In
many ways, the concept of unalienable rights of life, liberty
and pursuit of happiness as propounded by the American Founding
Fathers appeals to libertarians.
But
closer examination of the OECD countries shows that in the
real world most states pursue economic policies which combine
the libertarian principle of laissez faire with expenditure
for promoting social good in the form of education, health
care and welfare. Not withstanding Ronald Reagan and Margaret
Thatcher, the public expenditure in OECD countries is about
45% of GDP on an average. India's public expenditure as
a share of GDP is lower than every OECD country, except
the two city-states of Hong Kong and Singapore. The social
expenditure alone accounts for 25% of GDP, adjusting for
country-variations. The high-income countries spend 5.6%
of GDP on public education and 6.4% of GDP on public health.
Medium income countries spend only 4.6% and 3.2% of GDP
on education and health respectively, while poor countries
spend a measly 2.5% and 0.8% on these two sectors.
What
does this indicate? Limited government and political and
economic freedom to citizens are vital for individual growth
and national advancement. But liberty cannot be construed
in a very narrow and negative sense of state not abridging
individual freedoms. State is not merely a necessary evil
to defend our frontiers, maintain public order, protect
citizens and ensure justice. State can, and should, also
be a positive institution to create basic infrastructure,
develop natural resources, and most of all to provide quality
school education and effective primary health care. Liberal
think tanks and academics have been vehemently advocating
rollback of the state from these areas. While state's role
in business is now universally opposed, there are no realistic
substitutes to state in school education and primary health
care.
It
does not mean that state alone should provide these services.
Private and voluntary sectors have a significant role, and
nowhere in market economies is that role more pronounced
than in India. Nor does it mean that state should necessarily
provide these services. Stakeholders groups and voluntary
organizations often do the job much better. But the financing
has to come from the state. And by state I do not mean the
centralized, remote, big-government, but localized, citizen-centered
government starting with a community of stakeholders, and
expanding in concentric circles to local, provincial and
federal governments based on the principle of subsidiarity.
We
have to recognize that social goods like school education
and primary health care cannot be accessed by most citizens
without state's intermediation or funding. And in our country,
with vertical heirarchies, caste divisions and moral neutrality
to social inequities, state's role is critical. With the
state failing in these sectors, the bulk of our gene pool
is wasted, and educational opportunities are effectively
limited to a quarter of our population; poor people end
up suffering and spending much more than the rich in market-driven
private health care systems. Making education a profit-making
enterprise has resulted in mushrooming of countless colleges
that produce mostly literate, semi-educated, unemployable
graduates.
It
is easy for the well-heeled and well-connected to ridicule
the role of the state. But the fact remains that the future
of the vast majority of our children is dictated by the
circumstances of their birth.
The
potential of most children remains unfulfilled. Opportunities
for vertical mobility are severely restricted for the bulk
of the population. Paradoxically in the 1950's and 60's
children had better opportunities. But the decline in public
education and health care makes the situation increasingly
unacceptable. Abdication of state is no solution
We
don't need big-government or high taxation. What we need
is a better and more focused state that helps every child
fulfil its potential and provides opportunities for vertical
mobility. And we need to get good value for every rupee
spent. If we are too myopic to see the obvious, the result
will be hatred, violence and chaos. We owe it to ourselves
to learn the lessons of the last century and act quickly
to improve public education and health care.
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