Amba Salelkar

For all our children


Amba Salelkar

Capitol Hill to Raisina Hill

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There is an old adage in America that "politics stops at the water's edge." The phrase, coined by US Senator Arthur Vandenberg in 1945, today speaks to the informal norm that senior representatives of the government shall refrain from criticising the opposition when outside the country. Yet the phrase also carries another, unintended connotation, revealing a strangely pervasive temptation in Washington to treat domestic politics as a uniquely American phenomenon.

In Washington, from K-Street to the White House to the think tanks along Massachusetts Avenue, Americans instinctively see politics in everything. Political discourse is mesmerised by the politics of tax reform, engaging Iran, eliminating sugary sodas in schools and even of presidential birth certificates. Given this reality, it is puzzling that Americans often lose sight of the domestic political equations that define the quotidian policy debates in other democracies. This lack of awareness — combined with a sort of amnesia about our own foibles — is exemplified by a kind of "boom-and-bust" cycle in the Washington discourse on India. One day, the US celebrates India as the linchpin to America's "pivot" to Asia, but the next it questions whether India's dysfunctional politics make it an imprudent partner. India's recent economic downturn has once again given rise to such grumblings. The truth, however, is that Washington and New Delhi have more in common than is usually acknowledged: their politics are proving markedly unsuccessful at effectively managing day-to-day governance. Take, for example, the current debates taking place on either side of the Atlantic on economic reform.

From nearly 7,500 miles away, Americans are watching with increasing heartburn as the Indian growth miracle seems to be collapsing. An inhospitable external environment compounded by self-inflicted policy missteps and poor governance have done the unthinkable: dragged India's GDP growth rate below five percent. In the wake of this economic crisis, the government has belatedly struck a reformist tone. It has achieved significant progress in the past six months, but the recent budget presentation indicates just how much further it must travel. Even sympathetic voices admit that many of the finance minister's projections are the result of smoke and mirrors — optimistic growth estimates have swept many problems under the rug in the run-up to the national elections. Politically, there is still a tension between the reformist wing of the Congress party and the intellectual heirs to its socialist past. A forceful articulation of a liberal-minded Indian growth narrative is up for the taking, but has few takers. To compound matters, the UPA government is attempting an image makeover that conflates urban middle class voters and the aam aadmi. The principal opposition, on the other hand, has been engaging in a series of opportunistic flip-flops on economic policy. From policies governing natural resource extraction to FDI in retail, the BJP seems to find itself in the awkward position of having supported many UPA policies before they were against them. Many regional parties view the budget as an exercise in asking Delhi, "what have you done for me lately?" In Washington, Americans fail to understand why India's political class can't slash populist welfare expenditures, ram through further liberalisation of FDI or revamp its labyrinthine system of taxation.

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