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T HE I NDIAN R ENAISSANCE INDIA’S RISE AFTER A THOUSAND YEARS OF DECLINE - SANJEEV SANYAL

T HE I NDIAN R ENAISSANCE INDIA’S RISE AFTER A THOUSAND YEARS OF DECLINE - SANJEEV SANYAL. Book Review by: ARCHANA YADAV. INTRODUCTION.

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T HE I NDIAN R ENAISSANCE INDIA’S RISE AFTER A THOUSAND YEARS OF DECLINE - SANJEEV SANYAL

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  1. THE INDIAN RENAISSANCE INDIA’S RISE AFTER A THOUSAND YEARS OF DECLINE-SANJEEV SANYAL Book Review by: ARCHANA YADAV

  2. INTRODUCTION • Till a thousand years ago, India was a great nation, the world’s largest economy, the lynchpin of global trade, the hub of intellectual activity and a cultural superpower. Now, after ten centuries of decline, India has an opportunity to re-emerge not just as an economy but as a civilization. • In this book Sanjeev Sanyal looks at the processes that lead to ten centuries of decline. He also examines the powerful economic and social forces that are working together to transform India beyond recognition. • With clarity, understanding and insight the author tells the story from the perspective of the new generation of Indian who have emerged from this great period of change.

  3. ABOUT THE AUTHOR- SANJEEV SANYAL Sanjeev Sanyal grew up in pre- liberalization India , drifting between Kolkata, Sikkim and Delhi. When India liberalized its economy in 1991 he was studying at Shree Ram College of Commerce, Delhi University. He went on to Oxford University as Rhodes Scholar. At the time of writing this book, he was Deutsche Bank’s Chief Economist for the region as well as Adjunct Fellow of Institute of Policy Studies at the National University of Singapore. He is passionate about environmental conservation and antique maps of India.

  4. CONTENTS • Waiting for a Thousand Years • From Independence to Freedom • The Entrepreneurial Explosion • The Great Indian Middle Class and Its Limitations • Poverty, Inequality and the Last Bastion of Control • Two Revolutions • The Importance of Institutional Reform • How India will Change • Is India’s Rise Inevitable?

  5. WAITING FOR A THOUSAND YEARS • Whenever future generations will talk about history, they will read about two important dates from 20th Century – 1947 and 1991. • In the year 1947, India gained Independence from Britain, a colonial power which dominated the country since the eighteenth century. • In the year 1991, India decided to liberalize its economy and this year is a much important as the year 1947 is because for almost half a century, the country had been held down by self- imposed constraints that had hampered economic development. The year 1991 marks the turning point when India was forced to open itself out to the world.

  6. THE ‘GOLDEN’ PAST • India was home to earliest of human Civilizations. The Indus Valley civilization flourished between 3300 and 2000 BC. It went into decline in 1800 BC. In fourth century BC the Mauryan empire rose which was built by Chanakaya ( also calledKautilya), a Professor of Political economy at Takshila University. He created the empire with his pupil Chandragupta Maurya in order to check the advance of Macedonian Greeks led by Alexander. • The Mauryan empire suggests very prosperous country with an efficiently run administration which can be deduced from Kautilya’s Arthashastra, a treatise on public administration and political economy, that was possibly meant as a manual for running of the newly established empire.

  7. THE ‘GOLDEN’ PAST (contd.) • According to Angus Maddison’s estimates, India accounted for 33 per cent of world’s GDP in AD 1 which was three times the share of western Europe and was much larger than Roman Empire as a whole (21.5 per cent). China’s share was 26 per cent of world GDP. India was world’s economic superpower at that time. • The cultural impact of this era on South- east Asia is clearly visible in everyday life, from personal names to the immense popularity of epic Ramayana. The national languages of both Malaysia and Indonesia is “Bahasa”which is full of words derived from Sanskrit. To this day, the coronation of the king of Thailand and other royal ceremonies are carried by Hindu Brahmin priests.

