|
Bihar is on the right track, for a change |
|
It
has never been so good for Bihar. A Rs 3,600 crore railway zone at
Hajipur, Rs 7,200 crore super thermal stations of the NTPC in Barh
about 70 kilometres from Patna, a Rs 800 crore railway bridge over
the Ganga in the state capital, several other railway projects involving
another Rs 1,000 crore, a Rs 600 crore ordnance factory near Rajgir,
an international airport at Gaya, besides conversion of thousands
of kilometres of state highways into national highways and installation
of thousands of telephone connections in a brief period. As if that
was not enough, the UNESCO on June 27 declared Bodh Gaya as a world
heritage centre.
There is no doubt that these massive investments
are the outcome of the competitive populism among the post-1995 non-Congress
politicians. Yet it is also true this huge capital has the potential
to bring about a socio-economic revolution in the state, despite a
lack of enthusiasm palpable among the common mass of Bihar till the
politicians of West Bengal, especially Ms Mamata Banerjee, opposed
the creation of a East Central Zone.
If the creation of a new rail zone at last generated
some interest in Bihar the case is not so with other big projects
such as the NTPC. Surprisingly, neither the media nor the social analysts
are writing much about the impact these investments may have on the
state. The sudden inflow of investment raises an important question:
who should the credit go to? Ironically, to some extent, it goes to
the man who has apparently done nothing for the state, RJD chief Laloo
Prasad Yadav, who has been accused of destroying all institutions
and running Bihar as his fiefdom. Yet, none can challenge the fact
that had there been no Laloo Yadav at the helm of state politics,
Bihar would not have seen such a massive investment.
No one can deny the fact that in the first two decades
after Independence, Bihar was ranked among the two best administered
states of the country according to the Appleby Report. Even then the
state did not get the attention it required. Old timers recall that
there were complaints of discrimination always in those days too.
Ever since the establishment of the Bokaro Steel Plant in the early
Sixties, which incidentally is now in Jharkhand, Bihar had never seen
so much investment.
When political and social anarchy started gripping
the state after 1967 Bihar was virtually left to fend for itself.
Successive Central governments, wittingly or unwittingly, continued
to ignore the state. Bihar’s bargaining position was weak. At one
point of time during the prime ministership of Narasimha Rao, there
was only one minister of state in the Union Cabinet as the Congress
won only one Lok Sabha seat in the 1991 election.
However, by the mid-Nineties the situation started
changing. After having swept the 1995 Assembly elections, Laloo Yadav,
who later became the national president of the then Janata Dal, went
abroad to woo multinational companies. Later, he organised an NRI
meet in Patna and started the beautification campaign of the state
capital and some other cities. No doubt most of these were temporary
measures, yet they did spark off competitive populism. Laloo might
have done nothing for Bihar, but he spoke about the discrimination
of the state and against the policy of freight equalisation.
His bete noire in the United Front government, Ram
Vilas Paswan, picked up from there. He sensed that to neutralise Laloo
politically, it was essential to take up some developmental work.
True, he too embarked on the path of populism and wanted to help his
party workers with these projects. Be it the establishment of East
Central Railway at Hajipur, his parliamentary constituency, or a rail
bridge over the Ganga near Patna, or conversion of thousands of kilometres
of metre gauge into broad gauge and introduction of several new trains,
the credit, to a great extent, goes to Paswan. When the NDA government
was voted to power in March 1998 some of these works slowed down,
though the new railway minister Nitish Kumar was also from Bihar.
However, when President’s Rule was imposed on Bihar for a brief period
in February-March 1999, the Prime Minister paid a two-day visit to
Bihar and inaugurated several major projects worth over Rs 30,000
crore. While Nitish Kumar took personal initiative in the projects
meant for north and central Bihar, the then finance and now foreign
minister Yashwant Sinha took more interest in south Bihar, which later
became Jharkhand.
The October 1999 parliamentary elections sped up
the competition for bringing in new projects to Bihar with Nitish
and Paswan, the latter now back in the Cabinet, topping the race.
Though their motive was essentially to provide contract and business
to their supporters who were fighting Laloo, Bihar benefited as a
lot of investment came in. An interesting aspect of the development
is that it is taking place in and around Patna. The creation of East
Central Railway at Hajipur, just across the Ganga near Patna, is likely
to have an impact on the state capital. The real estate and construction
business will boom. There is possibility of the growth of ancillary
units in Hajipur and Patna as railways make most of the purchase of
spare parts from the zonal office. Unlike other industries which failed
in north Bihar, the prospect of these units is good as they will have
a readymade market in the form of railways. Besides, the resource-starved
post-Jharkhand Bihar would earn Rs 200 crores annually as sales tax
from the East Central Railway. Ironically, these investments coincided
with the bifurcation of Bihar, whose richest part was operated out
and Jharkhand was created on November 15, 2000. It is to be seen whether
its loss will be compensated by these investments.
Comment...
Comments:- You have
cited a dozen of multi-crore projects for Bihar, for the betterment
I am
cautioning you not to go by address below. I am a Bihari and die-hard
So far
Bihar has survived on promises. I do not know how long it is going
to Regards,
PRADEEP RAI Levich Institute, T1M 140 St at Convent Ave New York, NY 10031 Tel: 212-650-8487 Fax: 212-650-6660
Mr
Saroor Ahmed
|