FEATURE
Manmohan Singh And
ColonialismPrabhat
Patnaik
W HY should
one concern oneself with what Prime Minister Manmohan Singh had to say at Oxford on the
occasion of his receiving an honorary D Litt? Not just because he is the Prime Minister.
True, what the Prime Minister of India has to say even on such a quasi-academic occasion
is not without significance. But then Prime Ministers speeches are often drafted by
overworked speech-writers who are liable to make the most appalling howlers; so one does
not get worked up over speeches made on such occasions. The reason one has to take
Manmohan Singhs speech seriously is because, apart from being the Prime Minister, he
also happens to be the leading neo-liberal intellectual in the country. His speech is not
an example of a faux pas committed by some speech-writer working against a deadline. It is
an indication of neo-liberal thinking on the subject, and since the thinker is also the
Prime Minister, it is an indication of the shape of policy which Manmohan Singh and others
like him would like this country to follow.
POSSIBLE ABUSE OF MARX
But what, it may be asked, is wrong with his speech? He talked after all of the
deleterious economic impact of colonial rule in India. And as regards his suggestion that
modern universities, a professional civil service, research laboratories, rule of
law and a free press, all of which we still value and cherish,
were the result of Indias meeting the dominant empire of the day, hadnt
Karl Marx himself talked of the dual impact, including a regenerating one, of
British rule in India? Indeed Manmohan Singh himself, or his staff, may well cite Karl
Marx in his defence in the coming days if the furore over his speech begins to snowball
(as the editorial in The Hindu on July 13 has correctly anticipated). One may not even be
surprised if Marx increasingly gets dragged, over the coming months and years, into the
defence of the neo-liberal argument as a whole, since many in the neo-liberal bandwagon,
not just here but in Washington DC as well, had begun their careers as Marxists of some
description. It is imperative, right at the outset therefore, to rescue Marx from such
possible abuse.
India did not meet the dominant empire of the day (as Manmohan Singhs
quaint phraseology suggests). India was conquered and colonised, her economy plundered,
and her people as a whole, irrespective of class status, converted for the first time into
inferior beings in their own country. Now, whenever a materially superior mode of
production subjugates an inferior one, it simultaneously brings to the latter advanced
methods, technology and practices. It does so not out of kindness or compassion or any
humane feelings of sharing but as a fact of historical inevitability, independent of its
own specific will and consciousness in the matter. The Spanish conquistadores decimated a
large segment of the Amerindian population when they entered the New World, but at the
same time brought to the victims the use of gunpowder and firearms, not because they
specifically willed to do so but as a matter of historical compulsion. When Marx was
talking about the regeneration of India having begun under British rule, he
was referring first of all to the fact that the material premises for Indias advance
were being laid down, though the actual advance on the basis of these premises could be
realised only by the Indian people themselves after they have thrown off the colonial
yoke; and secondly, he was emphasising the fact that British rule was the unconscious
agent of historical change, even while it was dragging individuals and people
through blood and dirt, through misery and degradation.
FOR RAPACIOUS COLONIAL INTERESTS
To call this role of British rule in being an unconscious tool of history, even as it
drags people through blood and dirt an act of good governance, a
benign arrangement whose virtues even the subject people of India had apparently
recognised and articulated during their freedom struggle, is not just an objectionable
statement, but represents a basic confusion between the historical and the moral. Good
governance, to the understanding of any ordinary mortal (matters are different for
neo-liberals, as we shall see later), presupposes an intention on the part of the rulers
to be good, which they carry out in practice. But every act of the British
that was historically progressive in India, whether it is the laying down of the railways,
or the founding of universities or the creation of a politically unified India under Pax
Britannica, was meant to serve rapacious colonial interests.
The bureaucracy was meant to provide the steel frame of a colonial
state whose primary objective was to siphon off surplus from the Indian economy in the
form of commodities that Britain could make use of. The universities were meant to provide
the training ground for recruitment into this bureaucracy, and more generally into the
ranks of an intelligentsia subservient to colonialism and acquiescing in colonial
exploitation. The railways were meant to bind India firmly into the colonial division of
labour. (Even Ian Macpherson, a Cambridge economic historian of no radical inclinations
argued many years ago that the main purpose behind the building of the railways was the
extraction of raw materials needed by Britain.) And Marx who was so hopeful about the role
of the railways in the regeneration of India, repeatedly also referred to the
railways as being useless for the Indian people.