  8. THE ‘GOLDEN’ PAST (contd.) • It is estimated that as a result of centuries of trade surpluses, Indians accumulated a large store of gold and even today some 25- 30 per cent of all the Gold mined is held by Indian households in the form of jewellery even though the country itself has very few gold mines of its own. • Indian mathematicians, metallurgists, astronomers and physicians were arguably among the best in the world and were held in high regard. The treatise in surgery by Shushruta (circa fifth century BC) describes a hundred and twenty surgical instruments and three hundred procedures. Plastic surgery was a routine procedure. • Meanwhile Indian mathematician made extraordinary innovations, including the concept of zero, that is the basis of the numerical system which we use today. During the Gupta empire (third to fifth century AD), the astronomer- mathematician Aryabhatta was able to work out that the earth is spherical and that it rotates on its axis. He even made remarkably accurate estimates of the circumference of earth and of the ratio ‘Pi’. All this, a thousand years before of Copernicus and Galileo.

  9. THE ‘GOLDEN’ PAST (contd.) • India also produced remarkable work in art, literature and philosophy. Hindu- Buddhist kingdoms from South- east Asia to Central Asia looked to India for intellectual and cultural leadership. Pilgrims and students came by both land and sea routes to study in Indian Universities like Takshila, Nalanda and Ujjaini and to visit the holy sites. In common with the famous universities of today, the prestige of these ancient seats of learning attracted International endowments. • All in all, India had an extraordinary economic, intellectual and cultural influence throughout the ancient world. • In a way, India’s place in the ancient world was similar to that which is occupied by United states today. • The picture of ancient India is of a society that encouraged innovation and risk- taking. It was open to foreign trade, ideas, international students and political refugees.

  10. THE DECLINE • India appear to have maintained its position as a pre- eminent economic and cultural world power till around the eleventh century. After this, its relative position steadily declined. It is striking that all the India’s great contributions to world was devised prior to the this date – Yoga, Algebra, the concept of Zero, Chess, Plastic surgery, metallurgy, Hinduism, Buddhism and so on. • Between AD 1000 and 1820, India’s share in world GDP fell from 29 per cent to 16 per cent. In other words, India’s position was in decline well before the colonial period. The Industrial revolution and Colonial occupation only sped up the process. As the Industrial revolution spread through Europe and North America, India fell even further behind. When India gained Independence in 1947 its share in world GDP was barely 4 per cent and it further fell to 3 per cent by the time it liberalized it economy in 1991.

  11. THE DECLINE (contnd.) • Over the last millennium, India went from being a economic and cultural superpower to becoming virtually irrelevant. This is why 1991 is potentially such an important turning point – it could mark the rehearsal of a trend that has lasted a thousand years.

  12. Why the Indian Civilization go in Decline ? • When we look at the reasons for the sharp decline after the eleventh century, it is tempting to simply blame it on repeated foreign invasion – by Turks, Mongols and Afghans from Central Asia and later by European colonial powers. • Between AD 1000 and 1025, Mahmud-e-Ghazni made seventeen raids into Northern India. Then following Muhammad Ghori’s victory in the second battle of Tarain in 1192, waves of Invaders from Central Asia subjugated the sub-continent. During the Muslim invasion of India, temples, universities and cities were laid waste and hundreds of thousands, perhaps millions, of people were massacred. • The impact on India’s social fabric was harsh and it led Nobel laureate V.S. Naipaul to call India a ‘wounded civilization’.

  13. Why the Indian Civilization go in Decline ?(contd.) • However this alone does not quite explain the reason for decline as India was no stranger to foreign invasion. Over the centuries many invaded India which caused disruptions but did not cause a long- term decline in the countries fortunes. In case of the post- eleventh century invasions too, India successfully absorbed many elements of Islamic culture. • The main factor that lead to decline is the growing technological ignorance after the eleventh century. • It is very difficult to precisely tell what caused this fossilization but a key factor appears to be the spirit of entrepreneurship and the openness to new ideas and enquiry.

