Headlines
Patels bust Modi's favourite Gujarat model
Nothing shows more starkly the distortions that have vitiated the
policy of reservations as the agitation by the financially and
politically influential Patel community in Gujarat for inclusion in the
backward-caste category to avail of the quota system in the allocation
of government jobs and educational opportunities.
Behind their
quest for safety in the reserved categories is the evident failure of
the much-vaunted 'Gujarat model' of development which was touted by
Narendra Modi as the panacea for the entire country.
Yet, since
the preference for reservations is a throwback to the days of scarcity
during the licence-permit-control raj, the latest upsurge shows that
little has changed in the economy. The scourge of joblessness remains as
potent under the pro-market dispensation as it was under the controlled
economy.
Even then, there is something odd about an enterprising
community like the Patels wanting the government to act as their nanny,
as it were. The OBC (Other Backward Class) of the Hindi belt, too,
comprised dominant groups in the countryside when they secured 27
percent reservations for themselves in 1990.
But unlike the
Patels, they occupied a lowly position socially. As B.P. Mandal, a
former chief minister of Bihar and author of the Mandal commission
report recommending 27 percent reservation, said, he was not allowed as a
school student to eat with his upper caste companions by the Brahmin
principal. Mandal was discriminated against although he belonged to a
wealthy landowning family.
But the Patels or Patidars - the word
means the same as zamindars - never experienced such social
disadvantages. Not surprisingly, they were part of the anti-reservation
movements in Gujarat in the late 1970s and early 1980s directed against
the Congress-led state government's KHAM vote bank comprising
Kshatriyas, Harijans, Adivasis and Muslims.
It is strange,
therefore, that the Patels of the Patel-motel fame - they run a large
number of roadside hotels across the US - should now want to take a step
back into the backward caste category.
Such a regressive outlook
is all the more curious because the Patels, like most Gujaratis, are
known for their entrepreneurship. For them to seek reservations in
government establishments cannot be easily explained when the country
has opted for a pro-market economy with its emphasis on the private
sector.
The role of the government and the public sector is
therefore expected to shrink in the coming years. As such, it makes
little point to seek employment in these sectors.
Similarly, seeking
admission via reservations in government schools and colleges doesn't
make any sense because of the preference of parents now to admit their
children in English-medium private schools as these are believed to be
better able to prepare the students to face the challenges of a
globalized environment.
In a way, the agitation by the Patels for
OBC status is similar to the one by the Gujjars of Rajasthan who wanted
a relegation from their existing backward caste category to a Scheduled
Tribe (ST) classification since the recognition of Jats as OBCs in the
state eroded the availability of reserved jobs.
This kind of a
backward march is the result of dwindling employment opportunities at a
time when the private sector is not expanding fast enough to make up for
the reduction of government jobs. Besides, the Gujarat model may be
more hype than reality.
Till now, the failures of this model have
been noted by Amartya Sen and other Leftists in social sectors such as
infant mortality, whose rate is as high as 60.9 per 1,000 children in
Gujarat against 16.2 in Kerala. Moreover, the percentage of people below
the poverty line in Gujarat is 31.6 against 19.6 in Kerala.
But
the latest disturbances point to failures in the commercial segment as
well with the small and medium enterprises not faring well and the
capital-intensive industries not creating enough jobs.
While the
phenomenon of jobless growth where robots replace humans on the shop
floor is one aspect of the scene in Gujarat, another is how reservations
have come to be viewed as the panacea for such situations, especially
when those searching for jobs or educational opportunities find their
prospects blocked not by deserving individuals but by beneficiaries of
allotted quotas where castes are the passwords.
In a system where
the accident of birth trumps merit, the demand by the leader of the
Gujarat agitators, 22-year-old Hardik Patel, that either the provision
of all facilities be determined by caste or that the system should be
thrown open to all will appear justifiable.
Arguably, the gross
misuse of reservations by myopic politicians intent on catering for
particular support groups has led to this volatile situation. The worst
example of such misuse is how the Supreme Court's directive on excluding
the creamy layer or the successful beneficiaries from the quota system
has been negated by a constant upward revision of the criteria for such
exclusion by the ruling politicians.
For Modi, the fire in his
backyard is the most worrisome of the problems which he faces. And there
are many - an economy which refuses to look up, the imbroglio over
pension for ex-servicemen and an agitation in the Film and Television
Institute of India which underlines the government's insensitivity to
matters of popular culture.
(Amulya Ganguli is a political analyst. The views expressed are personal. He can be reached at amulyaganguli@gmail.com)
