Author: Editorial
Publication: The Indian Express
Date: February 25, 2004
URL: http://www.indianexpress.com/archive_full_story.php?content_id=41746
Introduction: The Congress should
be openly laying claim to have parented India Shining
What parties don't say is almost
as important as what they say. Today the Congress finds itself in a quandary.
There is the BJP going all out to claim credit for the current spurt in
growth, while the Congress itself continues to be needlessly coy about
having actually parented India Shining. After all, much of the good news
from the economy is a result of the NDA government extending the reform
programme initiated by previous Congress governments, especially that of
Narasimha Rao.
The Congress's reluctance to do
this may, in part, be attributed to the ideological rift within the party
on economic policies, but it could also be a reflection of the unwillingness
of the current Congress leadership to give too much credit to the Narasimha
Rao-Manmohan Singh team. There is nothing new about this streak of denial
in the Congress. When Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee decided to conduct
nuclear tests in May 1998 and declare India a nuclear weapons power, a
misguided Congress leadership criticised Vajpayee for his "hawkish" policy
rather than take credit for the role played by Prime Ministers Jawaharlal
Nehru, Indira Gandhi and Rajiv Gandhi in enabling India's nuclear status.
It's time then for the Congress
to review its position on economic reforms. Rather than claim that there
is no "feel good" feeling in the economy today, the party would be better
advised to credit itself for having pushed policies that have today enabled
India to become a stronger economy and an important global power. The point
that Congress ought to be making is that there are a few good things that
the NDA has done in its six years in power and that some of these its own
government had, in fact, initiated. This will enable a welcome consensus
on economic policies in the campaign itself. The party seems to have forgotten
that the only time the Indian economy notched upwards of 7 per cent growth
for three years in a row was when it was last in government!