People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol.
XXIX
No. 52 December 25, 2005 |
This Paper was presented by the CPI(M) general secretary, Prakash Karat, at the International Conference on Kerala Studies held at Thiruvananthapuram between December 9 and 11, 2005.
THE
Conference on Kerala’s development is being held 11 years after the
International Congress on Kerala studies in 1994. That Congress was a seminal
one in charting out a course for Kerala’s development. The Congress was held
at a time when the policies of liberalisation had already begun and were having
an impact on the social gains made in Kerala. The Congress had concluded that
while these social gains had to be defended, it is also necessary to develop the
productive forces in agriculture and industry in the state so that the material
basis for all round development is assured.
After
more than a decade, it can be seen that the worry about the erosion of
Kerala’s unique social model was correct.
Kerala still has the lowest infant mortality rate in the country. The life
expectancy is much higher than the national average. There is near universal
literacy, particularly amongst women and the population growth rate is the
lowest in the country. The Communist movement in Kerala made a major
contribution to overall social progress. By initiating land reforms, stress on
universal primary education and health care, provision of minimum wages and
hutment land for agricultural workers, development of a wide network of public
distribution system for food and social security measures, the Left-led
governments beginning with the first Communist Ministry in 1957, laid the basis
for this remarkable progress.
NEO-LIBERALISM
UNDERMINES GAINS OF PUBLIC ACTION
Internationally,
neo-liberalism has ravaged the gains of public action. This has occurred all
over the world, but particularly in countries that have historically been
less-developed and in countries of the former socialist bloc. The assault has
taken place in spheres of social and economic life and on institutions that are
of particular relevance to the people of Kerala; the attack has been, for
instance:
on
access to universal, public school education and on the quality of mass
education;
on
public access to higher education;
on
systems of the public distribution of food;
on
public systems of employment creation;
on
systems of public health and mass access to curative medicine;
on
the prices of agricultural commodities produced in the less-developed
countries, particularly those traded internationally;
on
public investment in physical and social infrastructure; and
on
public spending on protective social security schemes and welfare schemes in
general.
The
social advances in Kerala, a product of decades of popular movements and social
reforms are being undermined. Public education and health systems are in crisis.
The public distribution system, which was the best in the country is in decline.
The agricultural and industrial sectors have been badly affected. The agrarian
crisis, has become manifest since 2000 as a direct outcome of the liberalisation
in trade. Both public and private investment in industry have stagnated. The
traditional industries are in crisis. The growth in the services sector has not
been able to create enough jobs, thereby aggravating the unemployment situation.
The unemployment situation for women has worsened. All this has been accompanied
by a recrudescence of caste mobilisation and religious sectarianism.
DEFENDING
THE GAINS
The
Conference “On an agenda for Kerala’s development” is being held to
grapple with this situation and come out with a clear-cut, alternative path of
development. How to protect the social gains achieved while stepping up material
production to achieve a higher level of development. A realistic developmental
path has to be chalked out given the fact that at the national level,
neo-liberal policies prevail and imperialist globalisation has a direct impact
on Kerala. It is the understanding of the CPI(M) that Left-led state governments
must be able to pursue certain alternative policies despite the severe
constraints of the Central government’s policies, keeping in mind its
commitments to the people.
While
defending the gains, specific shape and content to the strategy for the future
must be given. The crises in the spheres of employment and material production
are among the most pressing economic problems in Kerala at present; the
situation in this regard is unsustainable, and it is no surprise that in his
address to the Congress on Kerala Studies in 1994 and in writings and speeches
until his death, EMS Namboodiripad emphasised again and again the importance of
transforming the conditions of production in Kerala’s economy.
Kerala's
development experience and Kerala's development future are matters of great
importance for the Left and Communist movements, in India and internationally.
Working within the constraints imposed by the Constitution of India and by often
hostile central governments, the Left in Kerala has mobilised the people for
kinds of social change unprecedented in the rest of the country. The tasks of
increasing employment and production (and transforming production conditions)
have to be principal components of the next phase of Kerala's development, and
that this transformation must build on, consolidate, and extend the achievements
of the past, and not undermine (or liquidate) the gains of a long history of
public action.
Such
a new phase of economic development has special resources on which to draw.
Kerala has extraordinary natural resources, a basic land reform, an educated,
skilled and politically conscious work-force, and unique achievements in the
spheres of health and education. It has a strong Left political movement that is
sensitive to issues of development and growth, that has set itself the task of
building social alliances for economic development and socio-political change,
and is active in the movement to create new institutions of local government in
the State.
