|
Economic Highlights
Rich, Bad & Ugly
TIME TO EMPOWER WORKERS
By Shivaji Sarkar
New Delhi, December 03, 2009
“Richest 40 add 65 per cent to their wealth over the year.
But the poor continue to pay inflation tax”, screams a
newspaper headline. The number of billionaires in the country
almost doubled to 52 in a year which saw the world going
through the worst recession in 80 years.
That is the paradox. The world-over the rich are becoming
richer and the poor are being marginalized. While the rich go
on adding to their wealth, the poor are losing their capacity
to buy the bare necessities as food prices rise by almost 15
per cent (14.55 per cent as per in a year and 55 per cent
since March). Inflation does not impact the rich, but it
further impoverishes the poor. Larger the number of poor means
less they have the capacity to bargain or earn in terms of
wages. The loss of the poor is the direct benefit of the rich.
They get cheap labour and can further add to their wealth.
The stark reality is that the 40 rich Indians are all
industrialists. They have replaced the maharajas and nizams,
who were counted among the world’s richest. Maharajas were
thriving on the toil of the poor, it is often said, and the 40
rich are industrious people. This is half truth if not
untruth. While these and many others of their tribe thrive,
those working in their establishments are suffering wage cuts
and job losses. This only testifies what Karl Marx had said:
that the rich could become rich exploiting the poor. Are we
going back to re-enact Water Babies of the 17th and 18th
centuries?
For an Indian, it is a dilemma – whether to celebrate the
achievements of the rich or mourn over the five- lakh job
losses as per official statistics during the period the
country’s 40 rich add almost three-fourth more to their
wealth. This is also the period when many poor workers, not
just debt-ridden farmers, committed suicide after having lost
their jobs even in the national capital – Delhi. There is a
stark similarity with the US – the trend is alike as disparity
grows there. The Lehman Brothers and AIG scandals have robbed
millions of people in America of their lifetime savings and
pension payments. Officially now 12.5 per cent or 37 million
people in the US live below the poverty line (though the line
at $ 21203 a year family income may be higher by Indian
standards).
The situation in the US is worsening. “My guess is poverty is
going to go up from around 12.5 per cent now by about half
percentage point to 13 per cent,” said Rebecca Blank, a senior
fellow at the Brookings Institution in Washington. “The main
driving factor is the rising unemployment.”
During the recent visit of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, US
President Barack Obama expressed the hope, “Indian investments
would create jobs in the US”. Has the wheel taken a full
circle or is it another ruse of the rich to deprive the poor
nations of the opportunity to invest their wealth in their own
countries? The situation in Europe is also on similar patterns
but there the rich are continuing to grow richer.
Sadly, the condition in India is not seemingly improving. The
policy makers have to be cautious. Tata and Reliance are
investing in loss-making units in degenerating European
economies raising huge debt. It serves one purpose. The
workers in the West agree to work at poor wages while the
condition at home also becomes conducive for keeping the wages
low at the threat of throwing people out of jobs. In the
process they add more personal wealth.
This is how the rich are making huge money while the common
man is getting impoverished or, at best, holding on to his low
income. Increase in inequality appears to be inevitable. The
workers of England were impoverished in the 19th century to
release investment in factories of Manchester. This is
seemingly being repeated in the 21st century. The wolf of
recession has helped the rich further reduce the cost on
wages. So while the common man is denied of even the
subsistence wages, large companies shamelessly make huge
profits.
It pays to keep the people poor. The poorest grumble but do
not protest. They are more concerned about their hunger and
have little time to look at the way they are being deprived.
Surely, this cannot be the model for development, either for
India or the world. The Arjun Sengupta report says that 77 per
cent of Indians subsist on Rs 20 a day. Thus, we have the
Maoists who are not fighting for the cause of the poor but the
ruse has helped them find support among them and disturb peace
in a wide stretch of the country.
Disparity cannot be the model for development. If the rich
want to grow richer the system would not prevent that. But
what was true in the 19th century – maintaining low wages -
cannot be panacea in the21st century. Though the industry may
be making hey-day due to the weakening of the labour movements
across the world, it should be viewed as a temporary relief.
Indeed, some workers have started uniting and raising their
voice once again demanding “floor wages” – euphemism for just
and equitable wages and sharing of profits with the workers.
It is at a nascent stage.
If their voice is not heard, it would not be very long when
the world may witness resurgence of trade unionism. Industries
need to learn that low wages prevent the workers from
consuming goods. It results in more production and low demand.
In the end it ultimately cuts on their earnings as some
manufacturers are now experiencing.
Clearly, it is time to consider empowering the workers
particularly in this country, which is at the threshold of
taking over the global leadership. The model of rising
inequality with alleviation of poverty is unlikely to work. If
the corporate and their owners want to grow they would have to
do so by paying just and adequate wages. ‘Hire and fire’
cannot be the solution to jack up profits. Being rich is not
bad. But they would also have to come up with a model so that
all those around them – the workers – also become rich to
sustain them. Less the disparity, higher would not only be the
growth but also the “index of happiness”. Would the Indian
rich take the lead? ---INFA
(Copyright India News & Feature Alliance)
E-Mail :
newseditor@sarkaritel.com
|