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Manmohan Singh - Man out of time

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India’s departing prime minister makes an easy punchbag, but critics are too harsh
From the print edition

AFTER a decade at 7, Race Course Road, the prime minister’s residence in Delhi, Manmohan Singh retires this month to a Lutyens bungalow nearby. It seems almost cruel that India’s mild leader, an economist by training, should attract so much personal venom. Even former supporters call him, variously, ham-handed, withdrawn, a wimp and a babu (a bureaucrat promoted beyond his abilities). Narendra Modi of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), his probable successor, mocks the legacy of the “economist prime minister” as high inflation and slowing growth.

A prolonged general election helps to explain some of the lack of grace. The seventh of nine voting phases took place across 89 constituencies on April 30th, as temperatures rose and tempers frayed. Rival politicians now routinely swap insults: “rats”, “butcher”, “Pakistani agent”, and “a devil” have all proved popular in recent days. Mr Singh keeps a characteristic silence, but is an inevitable target for the BJP.

The most spiteful critics, though, come from his own party. Congress expects a heavy defeat when national election results are broadcast on May 16th. It needs a scapegoat. The blame game began last month with a tell-all biography by a former spokesman, Sanjaya Baru. Supposedly, this is a defence of a man whom the author saw as a father figure. If so, who needs enemies? The book’s thrust is that the prime minister abdicated power to Sonia Gandhi, matriarch of the family that has the Congress party at its beck and call. That much is familiar. But it is the details that damn. The book chronicles a leader who is unassertive in cabinet, nearly powerless in hiring or firing ministers in a broad coalition and passive to a fault before colleagues’ disdain. Mr Singh never learned to communicate, giving just three full press conferences in ten years. His wife is quoted as saying that he “swallows everything, doesn’t spit anything out”.

Mr Singh is certainly responsible for some of the problems of government, and therefore for Congress’s abysmal standing. Take disgust over corruption, perhaps the most salient charge against the party. The prime minister’s personal honesty is not in doubt. But he refused to confront corrupt underlings. He could also have threatened to resign to force better behaviour from others. A colleague says the thought “never crossed his mind”.

That said, Mr Singh is not the only one to blame. Calling him only nominally in charge, and stuck with a “politically fatal combination of responsibility without power” (as the book puts it), shifts much of the fault onto Mrs Gandhi.

But perhaps a more vigorous defence of the prime minister can be made by examining the things he did achieve. One who works with him marvels at his “sheer lack of pomp”, and implies his longevity in office is proof of political skill. He stayed on because he liked it, including early-morning strolls in the huge, shady gardens of Race Course Road. True, his length in office may have bred a certain smugness—his decade in office rivals Indira Gandhi’s long rule. But there was a quiet zeal for economic reform—sometimes too quiet. He made a sustained case for the benefits of markets as few others have done—certainly not Mrs Gandhi nor, yet, Mr Modi. And as finance minister in the 1990s, he oversaw reforms that kick-started growth and changed global perceptions about India’s potential. A spokesman says that Mr Singh’s biggest regrets are wonkish ones: not passing two big tax reforms and not opening insurance to foreign investors.

His economic record is mixed-to-good, though in the current gloom—growth stuck below 5%—that assessment meets with raspberries. On his watch India’s economy more than doubled in size, as growth averaged over 8% until two years ago. The World Bank on April 29th ranked India’s economy as the world’s third-largest, replacing Japan’s (using purchasing-power parities). Elsewhere, a civil-nuclear deal with America brought benefits, notably imported uranium. And he had the grit to reduce huge subsidies on petrol and diesel, angering urban voters and politically well-connected lorry bosses.

Song sung, Singh

Left-leaning economists such as a Nobel laureate, Amartya Sen, in Delhi this week, chide him for failing to trumpet “successes for which he rarely gets credit”, listing poverty reduction, rural jobs and food schemes, polio eradication and the taming of a once-terrifying AIDS epidemic. Overseeing stable relations with Pakistan, despite severe provocations in the form of terrorist attacks, is another Singh success.

For the moment, Mr Singh’s failures are more in evidence. Too few jobs were created, with no effort made to ease labour laws. Inflation has remained painfully over 8% for more than two years—pricey onions lose votes. At the root of India’s inflation was a gaping budget deficit which the prime minister failed to tackle. That gave the financial markets jitters too, sending the currency down. When the then finance minister, Pranab Mukherjee (now president), attacked investors with retrospective taxes in his 2012 budget, the prime minister stayed quiet. Mr Singh’s record is especially poor in implementing policy, and reforming dysfunctional departments. Popular frustration at his lack of a strong hand is an overwhelming reason for the enthusiasm for Mr Modi.

In January Mr Singh predicted history would judge him more kindly, and perhaps it will. Among his fellow Sikhs that is already true. In Amritsar, his former home, Congress blocked him from campaigning, and his photo is a small afterthought on party banners. Yet ordinary voters praise him. Daljit Singh Pappu, a motorcycle repair man, says that with “intelligent” Mr Singh as prime minister “our turban was held high”. Two ink-stained workers in an ancient printers’ shop grumble about inflation, but say Mr Singh was decent and “tried his best”. As India’s first non-Hindu prime minister, he embodied a national tradition of tolerance and inclusion. His successor is likely to prove more dynamic—and more divisive.

