Thus,
Report received
Put on the Ministry’s website
A presentation made to the PM
Recommendations circulated to regulators/agencies for comments/views
Action completed!! Not that the project has been implemented. Not even that ‘the process’ by which it will be implemented has been settled. Just that the ‘comments/views’ on the process by which it is to be implemented have been invited.’ But ‘Action Completed’, it is!
And the sequence is typical. Given the concern of this Government for the poor, it is de rigueur to talk about the unorganized sector, and that is what Chidambram did in his Budget for 2005/06. ‘The unorganized or informal sector accounts for 92 per cent of the employment and absorbs the bulk of the annual accretion to the labour force,’ he said. The ‘possible solution’ is PURA or Provision of Urban Amenities in Rural Areas. A Commission has proposed action along these lines. And then the typical commitment, much praised recently for cleverness: ‘Once the proposals are firmed up, Government will take up the creation of a few growth poles, as pilot projects, in 2005-06.’
President Abdul Kalam was still in office. He used to propagate this idea of Professor PV Indiresen. Hence, a few ‘pilot projects’, but those also in the indefinite future – when the proposals have been firmed up. Kalam gone, PURA gone. No mention in subsequent budgets.
But commitment to the poor continues. The poor are at the heart of the Government’s thinking, the Prime Minister and the Finance Minister have proclaimed times without number; to the poor, what matters most is food; for delivering food to them, the Public Distribution System is the key; and for making that system effective, the key is to improve the working of the Fair Price Shops.
... contd.