HomeNewsOpinionHow a ‘Bharat-centric’ model can lead to sustainable, equitable development

How a ‘Bharat-centric’ model can lead to sustainable, equitable development

Sanghnomics: The excessive exploitation of natural resources to fuel the material economic growth has led to severe climate change creating a potential threat to the existence of the human race on the earth. It is clear that the world needs to look at more alternative economic models

May 20, 2024 / 20:57 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
development
Efforts to inculcate the spirit of ‘Swadeshi and self-reliance’ in the society would give the right impetus to job creation

Sanghnomics is a weekly column that tracks down and demystifies the economic world view of Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) and organisations inspired by its ideology.

The Communist China and the Capitalist Western world, both have been suffering from major cyclical fluctuations with their economic models looking increasingly vulnerable. During the last 100 years, these two models have largely been tried by the world and the results are staring at us. We have a less-equitable world. The excessive exploitation of natural resources to fuel the material economic growth started by the West and followed by the rest has led to severe climate change creating a potential threat to the existence of the human race on the earth. These anomalies in the prevalent economic model have been starker in the post-Covid world.  It is clear that the world needs to look at more alternative economic models.

Story continues below Advertisement

India can provide a solution to the rest of the model through a Bharat-centric model. This is the belief of many leading lights of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) since the 1960s. The RSS volunteers working in the field of economics, trade union, micro finance, rural development, environment protection have been discussing various aspects of this new model and trying to evolve it.

RSS stalwart and founder of organisations like Swadeshi Jagaran Manch (SJM), Bharatiya Mazdoor Sangh (BMS) and Bharatiya Kisan Sangh (BKS) Dattopant Thengadi called this model ‘Third Way”. Deendayal Upadhyay, another RSS stalwart who later chalked out the ideological framework for Bharatiya Jana Sangh also talked about a Bharat-centric approach towards economic issues in a series of lectures delivered in 1964 that spelled out the framework of ‘Integral Humanism’. This was adopted, first by BJS and then by its successor Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) as its official philosophy.