  14. Why the Indian Civilization go in Decline ?(contd.) • The greater part of the country’s export earnings were being wasted as a consequence of the lack of a very basic technology. This same closed attitude showed through in social mores. • The caste system emerged during this time and the injunction against crossing the seas embodies an astonishing reversal of attitudes for a civilization that had once been at the centre of world’s most important maritime trade system.

  15. The Importance of a Culture of Openness • The important point is that the cause of backwardness was not so much a problem of intellectual capability but of cultural openness to ideas and risk- taking. • It appears that civilizations, from time to time, commit suicide by closing themselves to innovation, entrepreneurship and the outside world. The fate of Sanskrit language provides a good guide to how Indian civilization become fossilized.

  16. THE STORY OF SANSKRIT • Language is the reflection of a civilization. If there is any language which embodied ancient India, it is Sanskrit. Today we tend to think Sanskrit as a static language that is used mainly for formal religious ceremonies. However in ancient times it was an active and vibrant language that was used for activities ranging from poetry and drama to science, philosophy, law and mathematics. • It was so successful because over the centuries it underwent enormous change in order to accommodate evolving intellectual and social requirements. First, it must be recognized that Sanskrit was part of mutually intellectual dialects. Secondly, it was constantly evolving and adding vocabulary.

  17. THE STORY OF SANSKRIT (contd.) • The periodic standardization was very important in the development in Sanskrit. • Unfortunately, over the centuries, the guardians of the language became increasingly preoccupied with the purity of form and vocabulary. More and more grammars were written and the rules became an end in themselves. The language stopped absorbing new words and eventually Sanskrit was killed by over- regulation. • The fate of Sanskrit mirrors that of medieval India. All societies need rules to function effectively. Unfortunately, the intellectual and political leaders of medieval India became increasingly obsessed with regulating everything. • In the end, India closed off its mind and regulated itself into centuries of decline.

  18. The Nineteenth-century Reawakening • The Portuguese were the first Europeans to establish trading ports in India. They were followed by many other Europeans – the Dutch, the French, the Danish and the British. This changed after the British East India company acquired Bengal after the Battle of Plassey in 1757. Over the next several decades the East India Company came to directly or indirectly control most of the sub- continent. • The British may have conquered India for their own purposes but they did have a positive long- term impact on India’s ‘wounded civilization’ by introducing India to modern institutions, science and the English language. • Perhaps the most important early reformers were Raja Ram Mohan Roy and Ishwar Chandra Vidyasagar. By this time, the glories of ancient India were mostly forgotten. The great works of Aryabhatta, Charaka and Vedic philosophers were not entirely lost but they were learned by rote, without thought to their meaning.

  19. The Nineteenth-century Reawakening (contd.) • Ram Mohan Roy was fluent in many languages but he realised that true renaissance would only be possible by the country being provided with means to access the thoughts emanating from west. Therefore, he fought for the introduction of English language in Indian schools and for teaching of ‘modern’ subjects like Human Anatomy and Mathematics. • The importance of English can’t be understated as it played a important role in not just opening the country to new ideas but in the rediscovery of its own past. For the first time since the decline of Sanskrit, educated Indians had a common language capable of conveying new ideas. These ninetieth century reformers were all very conscious of the need of wider civilizational reawakening and over the next century their ideas of cultural awakening lead the Independence movement.

