Strong governments from Stalin onwards unfailingly aim for Olympian heights: Their achievements are always the biggest, tallest, highest, fastest and so on (Stalin even claimed to have the world’s biggest department store, thumbing his communist nose at his capitalist competitors). Indians of a certain outlook are prone to making similar claims. Through the early noughties, for instance, Indian business delegations triumphantly touted the narrative of the “fastest growing democracy” at Davos and other global power talking shops. At least for a while, that claim had the virtue of being true. Now that we can no longer parade that line, we are left with such sundry claims as the world’s tallest statue, the world’s largest sanitation project and, of course, the world’s largest identification programme. Only one of those are worthy of praise as a solid achievement.
The merits and demerits of the judgment aside, surely, there are other urgent pending issues that should be consuming the energies of the highest court in the land? The Ayodhya hearings were fast-tracked even as some 60,000 cases are pending in the apex court. Now that the issue has been settled largely to majoritarian satisfaction, let’s take a closer look at other asymmetries in modern, aspiring India that deserve focused governmental attention.
Here’s one. The country has become a centre for upscale medical tourism. It’s not just the routine surgeries, Indian doctors can perform intricate medical feats that get feted in the media. The irony is that only rich foreigners and a minuscule proportion of very rich Indians can afford these services. The Ayushman Bharat medical insurance scheme has improved the access of poor and lower middle class Indians to better healthcare such as dialysis and surgical care. But access to basic healthcare in the shape of doctors, hospital beds, nursing care and even genuine medicines and so on remain depressingly low as the Economic Survey points out each year.
And a third. IITs and IIMs churn out engineers and management students that global corporations rush to snap up at eye-popping salaries. Yet each year, surveys suggest that Indian children are unable to read and do math for standards several rungs below.
None of these problems have been created by the current regime — they’ve been around for decades. But for a ruling dispensation that has focused so acutely on progress and development, surely these are more worthy of focused political attention than a temple and a mosque.