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Articles, Issue 18
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Delhi election verdict and the political economy of reforms | Discover ...
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several accounts, as I argued here and here. While the then Prime Ministerial candidate Modi went around the
country promising effective delivery of civic amenities, including rural and urban infrastructure , international
media read a triumph of the markets in Modis electoral victory. In fact, in every election rally that Modi
addressed during the 2014 general elections, he pledged to bring back the black money stashed [in Swiss
bank accounts] and give Rs 1.5 million to every Indian. Now, black money is not an issue that pro-market
advocates are usually passionate about. Instead, corruption is the quintessential populist issue with a universal
appeal.
During the Delhi election campaign, BJP also made the same promises for which the commentators have called
AAP a populist party. The BJP too had promised to halve power tariff and provide housing for the
slum-dwellers. BJPs electoral campaign was as populist as, if not more than, the one that AAP ran.
Moreover, Prime Minister Modis credibility as an efficient administration has also taken a hit in recent times.
Pradeep Chhibber and Rahul Verma cite evidence from the Cicero Associates opinion polls, which shows that
48% Delhis voters think that the Prime Minister has made lots of promises but has not delivered on them.
More importantly, even the staunchest Modi supporters suggest that nothing has changed on ground in
first nine months of the Narendra Modi government.
The AAP also used the Delhi campaign to hold the Prime Minister accountable for his numerous promises. As
the conversation that NDTVs Ravish Kumar had with AAPs foot soldiers revealed, during the election
campaign, the AAP cadre carried folders full of news reports to expose fundamental flaws in the lofty
declarations that the Prime Minister had been making day in and day out. Delhi residents interviewed by
NDTV correspondents asserted, It was important to teach the BJP a lesson; they had become too arrogant. It
is therefore reasonable to conclude, as Ashutosh Varshney did recently, that Delhi voters trusted Arvind
Kejriwal over Modi.[1]
In a nutshell, the Delhi verdict does not reflect the victory of a populist party pitted against a reformist party, as
some commentators have argued. Instead, the Delhi voter has voted emphatically for the classical Indian
electoral issues, often captured in the phrase, bijli, paani, and sadak (power, potable water, and roads). It is
unfortunate that this economic agenda, a phrase that I use deliberately in this context, which is of concern to a
majority of voters, is trivialized to paint AAP as a populist party. Improvement of the civic infrastructure is
critical even if market-led growth happens to be ones calling. Investment in health and education have been
the motors of economic growth in China and east-Asian tiger economies. In India, both BJP and Congress
leaders have failed to grapple with these challenges. Instead, they have taken the path of least resistance which
comes studded with corporate contributions to party funds and cheap brownie-points flaunted in global
investor summits.
An unprecedented growth in crony capitalism has been one of the key outcomes of Indias so-called market
reforms since the early 1990s. As the former chief election commissioner remarked, crony capitalism is
intertwined with Indias electoral politics. One of the highlights of the 2014 general elections was the
enormously expensive campaign that the BJP unleashed. Both BJP and Congress are opposed to the proposals
to bring political parties under the ambit of the Right to Information law. On the other hand, AAP has set
extremely high standards by disclosing information about the contributions to party fund on its website. By
making the corporate-political party nexus as one of the central planks of its electoral campaigns, the AAP has
helped create a demand for campaign finance reform and the need to hold political parties accountable.
Similarly, the AAPs position regarding Delhis power tariffs relates to important debates about reforms in the
power sector. Independent research shows that Delhis privatized power sector is replete with inefficiencies
and unfair trade practices. Reports suggest that power companies may have installed faulty meters that
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realm of electoral politics, the AAP has questioned the master narratives that falsely equate privatization to
competence and efficiency. During its 49 day government in Delhi last year, the AAP leaders instituted an audit
by the government auditors, a process that reportedly slowed down during the past eight months of Delhi
administration under the BJP-led federal government.
The AAPs electoral campaigns thus rely on issues that are fundamental to the successful implementation of
reforms in the delivery of basic amenities. This is not to suggest that the solutions AAP has offered are perfect.
Consider the proposal for the supply of 700 liters of lifeline water per day, an idea that is based on the World
Health Organization benchmark of 125 liters of water per person per day. The studies conducted by Dunu
Roy, the director of Delhi-based Hazards Center, suggest that a figure of 100 liters of water per person per day
is sufficient across all income groups in Delhi. Considering the importance of conserving valuable natural
resources, it would be desirable to rethink the specifics of how much of the needed supply of water should be
made available free of cost to every citizen. Other alternative exist, such as a minimalist pricing structure, or a
sliding scale in which the middle and upper class residents pay a higher tariff than they expect the poor to pay.
Accordingly, the idea of life-line water, which resonates with the United Nations recognition of water and
sanitation as fundamental human rights cannot be dismissed as populism. More so, because in the status quo
scenario, it is the poor who pay a steep price for water delivered by the tanker mafia, while the elite residents of
the Lutyens Delhi get a comparatively more reliable and abundant supply of highly subsidized water
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supplies. As Jean Drze has argued repeatedly, ironically, many of those who argue against the state-led
provision of essential services to a majority of citizens, are often the exclusive beneficiaries of a variety of
largesse that are built into the status-quo. This is the real essence of the politics that AAP has introduced to the
nations political landscape.
To conclude, Delhi elections are a reflections of the prime ministers failure to engender effective reforms, and
of the AAPs ability to convince voters about the superiority of its proposals to reform the reforms that have not
worked for Delhi and its residents. Even if the AAP just happened to be the vehicle for the articulation of
simmering discontent among a majority of Delhis citizens, as a veteran political commentator argues, the
people of Delhi found AAP to be the best among the options available to them. The task for all serious
advocates of reforms is cut out: rethink the types of reforms that would help improve the quality of life for the
majority of citizens and how elected governments are held to account.
Note:
[1] Some readers may notice significant similarities between the specific pieces of evidence and the underlying
analytical focus of this essay and Varshneys essay published in of the Indian Express. Please note that other
than the specific quote reference here, which is being included during the second round of editing, this essay
was written and submitted to the editors prior to Varshneys commentary was circulated online on February 18.
These similarities do lend independence validation of the arguments I make here.
Prakash Kashwan is Assistant Professor of Political Science at University of Connecticut, Storrs. His teaching and
scholarship focuses on comparative politics, political economy, and international environmental policy and
politics. He may be reached via email at prakash.kashwan@uconn.edu and his recent publications may be
accessed via https://uconn.academia.edu/PrakashKashwan
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