  20. MIND WITHOUT FEAR–by Rabindranath Tagore Where the mind is without fear and the head is held high; Where Knowledge is free, Where the world has not been broken up into fragments by narrow domestic walls; Where words come out from the Depth of truth; Where tireless striving stretches its arms towards perfection; Where the clear stream of reason has not lost its way into the dreary desert sand of dead habit; Where the mind is led forward by thee into ever- widening thought and action- Into that heaven of Freedom, my Father, let my Country Awake. (Published in ‘Gitanjali’ in 1913 & translated from Bengali)

  21. FROM INDEPENDENCE TO FREEDOM • When India became independent in 1947, there were many competing visions of how India should develop but as Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru came to dominate Congress party in fifties, it was he who forged the path that India eventually took. • Perhaps the most visible manifestation of the Nehruvian vision was an inward- looking economic arrangement that used a complex system of bureaucratic controls in order to allocate domestic resources and to minimize contact with the rest of the world. The private sector was tolerated but strictly held in check by industrial licenses, while the public sector became the centre piece of National Policy.

  22. Mahalanobis and his Mechanical Toy • The system was brainchild of one of Nehru’s closest advisors – the statistician Prashanta Chandra Mahalanobis – who devised a ‘scientific’ input- output model that aimed to speed up the country’s development through State Intervention. • It was a static mathematical model in which the country took raw materials and spat out finished goods. The whole approach was based on a mechanical view of the world that simply assumed away the role of private enterprise. and their was no place in this model for the messy, organic process of risk taking and innovation that drives economic progress. • Mahalanobis’s ‘scientific’ model had the same impact on the economy as the learned punditry of the medieval grammarian had on Sanskrit.

  23. The Price of Geo- Politics • During that era, India was not just obsessively inward – looking but also responded to growing sign of failure in the sixties by intensifying government control. • Unfortunately a sequence of political events within and without pushed India further to the left. Internal clashes between Congress party in 1969 lead to split and Indira Gandhi was forced to seek support of Left parties to remain in Power. Later in 1975 Prime Minister Indira Gandhi declared Emergency and assumed dictatorial powers and suspended the democratic process. As a result of Mass protests fresh elections were held in 1977 and Congress party was defeated and replaced by Janta Party. • The Janta party unfortunately did not represent a different economic vision and their ire was directed personally at Mrs. Gandhi rather than the underlying framework. This is why India’s economic failures can’t be blamed entirely on the Nehru Gandhi dynasty and almost entire political/ intellectual elite was in favour of State control.

  24. The Eighties and the Promise of Reform • The Janta Party collapsed after two years and Congress party led by Indira Gandhi came back to power even as the economy was hit by major shocks – a jump in international energy prices combined with severe drought. Faced with these shocks the new government attempted to easy supply side restrictions. From now, their were some tentative attempt to improve the efficiency of the public sector and even to introduce new technologies. The period saw the advent of colour television and colour transmission. Then in October 1984, Indira Gandhi was assassinated by her bodyguards. Rajiv Gandhi became Prime Minister and in elections held after few months he won by majority of votes. • Meanwhile GDP growth too accelerated in eighties to 5.4 % from the Nehru- Mahalanobis level of 3.5 % witnessed during the previous three decades.

  25. The Collapse • What eventually caused the system to collapse was not change of heart but a major economic crisis. Faced with uncertainty the expatriate Indians began to withdraw their money from special non- resident deposit schemes. After the formation of unstable non- Congress governments lead by V.P Singh and then Chandra Shekhar, in 1991 National elections were announced in May after collapse of government. • Then in the midst of election campaign, Congress party’s leader Rajiv Gandhi was assassinated by the attack of a suicide bomber. • Later on after the elections, the Congress party led by Narasimha Rao came in power who decided to make Dr. Manmohan Singh his Finance Minister. With Rao’s backing, Dr. Singh dismantled some of the worst features of the ancient regime by abolishing Industrial licensing, rationalising tax rates, freeing private sector from the tyranny of MRTP Act and the complex import control was torn down. • We should give credit to Prime Minister Rao and Dr. Singh for having the courage to disband the very system that had built them.

  26. THE ENTREPRENEURIAL EXPLOSION • After the reform undertaken by Narasimha Rao government, the most important change has been the explosion of entrepreneurial activity. • The first fifteen years of liberalization can be divided into 3 five year periods: 1992 to 1997, 1998 to 2002 and finally 2003 to 2008. • While there are some common threads that pass through all three, each time period has distinct characteristics that had a bearing on the particular economic trajectory taken by the Indian economy.

