There is another way- Naushad’s column published in Business Standard

There is another way 

Strong, decisive rule is not the only way to effectiveness. Our experience since 1991  shows diffused economic and political power can deliver the goods even better 

R Jagannathan’s thought-provoking article in these pages (‘Democracy, autocracy, or  both?’, Business Standard, April 3, 2024) has raised some very important issues. He  is surely right in saying that countries as a whole are difficult to compare, as no country  is like another across all elements. But he then goes on to directly assert that  autocracies are more effective at getting things done: “A country that wants quick,  radical change will tend to be less democratic because big change needs more  concentration of power.” 

There is another way. As many have pointed out (see Martin Wolf’s piece last week in  the Financial Times), there is no correlation between autocracy and performance. For  every Lee Kuan Yew (who brilliantly developed modern Singapore) there are multiple  Maos, Stalins, Pol Pots, and Chavezes who were walking, talking disasters for their  countries. Democracies may often stumble, but the option of voting incompetence out  can drive improved performance like nothing else. 

It depends, too, on what change one is driving. Large infrastructure projects can  benefit from top-down drive. But our single largest economic challenge is employment;  we need to create millions of good-quality jobs each year. In our private-sector-driven  economy, many things must line up. Since 1991, broadly sensible economic policy  across governments has kept growth reasonably strong. But that isn’t enough to  annually add millions of good-quality jobs. The state must remove obstacles to  employing more labour (our long-pending labour reforms) and ensure market access  through free-trade agreements for labour-intensive goods like garments and footwear.  But even that isn’t enough. The key missing element is a mindset among Indian  entrepreneurs that labour-intensive manufacturing is good business. What else  explains why a large garment plant in India employs 3,000 to 5,000 people, but one  across the border in Bangladesh employs 30,000 to 50,000. Changing mindsets  involves persuading, modelling, encouraging, incentivising, and doing so consistently  over many years; it cannot be ordered to happen. As dozens of entrepreneurs move  in the right direction, hundreds and then thousands more will follow them. How do we  make that happen? 

Let us learn from our own experience since 1991. The key element was the retreat of  the state. We scrapped rules restricting what industry could be started, where it could  be started, how much could be produced, what price it could be sold at, what could be  imported, for how much it could be imported, what technology could be licensed from  whom and by whom, and how much could be paid for it. All this, decided by  bureaucrats with no domain knowledge, held India back for 30 years. It is the removal 

of these controls that has seen India be one of the world’s 10 best-performing  economies for 30 years, with every projection saying we will continue to be so for the  next 30 too. 

The removal of controls unleashed Indian entrepreneurship. Over the years I’ve done  a simple exercise of comparing the Business India list of India’s top 100 firms. What is  striking is how the 10 years to 1991 saw a largely similar list. Ten years after 1991,  new entrants made up half the list. Whole new sectors such as pharmaceuticals,  information technology services, hotels and branded fast-moving consumer goods  products came in, while commodity producers retreated. Since around 2000, the churn  has reduced, and some older commodity groups have even returned to prominence.  The entry of new entrepreneurs slowed down in the 2000s, which has persisted to this  day. The Indian market seemed to become less welcoming to entrepreneurship at  precisely the time it was growing fastest. Why? 

Anne Krueger’s classic paper, “Political Economy of the Rent-seeking Society”, argues  that government restrictions on economic activity give rise to rents. These restrictions  can include limits on entry, protection, or licences to operate. People then compete to  capture those rents using legal or illegal means. Was there a fall in rent-seeking from  1991 to the early 2000s, and a return since? Rent-seeking thrives on political  connections; this favours incumbents and deters new entrants. The last page of Vijay  Kelkar and Ajay Shah’s book, In Service of the Republic, says: “The private sector is  fearful of the arbitrary power wielded by officials, and does not speak up. There is no  voice, but there is an exit in the form of reduced investment.” One form of this ‘reduced  investment’ is reduced entrepreneurship. 

The retreat of centralised control of the economy went with a revival in the  independence of other institutions. The Election Commission, the Supreme Court, the  Enforcement Directorate, and others, were all less beholden to the minority or coalition  governments of the day in their actions. Whether this came from weakness or wisdom  isn’t important; the effect on independence was the same. 

There remains ample opportunity for the state to retreat further, and so set us on  course to becoming a developed nation. The reforms after 1991 were all largely at the  level of the Union government; there is so much scope for state governments to do  less, and then do that less better. And even within the Union government, reforms  were concentrated in the finance, commerce and industry ministries; education,  science and technology, home, agriculture, and the rest offer great scope for further  reforms that limit their role to a few things done better. 

Ultimately a government must be judged not on whether it is strong or weak, but on its  performance. How have we performed in economic well-being, both for the overall  economy and the income of the median Indian; in civil and individual rights for all  citizens; in equality of opportunity through access to education and health 

infrastructure; in the rule of law being applied freely and fairly across states and  citizens. 

Jagannathan ends by saying: “Is it any wonder many voters seem to prefer strong  leaders, even if it means less democracy, so that their everyday problems get solved.”  He cites the Austrian-British philosopher Karl Popper for his paradoxes of democracy,  freedom and tolerance. Much of Popper’s book is an attack on those who would offer  us grand theories in the name of history, to reclaim some lost (and usually never  existing) glory. His is an argument not for concentration of power, but decentralisation,  and for checks and balances as things get done. Economic and political power must  be diffuse. Like Jagannathan, I will cite Popper too, from the same book, The Open  Society and its Enemies: “If in this book harsh words are spoken about some of the  greatest among the intellectual leaders of mankind, my motive is not, I hope, to belittle  them. It springs rather from my conviction that, if our civilisation is to survive, we must  break with the habit of deference to great men.” I share Popper’s motive – and  conviction. 

Naushad Forbes 

ndforbes@forbesmarshall.com 

Co-Chairman Forbes Marshall, Past President CII, Chairman of Centre for Technology InnoAvation and Economic Research and Ananta Aspen Centre. His book, The Struggle and the Promise has been published by HarperCollins.