Manmohan Singh: Man out of time | The Economist

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The lengthy article dedicates only a single line on the issue of foreign policy which is the most glaring example where there is a clear contradiction in the perception of Manmohan Singh being a mild-mannered and utterly weak leader but nevertheless being able to display extreme ruthlessness in dealing with neighbors and not just Pakistan. A case in point is Bangladesh where the Congress party pushed a brutal and autocratic Awami League to power for a second consecutive term on the back of fraudulent elections which the opposition was forced to boycott. In return for this favour to the Awami League India has been able to extract all forms of concessions from Bangladesh without having to give anything in return except to ensure the continuation of the violent AL regime. Was this the doing of Manmohan Singh or the Congress party machinery? Most likely the latter but aided by the bureaucracy, military, intelligence, business and Hindu religious elites. However, Narendra Modi if he were to become PM would probably lead from the front but will not only have to deal with the usual elite groups but also the BJP party, RSS and VHP extremists. This holds out even more dangers although the Congress and BJP share many of the same objectives in foreign policy. Read more in my book The India Doctrine which covers the early years of the Manmohan Singh administration -

https://www.academia.edu/5690262/The_India_Doctrine_1947-2007_
 
TBH, a lot of the criticsm of a personal nature are uncalled for.

But the fact is, he was a bureaucrat playing out of his league.

He let so many scams happen under his watch, and his 'honesty' defence was wearing thin.

The much talked about economic growth's foundation was laid by himself and continued by the Vajpayee regime.

He could have served as an Advisor or could have taken the Finance portfolio whilst a more charismatic figure could have taken the reins as Prime Minister.

He is part victim of things accused rightly, the other half bloated vitriol by opponents.
 
UPA-1 was okey it went bad in UPA-2. MMS did his best, chidambaram would have been a better PM I think.
 
UPA-1 was okey it went bad in UPA-2. MMS did his best, chidambaram would have been a better PM I think.

UPA-1 was 'okay' because of the massive groundwork NDA had done that paved way to progress and economic boom in 2005. However, all the work got undone because the effects of NDA's work started ebbing away as scams after scams started coming into the light.

MMS or Chidambaram, both economist and financial experts, have no capability to be a leader. As we all know, that there were more than just 'sacrifice' that Sonia did to make MMS the PM. The backdoor entry or what is called Rajya Sabha entry was used.

While both MMS and Chidambaram might be able and qualified for their jobs respectively, they became onlookers to the ruthless scams that raped the country's coffers and vaporized all the effects of what the Vajpayee government had done.
They lacked the strength of character, mind or personality to be able to say NO to Sonia or any of her cronies who got away with crores.

This effectively reduced them to the status of Puppets.

Look at the pattern of ministers that have come and gone in 10 years:

1- Shivraj Patil: MHA
2- SM Krishna: MEA
3- MMS: PMO of (Theek hai fame)
4- Pratibha Patil: President
5- AK Anthony: MOD
6- Chidambaram: MOF
7- Sibal: MOC
8- Khurshid: MEA (Sonia mata fame)
9- Anand Sharma

All puppets.

Only Pranab Mukherjee had the strong voice and he was sidelined. He tried to do his best but even then couldn't perform.
Now, what could have been Congress' trump card, was thrown into the President's role because Sonia doesn't want a strong PM candidate.

She want's a 'yes madam' person.

I am not being biased but the effects were obvious: why boom was visible between 2004 and 2007 and why not 2009 onwards? Despite the fact that global economy slowed down and recession hit, China continued chugging at the same pace while India slipped level after levels.

So the whole theory of recession is ruled out.

What made MMS lose all credibility was his lack of willpower to stop the injustice against India.

When asked a question about 'where are so and so files', who the **** understanding hindi, replies 'Theek hai'?

And which PM calls a press conference to denounce an opposition's candidate as 'disastrous'? That is fucking job of the rest of the party. NOT a functional PM who has the nation's responsibilities on his shoulders.

This shows that he was either blackmailed, threatened, coerced or simply bullied to keep his mouth shut.

For 10 years if a PM has to go by the decisions of a woman who has: zero experience, zero knowledge, zero concern, zero responsibility, zero accountability and zero character, just because she got married to the Nehru Royal Family, means a shame for the democracy that we say.

It is a blot on India as a whole; not just on MMS. Blot on India because Indians are so politically illiterate, blind and callous about the country's situation that they re-elect them without punishing them.

But well... now at least things are coming back to sanity.

he is more assertive, more methodical in his approach and has been elected directly. He is also not too offensive to opposition (BJP). He would have been problem for sonia though.

Chidambaram is anything but assertive, mate.

The only one who was assertive was Pranab Mukherjee who had some credibility.
 

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