  27. The Indian Growth Model • India is the latest of a series of Asian countries that have been transformed by economic development in the last half century. However India’s experience is very different from the usual east- Asian pattern. • The east- Asian model consists of an export oriented strategy that uses heavy investment in manufacturing capacity and infrastructure to drive development and the sectors that grow fastest are those which have abundant supplies of cheap labour. • The Indian growth experience of initial fifteen years involve rapid internationalization but this is where similarity ends. India didn't use its abundant and cheap labour force to scale up low – skill activities. We can see growth in sectors like software, airlines, media and finance by the use of even more technology and skill- intensive then before . • The structure of Indian economy changed drastically as a result of the services boom.

  28. THE GREAT INDIAN MIDDLE CLASS AND ITS LIMITATION ORIGINS The emergence of a middle- class is one of the characteristics of a successful economic development. The Indian middle class had its origins in the nineteenth century. The middle class grew gradually in nineteenth century. For the most part it was concentrated in the main cities of Bombay, Calcutta and Madras. Leading members of this class came together in 1885 to form the Indian National Congress. This marks the formal beginning of a movement that would eventually led in Independence from British rule.

  29. Independence and After • Independence opened up a whole new view of opportunities for Indian middle class. Senior positions in the civil service, judiciary and the military that had been occupied by British now became available. • Importantly English was retained a the medium of Instruction. Meanwhile, an elaborate system of written examinations was created to induct students into these new technical institutions and then into the Public sector/ Civil service. The new generation of middle class was very different from the pre- Independence middle class.

  30. POVERTY, INEQUALITY AND THE LAST BASTION OF CONTROL • There are many people that still argue that liberalization and globalization has not improved poverty and that things may had become worse as the employment opportunities declined since 1991. In other words, they argue that it had only benefited the educated middle class.

  31. Inequality and Unemployability • The skilled middle- class will grow naturally over – time as the economy expands but this process will require ever growing numbers to develop the capabilities to take advantage of the opportunities. In other words, the first requirement to sustaining the current growth model is expansion in tertiary education. Higher education is key to social and economic mobility. • It is true that socialist era India ignored primary education at the expense of tertiary education. This led to a highly educated middle class amidst a mass of illiterates.

  32. The Problem with Higher Education • The country’s higher education institutions have an enrolment of 10.5 million students and turn out 2.5 million each year. • As compared to countries like China the enrolment rate in Universities is very less. Moreover, their quality problem do exist as even some of the colleges affiliated to elite universities have limited facilities, truant lectures and irregular classes. The second quality related problem is that of employability of students. The third problem is the inability of universities to retain graduates for higher degrees and for research.

  33. The Last Bastion of State Control • The most striking feature of the current tertiary education bottleneck is the similarities of the scarcities that plagued the most goods and services in the pre- liberalization era. • During the socialist years, government licensing created queues and waitlists for everything ranging from telephones to cars and its should not be surprising that the same scarcity and quality problem today plaque the university system because it is one of the last remnants of the government license- regime. • Part of solution must be to increase financing for the sector but the government finances is in no position to increase support on a sustained basis.

  34. TWO REVOLUTIONS Fortunately India may be about to benefit from two major long- term shift – one in its population dynamics and one in primary education. • The Demographic Revolution • The Primary Education Revolution

  35. THE IMPORTANCE OF INSTITUTIONAL REFORM • The broad legal infrastructure is necessary for both a formal set of rules for social/ economic interaction as well as a means for enforcement. However this is even more relevant in post liberalization India where we expect a market based economic arrangement to bring prosperity to the country specially to the poorest section of society. • A good legal system can be an important partner in furthering the reform process in itself as it is virtually impossible for the executive and legislative arms of the state to keep up with all the rules governing a vast and rapidly changing country like India. • Many thing needs to be done in order to improve our legal infrastructure such as many outdated laws should be scrapped or replaced and efforts should be made to simplify legal provisions in areas where there is multiplicity of rules and regulations. The process of enforcement and dispute resolution also needs radical changes.

