Guest guest Posted July 21, 2003 Report Share Posted July 21, 2003 Five years of Vajpayee rule "...Finance Minister Jaswant Singh announced that India would not be seeking Official Development Assistance (ODA) any longer; even more importantly, India, in the first week of March pre-paid $ 3 billion in external loans! Such an act had never been even dreamt of before!" By M.V. Kamath Vajpayee, who has become a father figure, respected by one and all had dreamt dreams but in his case the dreams are becoming a reality. In five years, Vajpayee has attained what the Congress could not attain in fifty. Moral: The NDA Government is here to stay. LET's face up to it. The BJP-led NDA Government of over twenty coalition partners has done the unbelievable: it has survived full five years and is well set to return to power for another five years when the time comes. Never before has a non-Congress Government consisting of diverse political elements survived so long—and so well. There have been, of course, hiccups. Mamata Bannerjee turned out to be a major headache. Tehelka gave a strong handle to the Opposition to hit hard not just at George Fernandes but at the very heart of the NDA Government. Pakistan's General Musharraf was seen to take India for a ride. And then nature seemed to work against the Delhi Administration. India had the worst drought in three decades; a super-earthquake hit Gujarat hard; elsewhere the country had to face a terrific cyclone. The war over Kargil starkly showed India's unreadiness to face Pakistani perfidy. But surprise, surprise: Delhi weathered them all. And Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee stands unchallenged not only as BJP leader but head of a coalition that knows its place. India has weathered crisis after crisis only to emerge victorious. For years and years, indeed ever since 1956 India had been in the thrall of a foreign exchange crisis. Delhi was almost living on borrowed money and was at the mercy of the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund. Conditions had become so terrible that at one point India was forced even to pawn its gold. That was a decade ago. But consider the situation today: With a foreign exchange reserve of over $75 billion, continuing to grow by a billion dollars every month, India can look any creditor in its face. Indeed, just the other day, Finance Minister Jaswant Singh announced that India would not be seeking Official Development Assistance (ODA) any longer; even more importantly, India, in the first week of March pre- paid $ 3 billion in external loans! Such an act had never been even dreamt of before! In a recent address to a seminar held in Delhi, Disinvestment Minister Arun Shourie was to point this and some other equally potent facts to a wide-eyed audience. Among the points he made are the following: * In spite of recessionary conditions in the world, India's exports have grown by about 15 per cent in 2002-2003. * In spite of the worst drought experienced in three decades prices hardly rose by more than four to five per cent. When the country experienced a similar situation during a Congress regime, prices had shot up by 17 per cent. * Twenty years ago, agriculture in India accounted for nearly 40 per cent of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) and Services for 35 per cent. India was predominantly an agricultural country, at the mercy of the monsoon. Presently agriculture accounts for a quarter and services for nearly a half! Once agricultural commodities accounted also for 40 per cent of our exports. Presently they account for 17 per cent. It is a fantastic turnaround. * Foodgrain stocks have reached an unbelievable 60 million tons which can take care of any major calamity. The proportion of people in dire poverty have gone down from 36 per cent to 27 per cent. People have more purchasing power, considering the number of cars that are being manufactured every year—and sold! Neither the Indira Gandhi Government, nor that of Rajiv Gandhi, nor, for that matter any earlier non-Congress Government had dared to order the testing of nuclear weaponry. Within weeks of coming to power Vajpayee Government ordered just that; power after Western power applied sanctions against India but nothing daunted India went about as if it cared two hoots. Not long after, the sanctions were to be lifted. Delhi had made its point that it was not a power to be slighted. India's self-respect received a major boost. Whether the major nuclear powers wished to admit India to their private club, or not, Delhi's eligibility was no more in question. On the Service front India hardly has any rivals. Arun Shourie has quoted an expert as saying that for a range of products capital costs in India are just 30 to 35 per cent of what they are in technically advanced Europe. As for Information Technology, India has no peers. Bangalore has become India's Silicon Valley and Hyderabad is fast aspiring to become another. India's exports run into crores and crores of rupees and there is no let up. India's software exports are to the tune of $ 6.2 billion in comparison to China's 0.85 billion and they keep growing. Then there were many sceptics who said that no free and fair elections can ever be held in Jammu and Kashmir; but under international monitoring and sharp scrutiny, free and fair elections were held to the acute discomfort of terrorists and Pakistan, raising India's standing on this issue to a high level. India's credentials on Jammu and Kashmir are now accepted without challenge. Peace has been established in Mizoram and Delhi is continuing to hold peace talks with Naga rebels who seem to have come to the conclusion that fighting any longer is futile. In international affairs India has maintained a wholesome balance in its relationships with various power centres. When Musharraf went calling on the Russian President, Putin was quick to phone Vajpayee that the Pakistani leader's visit should not be misunderstood and that nothing can disturb Moscow's old relationship with Delhi. In his time US President Bill Clinton paid a three-day visit to Delhi and restricted his call on Islamabad to that many hours. And though for tactical reasons the current administration in Washington seems close to Musharraf, India continues to be held in high regard. And there is increasing talk of India being chosen as another Permanent Member of the UN Security Council. In the midst of all these happenings Atal Behari Vajpayee stands supreme, a figure unchallenged by anyone both within his own party and without. He has become a father figure, respected by one and all (including Jayalalitha) who, for all one knows, will continue to be the Prime Minister for as long as he wants to be. And should, perchance, the Supreme Court decides in favour of the VHP on the Ayodhya issue, then no party in the country would stand a chance to dislodge him. The NDA's achievements, especially in building roads linking the four corners of the country will further strengthen NDA's popularity. Never had such an effort even been visualised since the time of Ashoka. Vajpayee had dreamt dreams but in his case the dreams are becoming a reality. In five years Vajpayee has attained what the Congress could not attain in fifty. Moral: The NDA Government is here to stay. The India Today-Marg-Org poll taken some weeks before merely reflected ground reality. The organiser: April 13, 2003 Vol. LIV No. 39 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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