In a recent piece in the Indian Express, Atanu Dey argues that keeping fuel prices low is effectively delivering subsidy to the rich, by subsidising the cost of car transport. In response to this, he says there should be an annual fuel surcharge imposed per-car. This way, he says, fuel price hikes can be prevented for buses, scooters and trucks, which are common man’s vehicles, and burden only the rich.
Month: June 2008
Fuel price hike
So petrol prices have gone up by a whopping 10%, and LPG by an even more whopping 16%. It’s quite ironical that the government, which in the name of the aam aadmi had rolled back a number of reforms has had to do this in the final year of its reign. They say that the prices have been moved up by an amount more than necessary, so as to leave room for a Yashwant Sinha-esque rollback. Nevertheless, for the price of a government-controlled commodity, the increase is significant.
Hotel Dwaraka
In its earlier sit-down avatar on Bull Temple Road, it was known for doling out copious quantities of chutney in buckets. No sooner had you emptied half the chutney on your plate, a waiter would materialize and pour a bucket of the stuff into your plate. The main item on the menu here was the “khali dosa” (not to be confused with “plain dosa”). No sambar no palya no saagu. Just enormous quantities of chutney.
On introducing democracy
Ravikiran Rao argues that the reasons most Indian parties are afraid to embrace inner party democracy is that the people who are in charge are afraid that if they introduce democracy and lose the first election, their opponent might destroy the democracy and just keep the power with himself.
Isn’t this the case everywhere? Be it Indian political parties or African countries or even the local club. I mean, if you want to introduce democracy (by which process you are giving away something), you should be convinced that the opponent plays by the rules. However, in most cases, it is tough to find an opponent who is guaranteed to play by the rules. However, if democracy is introduced and works successfully for a few years without anyone trying to misuse it , in that case, it will stay for good.
One implication is that you try to introduce democracy when you know that you will win the first round. Given that you want to introduce democracy means that you aren’t THAT power-hungry and are willing to give away a bit in order to secure long-term systemic gains. Which means that you are likely to play by the rules in your term as power. And once you can ensure that, democracy is likely to get embedded in the system, after which even if you lose one, you know that your opponent won’t be able to do much to blindly hang on to power.
When countries become self-governing after an independence-struggle, the party that is in charge will usually be the one that has led the struggle. And it is usually confident that it can win the first couple of rounds. Hence, most countries that became independent in the 40s to 60s started off as being democracies (that many of their systems have broken down is another story) – it was useful to gain brownie points with the US, UK , etc. and there wasn’t much threat to capture of power.
However, when you have got power through other means – say by some kind of an inorganic process, then there is no guarantee that you will win the first round, or second round, or ever. Hence, you have some countries that came out of the Eastern Bloc and Central Asian countries that have never made an attempt at democracy. The people in power know that once they try to bring in democracy, their power is effectively over.
On a similar note, countries that have moved away from democracy (Zimbabwe immediately springs to mind) have no incentive to bring it back – again the first round victory is not guaranteed. Yes – there have been efforts such as those in Pakistan to reintroduce democracy, but it’s being done under some kind of special circumstances – such as Musharraf’s party not being allowed to contest, etc. Also it has been done under considerable supervision of the US, so self-interests of Musharraf can’t be so blatant.