  36. HOW INDIA WILL CHANGE • India is just entering the Hyper Growth phase. Here is the prospect of sustaining high GDP growth rate over decade and of eliminating extreme poverty and want. The process is likely to transform India dramatically over the next few decades. • The change will be felt at all level – through urbanization, evolving social- cultural value and growing international influence. INEVITABLE URBANIZATION An important implication of the new growth paradigm is urbanization as historical evidence shows that economic development always led to growth of cities. Urbanization is the sociological and spatial counterpart to economic processes that shift workers from subsistence agriculture to more productive sector. The most interesting impact of urbanization will be the growth of urban middle class.

  37. Hard versus Soft Power • The rise of economic power and more broadly civilization is not surprisingly associated with growing International power. Often this International stature is backed by ‘hard military power’ which is evident by looking at the examples of countries like Britain, Germany , Japan etc. where since the Industrial revolution each rising economic power also saw rise in military might. • India was the world’s economic superpower for much of recorded history. Yet with very few exception India never exercised hard power outside of the subcontinent. Instead, India’s influence was in the form of ‘Soft Power’ – trade, culture and philosophy. • From Buddhist temples in Japan to Ramayana performances in Java, evidence of this Soft power is visible even a thousand years after India went into decline. Moreover, the influence of ancient India is not only just limited to old cultural traditions as is evident from the importance of ‘Zero’ in everyday life.

  38. IS INDIA’S RISE INEVITABLE ? • Although this book highlights the economic aspect of India’s reawakening, it is important that we keep in mind that an economic Renaissance is always part of a wider civilizational revival. • India is now entering this phase however there is nothing inevitable about India’s rise. Demographic change and growing literacy are but enabling factors. In the end, what matters is that India has the confidence to take advantage of the opportunity. This requires a mental attitude which requires to be actively promoted.

  39. The Decline of Kolkata : A Cautionary Tale • At the beginning of the twentieth century, Calcutta was the capital of British Empire in India. It was one of the most advanced and cosmopolitan cities of Asia. The late nineteenth and early twentieth century were the high noon of Bengali culture led by stalwart like Bankim Chandra, Sarat Chandra and Rabindranath Tagore. Calcutta was the intellectual centre for both social reform and struggle for Independence from British India. • Even after the shift of official capital to New Delhi in 1911 and the loss of part of its hinterland to East Pakistan in 1947, the city retained its position as the most important economic and cultural centre in the country. • Yet today’s Kolkata rarely merits mention in the current economic boom. In the late sixties it ceded its position as India’s financial Capital to Mumbai and never made an attempt to regain its position.

  40. The Decline of Kolkata : A Cautionary Tale (contd.) • From the late sixties the Industrial cluster in Kolkata was paralyzed by Industrial action. Companies started to leave one by one including giants like IBM. However the decline was not just economic one but by this time Calcutta closed itself off, culturally and intellectually. • What happened to Kolkata in last four decades is similar to what happened to India in eleventh century. During that time the banning of English and of artistic innovation instead of leading to a great Renaissance of Bengali culture and literature to the contrary Bengal has never produced thinkers of the caliber of Rabindranath Tagore, Subhash Bose, Bankim Chandra, Satyajeet Ray, Vivekananda and Raja Ram Mohan Roy. • The discouragement of private enterprises does not create a public sector haven instead companies like S.B.I. shifted their headquarters to Mumbai in order to be near to their private sector peers.

  41. Aasto Ma Sadgamaya, Tamaso Ma Jyotirgamaya, Mrtyor Ma Amritamgamaya From Falsehood unto Truth, From Darkness unto Light, From Death unto Immortality - From the Brihdaranyaka Upanishad circa 9th century BC

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