This paradox, of something vital for the regeneration of a people
being at the same time useless for them, illustrates the distinction between
the historical and the moral. The fact that railways would help
the regeneration of the Indian people was a historical inevitability; at the same time it
was also a fact that the railways were built by the British for their own selfish
interests and not for those of the Indian people for whom they were useless
when they were built. Not to see this distinction, to telescope the concept of historically
progressive with the concept of morally desirable is the first basic
flaw in Manmohan Singhs argument.
GLOSSING OVER BLOOD AND DIRT
The second basic flaw consists in glossing over the blood and dirt mentioned
by Marx. Precisely because colonialism was not all about doing good to the Indian
people, precisely because even its historically progressive consequences were the
unintended consequences of a fundamentally rapacious regime which dragged people through
blood and dirt, which unleashed famines killing millions (and congratulated
its functionaries that tax collections in the famine stricken districts had been kept up
to the mark), which unleashed de-industrialisation and unemployment on a massive scale,
and whose dispensation squeezed the peasantry to a point where the agrarian economy
witnessed unprecedented retrogression; precisely for these reasons, to emphasise
essentially its historically progressive consequences (quite apart from the
fact that these consequences themselves are mistakenly interpreted as following from a
benign will) is utterly illegitimate and callous.
To be sure, Manmohan Singh referred to Angus Madisons estimates showing a
sharp decline in Indias share of world income over the period of colonial rule, but
that estimate per se says nothing about exploitation: it is silent for instance on the
question of whether India merely grew more slowly than the world, or whether India
retrogressed when the rest of the world grew.
Of course, Manmohan Singh was speaking on an occasion when a degree of diplomacy
had to be exercised and hence a litany of complaints against colonialism did not have to
be provided. But diplomacy cannot excuse glossing over exploitation; and if mention of the
latter had to be eschewed then there was no need for giving colonialism certificates for
good governance either. Indeed Karl Marxs writings on British
colonialism, imbued as they are with a deep sense of history, are nonetheless full of a
deep sympathy for the suffering of the Indian people, which one fails, alas, to find in
Manmohan Singhs speech.
NEO-LIBERAL THINKING
All this, as mentioned in the beginning however, is not an oversight or a slip of
judgement. It is a part of neo-liberal thinking in which the concept of governance
is detached from exploitation. A ruthlessly exploitative regime, according to this
thinking, can still earn kudos for good governance. So, when Manmohan Singh
praises the colonial regime for good governance, he is actually being true to
neo-liberal thought. We have so far seen why Manmohan Singhs arguments should not be
defended on any allegedly Marxian grounds. Let us now look at his argument as a sui
generis representation of neo-liberal thought.
There are two basic premises of neo-liberal thought. First, no matter what the
degree of inequality in society (which is a euphemism for exploitation), if the economy
grows rapidly enough then the benefits of this growth are bound to trickle down
to the lowest level, from which it follows that the focus of attention should be on growth
and not inequality (read: exploitation). Second, the way to promote growth is by creating
the appropriate conditions for enterprise to flourish. And these include
appropriate infrastructure, a set of well-defined bourgeois property rights, a legal
system to enforce these rights (rule of law), political unity and stability,
freedom and ease of movement of resources and capital, an efficient bureaucracy providing
the right setting, and above all free markets. All this is captured under the rubric of
good governance. It is a part of the logic of this thinking that good
governance is detached from the fact of exploitation. Even a regime under which
there is rapacious exploitation can be legitimately congratulated for providing good
governance and the case would be made that with such good governance the
edge of exploitation would get blunted anyway.
Now, there can be little doubt that the colonial regime built railways,
introduced posts and telegraph, created a bourgeois legal system, created private property
in land and other assets, and introduced free markets to a point where no country in the
world can claim to have witnessed over any period in its history as much of a regime of
free trade and free markets as colonial India prior to the first world war (matters
changed a little in the inter-war years under the triple impact of the Great Depression,
the rising National Movement, and the declining position of Britain in the world economy).
It did so for its own purposes, to further the exploitation of the Indian people. But to a
neo-liberal it must represent good governance.
Indeed, Manmohan Singhs argument in a curious way supports what the Left
has been saying all these years. We say that neo-liberalism is a means of recolonisation
of the economy, of opening up our country to intensified exploitation by imperialism and
its local collaborators under a new international regime, which is reminiscent of the old
colonial order. Manmohan Singh vicariously agrees with this: we oppose neo-liberalism
because it recreates the horrors of colonialism; he denies (implicitly) the horrors of
colonialism because he supports neo-liberalism. His Oxford speech should serve to convince
all who are sceptical that the struggle against neo-liberalism is but a continuation of
our struggle for freedom. |