ECONOMIC REBIRTH OF INDIA
By S. V. RAMAMURTY
For
a thousand years from the beginning of the Christian era, India was
creative both in mind and in matter. The source of the creative faculty is
spirit which expresses itself in matter, mind and life which is their compound.
When we speak of the rebirth of India
today, it is not the matter of India
or the mind of India that is
reborn but the spirit of India.
The highest expression of spirit in life is man. Indian civilization was rich
not only in culture of mind and spirit but also in material development. It was
the material riches of India,
cloth, silk, precious metals and stones and spices, that
attracted European traders to India.
The value of the culture of India
was recognized later by Europe. The spirit of India was active when India
sent Buddhist missionaries to Central Asia and the Far East, and sent colonisers to South-East Asia where they established
kingdoms in Indo-China, Siam and Burma,
and Malaya, Java and Sumatra. These kingdoms
were established and maintained in a peaceful and righteous manner so that even
today the memories of Indian rule a thousand years ago are treasured with
goodwill and maintained in something of the ways of old established Indian
culture. It is said in Siam
that after say, 1000 A. D., Indians withdrew their movement into South-East Asia as they had to defend themselves against
Moslem incursions.
The
British introduced a culture which had affinities with India, and
corrected its defects. India
is the only Aryan outpost in Asia. The mother
language of India,
Sanskrit, comes of the same root-stock as most of the European languages. Words
are the outer expressions of inner ideas.
There
was one main direction in which Britain
furnished a corrective to India.
This was in regard to the value and significance of matter. The Indian idea of
spirit was that it was “the inner base of all that exists,” in the words of
Prime Minister Nehru. Spirit, therefore, may
express itself in matter, mind or man. But India tended to regard matter as maya, a level of expression which was
inferior to mind and spirit. This was opposed to the original vision of India. Spirit
is not matter, but spirit is also matter. The law of logic called the law of
exclusion of the middle, viz., A is either B or not B, is true only of finite
existence, but not of its base which is not less real. The rich material
civilization of India
fell into neglect, and men had to be content with the social organization that
had built up but had discarded the rich material life which was replaced by an
asceticism which was sometimes an excuse for laziness and neglect.
When
India
became free, it heralded a new creative era for its spirit. With freedom won
under the great leadership of Gandhiji, and maintained by that of Pandit Nehru,
a new era of social and economic development, of material, mental and vital
growth, has come into being. The development of science, economics and politics
in free India has, while it has much in common with the development of the
West, also aspects which bid fair to be different from and helpful to the West.
Matter is real even as mind and spirit. But its reality has to be in unison
with the reality of mind and spirit. The West is passing through the age of
Physics where the primary reality is matter. The development of science has led
the world to the atomic age, the age of the many atoms between which there is
clash and violence. The genius of India is one of synthesis no less
than analysis. It is the function of India to build on the atomic age
with all its rich flowering of material atoms a cosmic age in which the many
atoms, and the energy contained in them, are rebuilt into a unity which is the
vehicle not of war but of peace. The task of India
today is how to build the body of India while maintaining and
developing its mind and spirit.
The
source of energy is spirit. This may express itself either through material
atoms or the organizing mind or the unifying spirit. Mind is an affirmation of
spirit, and is a way of energy-manifestation which is nearer to the genius of
spirit. If man would save his soul, he should recognize the reality of mind at
the same time as of matter. The West has done humanity’s task of developing
matter. India
has to be abreast of the West in material development, and has further to
develop mind and spirit.
Pandit
Nehru has shown an awareness of the need for a reborn India to
develop in all the three directions of matter, mind and spirit. He is no less
true to the demands of the scientific age than the scientists of Europe. He maintains the vision of Vedanta that spirit is
“the inner base of all that exists.” But equally he is the author of the
planning and development of India,
which has received its impetus from him and which is maintained by him more
than by any other leader of India.
The economic rebirth of India
is the rebirth of the spirit of India
at the material level. How is spirit reborn in matter?
