Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Portuguese in the Indian national interest: Expanding horizons beyond the English speaking world

To a small but vocal minority in Goa, Goa’s Portuguese heritage is something to be castigated and cast into the dust-bin of history. To this shortsighted group Portuguese evokes only the continental European country that speaks the language, and they fail to see the linkages that Goa has had, and can continue to have via this language, with a larger Portuguese speaking world that extends across the world.

On the 12th of this month, the Xavier Centre’s History Hour played host to Constantino Xavier who made an argument along similar lines. Constantino Xavier is currently a Fulbright-sponsored Ph.D. candidate in South Asian Studies at the School of Advanced International Studies, Johns Hopkins University, in Washington DC and someone with a number of very interesting things to say. At the History Hour, his argument was that as India opens out to the world, there is space to carve out what he calls ‘diplomatic niches’ outside of New Delhi. Goa, he argued, can play a crucial role in facilitating India's burgeoning economic, political and cultural relations with the Community of Portuguese-speaking countries (CPLP) and the lusophone world. In line with Beijing's efforts to leverage Macau's potential, New Delhi could develop Goa into a strategic hub to foster relations with the emerging "Global South" and, in particular, with Brazil, Portugal, Angola, Mozambique, Macau, or East Timor. It need not be pointed out that Brazil and Angola are significant economic players in the emerging southern economies.

This column has on numerous occasions berated the point that economic capital is not the only capital that one has; rather one should also be alive to the cultural capital that we hold. For the Goan, this cultural capital of global worth includes the Portuguese language. Thanks to the machinations of this tiny group however, we are prevented from using or expanding on this capital.

A greater familiarity with Portuguese and the Portuguese-speaking world holds over benefits as well. This includes expanding our intellectual horizons. It was while reading Opus Dei, a book by John L. Allen Jr. about the Catholic organization of the same name that the truth struck home. Many of the prejudices and opinions that we often have of the world, are those moulded by the prejudices and opinions of the English-speaking world. Thanks to unfamiliarity with other dominant world languages, our opinions, perspectives, and options are in many ways restricted. Goa’s linguistic diversity ought to have been a route for us to introduce the larger Indian civil society space with different ideas from the larger Portuguese-speaking world. Happily, this route is not yet not closed to us.

An example of the manner in which familiarity with this non-English speaking world is useful was brought out by a recent essay by Vinod Vyasulu in the Economic and Political Weekly. Vyasulu who is the Director for the Centre of Budget and Policy Studies in Bangalore, has written a rather interesting essay on Brazil’s cash transfer systems that are a part of their strategy to reduce poverty and income inequality. Apparently the way the system works is that “Since poverty is lack of income, the federal government of Brazil transfers cash to families in poverty to help them meet basic needs, if the family agrees to send children to school and to get them vaccinated.” Similarly as part of the cash transfer system the “Fome Zero, or zero hunger” strategy has introduced the bolsa familia. The Bolsa Familia apparently is a family grant which is a direct income transfer to benefit families earning a monthly income of not more than Brazilian Real (R$) 120 per member per month in any municipality in Brazil. “The objective is to enable the poorest families to buy food and essentials and at the same time encourage these families to access health, education, and social welfare public services.”

Vyasulu reports that the cash transfer system has been largely successful in Brazil and “have not only served to reduce poverty, they have also contributed to a reduction in inequality”. He goes further to suggest that Brazil’s experience shows that when implemented properly, cash transfers, “are at best a necessary condition for poverty alleviation.” Vyasulu is clearly indicating that it would be worthwhile for India to follow a similar route.

It was not however merely this reference to the cash transfer system that caught my attention but the quotation extracted below;

“Inter-governmental Relations… is an area where India has a lot to learn from Brazil. In the 2009 elections to Parliament in India, many of the candidates seeking election to the Lok Sabha, fought on issues of garbage clearance, water supply and the like. These are municipal issues. The job of MPs is to legislate; this was one thing they were silent about. Members of the state assemblies also talk of transfers and local matters, when their job is to make policies for the state. Thus local representatives are denied their space; local government in India is a sham. And unless local government – which we denigrate by calling self-government – works, such policies which require higher level guidance and local integration cannot work. Many studies have shown that integration of programmes at the local level is the missing link in India’s development policy. Each level of government has its role and we must let it play that role. In this we need to find our way back to normalcy from where we are today.”

This observation would taste sweet for many of those in Goa who are fighting the battle for local governments to have greater autonomy in planning. Vyasulu in castigating the Indian practice of self government makes a striking point. In preventing the Goan panchayats from realizing the planning powers they are demanding, the MLA’s are not only wrongfully interfering in local issues, but they are not guilty of failing in their primary duty, i.e. legislating.

The anti-Portuguese lobby in Goa claims its opposition to things Portuguese on nationalist grounds. Both Xavier and Vyasulu however, seem to suggest that it is in fact a knowledge of Portuguese that could work to the Indian national interest. This point of view should give our right-wing nationalist friends some pause to think….let’s keep our fingers crossed!

(First published in the Gomantak Times 14 July 2010)

3 comments:

oskeladden said...

Jason: This is an excellent post. I agree with most of what you say - particularly about preserving Goa's Portuguese heritage (and, I'm ashamed to confess, I had no idea just how alive this still was until I found out that one of my Goan colleagues actually spoke Portuguese at home). I wonder if religion has anything to do with it.

