda tonight

Rahul is 'natural leader' of UPA 3: Manmohan Singh

New Andhra ministers spark fresh guessing game about Telangana

Narendra Modi breathes new life into Ram mandir issue, set to visit Ayodhya

More
© The Indian Express Limited. All rights reserved
Advertise With Us | Privacy Policy | Feedback | Express Group | Site Map