Spirit
is swayambhu. Being reborn of itself,
it draws together mind and matter, perhaps by a form of induction. The spirit
of India
is reborn in her leaders–like Gandhiji and Nehruji.
The potential energy of India
in the shape of mind as well as matter is then made mobile in a further layer
of leaders. The kinetic mind and matter of these leaders then draws out the
material energy as well as the ideas of the mass of men in the shape of
concrete and hard work. There are thus the self-birth of the spirit of India in the
top leaders of men, the birth of spirit at the intellectual level in the next
group of leaders, and the birth of spirit at the material level in the mass of
men. Everywhere, it is spirit that is born at the level of man, mind and
matter. A nation is a pyramid of matter, mind and man. For the rebirth of a
nation, we need first one or two top leaders, then a layer of lieutenant
leaders, and then a layer of workers. How does this work in India?
India
has produced a few supreme leaders in the last half a century who have
developed a fresh power of spirit. It has next produced men who can apply the
potential power created in the top leaders to the planning of development. This
is next worked out in material and other development by men who are in tune
with the new power and work hard to apply it. The base on which they work is
the material resources of India–its
land and water, its minerals, plants and animals, besides
the developed human resources in mind and spirit.
A
programme for the development of these resources has been designed by the
National Planning Commission headed by statesmen and administrators. The programme
for the Central Government is drawn up by Central Ministries in respect of
Irrigation and Power, Railways, Steel and Iron, Commerce and Industry,
Agriculture, Education and Health. The programme for the States is divided into
six principal heads as follows:
i.
Agriculture and allied subjects including
agricultural production, irrigation, land development, animal husbandry,
forests, marketing, co-operation and fisheries;
ii.
Community development and national
extension service;
iii.
Irrigation and power
iv.
Industry and mining–large, medium, and
small technological industry, village and cottage industries and mineral
development;
v.
Transport and communications;
vi.
Social services including education,
health, housing, backward classes, social welfare and labour.
The plan for the States is prepared by State
Governments in consultation with villagers and local leaders and officials. It
is examined and approved by the Planning Commission first for a 5 year period
and then split up into annual plans discussed and approved each year. The
following figures give the amount provided in the First 5 Year Plan and the
Second 5 Year Plan for the whole Union and for
the States alone.
(in crores)
I
Plan II
Plan
Total provision Amount spent Total provision Amount anticipated to be spent
Union 2378 2013 4800 4500
States only 988 898 2241 2048
The percentage
provision under the main heads is given below:
I Plan II Plan
% %
i.
Agriculture and allied-subjects 11.3
7.7
ii. Community
development and national
extension service 3.8 4.1
iii. Irrigation and
power 28.1
19.0
iv. Industry and
mining 7.6 18.5
v. Transport and
communications 23.6
28.9
vi.
Social services 22.l.
17.7
vii. Miscellaneous 3.0 2.1
100.0
100.0
It
will be noticed that in the I Plan, the expenditure on agriculture, rural
development and irrigation and power comes to 43 per cent, while in the
II Plan it comes to 31 per cent. Industry with transport and
communications rises from 31 per cent to 47 per cent. The core of
the II Plan is industrial. It is, however, being felt that the foundation of
the Plan must be agricultural and increasing attention is being turned
to agricultural production.