BROAD
STRATEGY
Without
attempting a detailed blueprint for production and employment in Kerala, some
general points can be made. First, market forces will not ensure
that productive investment appears spontaneously; transformation in the spheres
of production and employment requires public intervention. It requires the
conscious policy attention of governments and intervention by political parties
and mass organisations. Secondly, it is clear, and there is
general scholarly consensus, that state-supported infrastructural investment is
crucial for industrial and agricultural growth in Kerala. Thirdly,
the potential for the expansion of skilled employment in Kerala is
extraordinary. Unlike the rest of India, where schemes for mass employment are
basically earth-work projects that involve unskilled work or work that requires
low skills, Kerala is a region where even schemes for mass employment can
draw on a labour force, rural and urban, whose members are literate, with high
levels of political and social consciousness. Fourthly, as is well
known, Kerala's agriculture is characterised by the existence of a series of
agricultural micro-environments suited to different kinds of mixed farming, and
by a substantial proportion of perennial crops in total agricultural output.
Thus, any plan for rural economic growth in Kerala must consider the very
promising opportunities for growth based on the mixed cultivation of diverse
crops that require skilled crop management, with support in respect of
agricultural information, extension, and marketing, from public institutions and
that involve new forms of production organisation. Fifthly,
industry is an area that needs fresh thinking, and it is not my intention to
second-guess the experts in this field. Nevertheless, past experience indicates
that future industrial development in Kerala must take into account specific
features of the State’s natural resource base, its location in the south-west
of the country, and the environmental needs of a thickly-vegetated region with a
high population-to-land ratio.
In
the sphere of industry, while protecting and restructuring the public sector
enterprises in the state, serious efforts must be made to attract fresh
investment.
Much of this will be in the private sector. The IT sector, biotechnology and
agro-based processing industries must be given priority. Foreign capital in high
technology areas can be solicited. The revival of traditional industries like
coir and cashew is important given the large numbers employed in these sectors.
Small scale industries will continue to form a significant part of industry and
they require adequate State support. Infrastructure development and the power
sector in particular will need public investment.
The
public sector requires to be defended and strengthened in the face of the
right-wing assault against its existence.
However, the public sector cannot be strengthened without a process of
restructuring. The public sector enterprises in the key and core sectors have to
be retained. Apart from the profitable public sector units, those enterprises in
public services which serve a social need have to be retained. Many of the
public sector enterprises, which are loss-making, can be revived through
restructuring and through joint sector ventures with the private sector. Totally
unviable public sector units may have to be closed down but this should be done
only after an appropriate rehabilitation and compensation package for workers is
put in place.
While
the substantial historic gains of women in Kerala cannot be underestimated,
there are still important spheres in which women’s equality has not been
achieved, and in which discrimination persists. Simply put, socio-political
and economic advance among women in recent years is not commensurate with the
historic achievements of women in the spheres of education and health. Work
participation rates among women are low, rates of unemployment are very high,
and gender differentials in the labour market persist across caste, income, and
education categories. A substantial section of the women’s labour force is
concentrated in traditional industries that are currently stagnant or in
decline. The representation of women is very low in elected bodies and in trade
union executives. Economic planning and social measures must specifically
address these problems and ensure greater participation of women in the
production processes and employment.
AGGRESSIVE
COMMUNALISM
Kerala
has felt the impact of the rise of identity politics and communalism all over
the country. In recent years, the secular space has been invaded by new forms of
aggressive communalism. The Hindutva forces have been trying to communalise
politics by pitching against the minorities. Another distortion of the tradition
of public action and civic consciousness is the effort of caste groups to widen
their intervention and challenge the Left in the political and social spheres.
There has been a regression from the earlier posture of claiming to represent a
socially oppressed group, as in the case of the SNDP, to advocating a Hindu
consolidation to take on the power of the minority communities.
Such
divisive and sectarian agendas mask the rampant drive by the elites in these
communities to aggrandize public resources and privatise public services such as
education and health. Social control over private professional and higher
education institutions is essential to check such unhealthy trends. Democratic
politics in Kerala must assert that caste and communal organisations will not be
allowed to carve up public resources for private use and counter their forays
into politics.
CPI(M)
& THE LEFT IN
KERALA
The
CPI(M) and the Left have been most consistent force advocating decentralisation
of powers in the country. The evolution of powers from the Centre to the states
and the states down to the panchayati raj institutions has not only been
advocated by the Left but also put into practice within the existing
constitutional limitations in states like West Bengal, Kerala and Tripura. The
people’s planning campaign between 1996 and 2001 was an important initiative
in democratic decentralisation. Unfortunately, the UDF government, which took
over in 2001, has scuttled some of the vital aspects of the decentralised
planning process. It is essential that popular participation in planning and
development be taken forward. For this, a critical evaluation of the people’s
planning campaign and suggestions for overcoming the weaknesses should be on the
agenda of the conference.
The Left is hopefully poised to undertake another stint in government in Kerala. Protect the past gains and chalk out a viable future path should be the slogan. The Conference “On an agenda for Kerala’s development” involving hundreds of political and social activists, social scientists and intellectuals should be able to make a major contribution in delineating this path forward.
(Emphasis
added and sub headings provided-Ed)