Commentary/Amberish K Diwanji
Indian nationhood is not so well defined or established so as to make us complacent
This article is pessimistic and predicting doom
of sorts. A projection has been made about the population growth
of India, which is, no doubt, scary. The projection did the usual
round of declaring that India will overtake China by 2040.
However, what is worrisome is the playoff between
democracy and demography. The population projection pointed out
that the south Indian states have stabilised their populations (Kerala
and Tamil Nadu) or are on the verge of doing so (Karnataka and Andhra
Pradesh) in five years of so.
Maharashtra, often considered the
border between north and south India, will stablise its population
in 10 years's time (which includes the massive immigrants that this
state receives, especially in Bombay city). This takes care of
the Deccan states, which are among India's most industrialised
and urbanised. Even though Kerala is hardly industrialised, its
cent per cent literacy puts it on top in the human development
index.
The other sea-bound states, Bengal, Gujarat, Orissa,
have also made more progress regarding the control of population,
which, though less than the Deccan states, is better than that
of north India. The north India that I refer to does not include Delhi,
Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Jammu and Kashmir, and Punjab.
The trouble starts with the so-called heartland,
or cowbelt states of India. States like Bihar, Madhya Pradesh,
Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh. The most backward, and with fast rising
populations. Rajasthan has at present comparatively a low population, but
this vast state with many desert areas cannot support a much larger
population, even though there are hopes that the Indira Gandhi
canal might turn it into a green state. The population in these
states will not stabilise till well into the middle of the next
century, Uttar Pradesh by as late as 2100!
Yet figures in absolute terms tell only half the
story. The other half is the relative figure, in terms of percentages
and proportions. This especially becomes important because in
a democracy, where sheer numbers translate into votes, and the
ruling elite. That this factor is important is made clear by the
constitutional amendment of 1971, which has kept the number of
seats in Parliament constant at the 1971 census.
This was done
to ensure that those states that actually succeed in limiting
their population growth do not lose out by way of proportional
representation in the Lok Sabha and the Rajya Sabha (which, questionably,
is also based on population of the state). The amendment is due
to be over at the turn of the century, just four years away, and
this is likely to snowball into a major controversy.
It took about fortyfive years before a south Indian
could become the prime minister of India, when P V Narasimha Rao
sat in India's top seat of power. And this was possible only
because the votes from north India were extremely divided, giving
south Indian Congress members of Parliament enough numbers to
ensure their brethren as prime minister. But one wonders how long this will last.
It is, of course, possible that the day will come when Indians
will see themselves primarily as Indians and vote accordingly,
but unrealistic, given human nature and the sheer disparities
among Indians. Because, votes are often among emotional lines
rather than purely rational lines.
You vote for someone because
you think he will best serve your interests first and someone
you can relate to. And this means voting along ethnic and regional
lines. Of course, this does not apply to everyone at all times;
there are moments when certain persons capture the imagination
of the entire country.
What is scary is that the delicate proportion will
be shortly disturbed when the delimitation is taken up again for
India. When delimitation is taken up again, it will be easy to
realise that the proportion of north Indian seats (mainly UP and
Bihar) will increase more than those of south/Deccan India, or
of any other region of India.
The tragedy is that the very hard
effort and success of the southern states is going to harm them
vis-a-vis the north, who have failed to bring down their large
populations (though they have certainly curbed the growth rate).
An increase in the northern proportion will only increase their
domination in Parliament.
And it is not just who becomes the prime minister,
but all those who make the laws: the honourable members of Parliament.
Not only is north India overpopulated, it is also most backward.
The north never had a period of reformation or renaissance as
did the south, Bengal, and Maharashtra. The population is largely
illiterate, feudal, and quite casteist and communal. It is their
attitudes that will dominate the process of making laws.
A complete domination of north Indians whose numbers
give them a decisive advantage in passing the laws can fuel alienation
of the people, who might often feel that they are cut off from
the decision-making powers that be. An urbanised and increasingly
industrialised southern half might become resentful, especially
if it feels that its interests are being neglected.
As it is,
from the Centre's exchequer, southern states have often complained
of neglect. The Finance Commission, which decides the states's
share from the exchequer, has placed greater emphasis on population
as a basis for dividing the goods, giving north India an advantage.
This is not to scare but just to warn. Indian nationhood
is not so well defined or established so as to make us complacent.
Our legislators will have to find a way out when the time for
the next delimitation comes up; but if the simple ratio of one
seat per million (as used in 1971) is followed, there might be
trouble ahead. Success in family planning should be rewarded,
not penalised by decreasing the states' proportion.
Besides population is the quality of people. With
population under control, the Deccan states will now be able to
concentrate on improving the quality of their people. In this
regard, mention must be made of Kerala which has achieved nearly 100
per cent literacy. In a decade or two, the other Deccan states,
along with Gujarat and Bengal, will follow suit. Thus, these
states will produce more of India's most educated and qualified
professionals, people eager to join the ranks of people in well-off nations.
On the other hand, despite pockets of excellence, north-central
India is teeming with illiterate people, just hungry mouths to
be fed, people who migrate out seeking salvation. Mainly rural,
these are the people who demand government subsidies and a strong
role for the state.
So now, besides the historical differences of language
and ethnicity, we face the risk of disparities in population
and economy. Quantity with north, giving them overwhelming control
of Parliament; quality with the south and sea-bound states, giving
them economic power. Unless the differences can be narrowed,
it is a cause for worry.
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