A
visit to the “India 1958”
exhibition in Delhi
is instructive in showing the marked improvements in production, construction
and techniques achieved by the Plans. The large scale irrigation and power
schemes are well presented in the Irrigation and Power pavilion. The projects
of Bhakra-Nangal, Damodar Valley, Hirakud,
Nagarjunasagar,
Chambal, Tapti, Kundah, Sheravati and Rihand have come into being as a result of the Planning. Tungabhadra reservoirs are pre-plan
projects continued under the Plans. Projects on the Godavary–Ramapadasagar, Ichampalli and Pochampadu–are to
come under future plans. The increased
production of steel and iron has become a major part of the II plan. The
raising of the production of cereals per acre
is a matter for special concern and attention. The average production of paddy per
acre in India is 1200 lbs, in China 2400 lbs, in Japan 3700 lbs, in
Indonesia 2000 lbs, in U. S. A. 3000 lbs and U. S. S. R. 2000 lbs. Even
a 50 per cent increase in paddy production per acre in India will revolutionize the economy of India and raise
its political status among the nations. The average yield of wheat is 640 lbs
in India, 770 lbs in China and 1870 lbs in Japan. Special attention is being
paid to the use of local and chemical fertilisers,
provision of improved seed and techniques of cultivation besides the provision
of more irrigation. The irrigated area in India has risen from 51 million
acres at the beginning of the I Plan to 62 million acres at the end and is
expected to rise to 78 million acres by the end of the II plan Power rises from
1.7 million K. Ws to 2.7 million and 5.3 million in the same periods. There is
no reason except it be the lack of a will to do things that stands in the way
of India attaining a 50 per cent increase in cereal production in the
course of a few years. Special mention may also be made of a project of large
scale land utilization in an area in Central India
to which I have given the name of Dandakaranya as it
is associated with the epic wanderings of Rama, Sita and Lakshmana.
The first phase of the project deals with an area of 30,000 square miles which
will rise later to 80,000 square miles. It will provide living space as well as
increased wealth.
Industry
is being developed at all levels–major, medium, small and cottage. India has now a
list of some thirty main industries under production including steel, aluminium, machine tools, cement, sugar, textiles, paper,
engines, automobiles, ships, aeroplanes, tractors, fertilisers, chemicals, petroleum refinery, electrical
transformers, heavy electrical goods, bicycles and sewing machines. Some twenty
years ago when I visited the Planning Commission in Russia,
and was asked to mention the principal industries in India, I could only mention cotton,
jute, steel, leather and glass and could hardly add to them. The position is
far different today. The per capita income in India is expected to rise from Rs. 246 to Rs. 321 a year by the
end of the II Plan.
The
development of rural life through the Community Project and National Extension
Service movement is one of the most hopeful features of development in India. To a
superficial observer, it looks as if the results are hardly striking. But
having visited these projects in many States, I am confident that the spirit of
the people in villages is being remoulded and that
the human resources of the village are being harnessed along with the natural
resources to produce an integrated development of villages. The Planning
Commission, under the leadership of the experienced administrator who is its
Deputy Chairman, has been stressing the importance of every family in a village
having a plan of development working through a Panchayat,
co-operative society and school and paying pecial
attention to the needs of women and children. When the movement gathers speed,
it will pay accelerated dividends by developing mind and man in the village
along with its matter.
One
feature of the “India
1958” exhibition that is particularly striking is the excellent research work
done in the last few years in the various national science laboratories.
Research has developed the use of various chemical, mineral, fuel and leather
resources by finding substitutes for crores worth of
imports through articles made from local materials. The development of science
gives a necessary stimulus to economic development. Dr. A. N. Whitehead has
pointed out that the discovery of the differential calculus in Europe helped the industrial revolution there by
providing an instrument for detecting technological potentialities otherwise
unnoticed. In India,
the inherited and trained intelligence of many centuries may well help the
progress of science not only along directions pursued by the West but also in
new directions relevant for mind and spirit. While the West concentrates on the
energy contained in matter, India
may develop newer resources of energy–energy too which may help to construct
life and not help to destroy it.
When
I visited U. S. A.
for the first time in 1922, it was nothing like as prosperous as it is now.
After the First World War, U. S. A.
and Japan
which did not participate in it were well-to-do when the other nations which
fought in it were suffering. It is in the last thirty years that U. S. A. made enormous strides in economic
development beginning with the large scale production of electrical power in Tennesse
Valley. I belive that if India
maintains its present tempo of development, it will, in 15 to 20 years more,
attain a level of living which is as satisfying relatively to her notions of a
good life as U. S. A.
has attained relatively to her objectives in life. The
economic rebirth of India
in the present generation bids fair to achieve a new level of living as rich as
any in her history.
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