One minor point. You quote Vyasulu with agreement:
The job of MPs is to legislate; this was one thing they were silent about. Members of the state assemblies also talk of transfers and local matters, when their job is to make policies for the state.
This isn't actually true. In a Westminister system, Parliament (or their state-level equivalents) isn't a true legislature. Legislation almost never originates in Parliament - it originates outside Parliament and is approved by Parliament. And that's how it's supposed to be. Making policy - and making laws to translate those policies into action - is the job of the government. The purpose of Parliament is, rather, to hold the government to account. It does this in different ways for different issues - questioning the Prime Minister and other ministers in relation to everyday administration, reviewing delegated legislation, and ratifying or refusing to ratify the most important policies by giving or withholding consent to statutes.

As a matter of principle, localism is a good thing, and devolving more powers to panchayats - including planning powers - is a laudable goal. Unfortunately, so little thought is given to institutional design in India that the few institutions of local government we have are inherently broken and unfit for purpose. Giving planning powers to local government bodies in most states would reduce accountability, it wouldn't improve it, because elected panchayats are simply not participatory, and lack any real mechanisms to hold the executive to account. Those who champion the cause of panchayats should seriously study how they use the powers they already have.

And, finally, the bigger hurdle when it comes to empowering panchayats isn't the power of the state legislature. It's the power of the absolutely unaccountable administrative officers. These fellows have near dictatorial powers and can frustrate anything a panchayat tries to do. But once again, we've given absolutely no thought to what the purpose of administrative officials - district magistrates, collectors, and what have you - is, and how they're supposed to sit alongside participatory local government.

Just my thoughts.

oskeladden said...

Jason: This is an excellent post. I agree with most of what you say - particularly about preserving Goa's Portuguese heritage (and, I'm ashamed to confess, I had no idea just how alive this still was until I found out that one of my Goan colleagues actually spoke Portuguese at home). I wonder if religion has anything to do with it.

One minor point. You quote Vyasulu with agreement:
The job of MPs is to legislate; this was one thing they were silent about. Members of the state assemblies also talk of transfers and local matters, when their job is to make policies for the state.
This isn't actually true. In a Westminister system, Parliament (or their state-level equivalents) isn't a true legislature. Legislation almost never originates in Parliament - it originates outside Parliament and is approved by Parliament. And that's how it's supposed to be. Making policy - and making laws to translate those policies into action - is the job of the government. The purpose of Parliament is, rather, to hold the government to account. It does this in different ways for different issues - questioning the Prime Minister and other ministers in relation to everyday administration, reviewing delegated legislation, and ratifying or refusing to ratify the most important policies by giving or withholding consent to statutes.

As a matter of principle, localism is a good thing, and devolving more powers to panchayats - including planning powers - is a laudable goal. Unfortunately, so little thought is given to institutional design in India that the few institutions of local government we have are inherently broken and unfit for purpose. Giving planning powers to local government bodies in most states would reduce accountability, it wouldn't improve it, because elected panchayats are simply not participatory, and lack any real mechanisms to hold the executive to account. Those who champion the cause of panchayats should seriously study how they use the powers they already have.

And, finally, the bigger hurdle when it comes to empowering panchayats isn't the power of the state legislature. It's the power of the absolutely unaccountable administrative officers. These fellows have near dictatorial powers and can frustrate anything a panchayat tries to do. But once again, we've given absolutely no thought to what the purpose of administrative officials - district magistrates, collectors, and what have you - is, and how they're supposed to sit alongside participatory local government.

Just my thoughts.

oskeladden said...

Jason: This is quite a thought-provoking post. I agree with most of what you say - particularly about preserving Goa's Portuguese heritage (and, I'm ashamed to confess, I had no idea just how alive this still was until I found out that one of my Goan colleagues actually spoke Portuguese at home). I wonder if religion has anything to do with the reluctance to acknowledge the Portuguese heritage.

One minor point. You quote Vyasulu with agreement:
The job of MPs is to legislate; this was one thing they were silent about. Members of the state assemblies also talk of transfers and local matters, when their job is to make policies for the state.
This isn't actually true. In a Westminister system, Parliament (or their state-level equivalents) isn't a true legislature. Legislation almost never originates in Parliament - it originates outside Parliament and is approved by Parliament. And that's how it's supposed to be. Making policy - and making laws to translate those policies into action - is the job of the government. The purpose of Parliament is, rather, to hold the government to account. It does this in different ways for different issues - questioning the Prime Minister and other ministers in relation to everyday administration, reviewing delegated legislation, and ratifying or refusing to ratify the most important policies by giving or withholding consent to statutes.

As a matter of principle, localism is a good thing, and devolving more powers to panchayats - including planning powers - is a laudable goal. Unfortunately, so little thought is given to institutional design in India that the few institutions of local government we have are inherently broken and unfit for purpose. Giving planning powers to local government bodies in most states would reduce accountability, it wouldn't improve it, because elected panchayats are simply not participatory, and lack any real mechanisms to hold the executive to account. Those who champion the cause of panchayats should seriously study how they use the powers they already have.

And, finally, the bigger hurdle when it comes to empowering panchayats isn't the power of the state legislature. It's the power of the absolutely unaccountable administrative officers. These fellows have near dictatorial powers and can frustrate anything a panchayat tries to do. But once again, we've given absolutely no thought to what the purpose of administrative officials - district magistrates, collectors, and what have you - is, and how they're supposed to sit alongside participatory local government.