HomeNewsOpinionProtests or vandalism? Don’t kill the golden goose of private enterprise

Protests or vandalism? Don’t kill the golden goose of private enterprise

It’s a simple fact that for faster growth and an improvement in incomes, we need non-farm manufacturing jobs to grow in India, including Punjab. Agriculture can support only so many people and we need to move workers to better productive sectors 

December 31, 2020 / 12:58 IST
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The farmers’ agitation continues and protestors hold the National Capital Region hostage by blocking different borders of Delhi. Our institutions face a dilemma: Should they allow the protests to continue even as it disrupts the life of 20 million people in the region or should they enforce law and order aggressively?

That India is a vibrant democracy is our biggest strength, but political opportunism at times creates a challenge for our weak institutions as they are unable to act due to various reasons. The developments in Punjab, where protestors are damaging private property, are far more worrying.

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They are an outcome of a disturbing trend in the political discourse that demonises India’s wealth creators. These wealth creators provide for ample jobs, value addition and income flows which generates tax revenues that enables the government to extend the subsidies to the farmers of Punjab. Thus, if anything, the farmers of Punjab should express gratitude to the tycoons of industry, business-owners, and taxpayers rather than disrupting businesses.

However, what has transpired is the exact opposite. The way forward for Punjab – and for the country -- is to create a prosperous society whereby even the farmer can afford a “suit & boot” but instead, we are back to the ideas of Nehruvian socialism where profit is a dirty word. Nehruvian Socialism led to India being a poor country with a near stagnant level of per-capita income and limited economic opportunities.