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General Studies Today

The Wise Elephant

TODAY IS the first day of the 21st Century and a good time to take stock. The ascent of a country from poverty to prosperity, from tradition to modernity is a great and fascinating enterprise. India has recently emerged as a vibrant, free market democracy after the economic reforms and it has begun to flex its muscles in the global information economy. The old centralised, bureaucratic state, which killed our industrial revolution over the past 50 years, has begun a subtle but definite decline. The lower castes have gradually risen through the ballot box.

Most Indians instinctively grasp the spirituality and poverty of India. But the significance of this quiet social and economic revolution eludes us. The change is partially based on the rise of social democracy, but more importantly on a sustained 5-7 per cent annual economic growth that India has experienced for the past two decades. It has tripled the size of the middle class, which is expected to become half the Indian population within a generation. In the end, this ``silent revolution'' is more significant than the constantly changing fortunes of political leaders that so absorb us.

In the Fifties, we passionately believed in Nehru's dream of a modern and just India. But as the years went by, we discovered that Nehru's economic path was taking us to a dead-end and the dream soured. Having set out to create socialism, we found that we had instead created statism. We were caught in a thick jungle of Kafkaesque bureaucratic controls. Our sense of disillusionment reached its peak during Indira Gandhi's autocratic rule in the Seventies. There was a glimmer of hope when Rajiv Gandhi became Prime Minister in the Eighties, but it quickly died when we discovered that he did not have what it takes. It was not until July 1991 that our mood of despair finally lifted with the announcement of sweeping liberalisation by the minority Government of Narasimha Rao. It was as though our second independence had arrived: we were going to be free from a rapacious and domineering state. Although the reforms have been slow, hesitant and incomplete, they have set in motion a process of profound change in Indian society. It is as important a turning point as Deng's revolution in China in December 1978.

In part, the past 50 years are a story of the betrayal of the last two generations by India's rulers. In stubbornly persisting with the wrong model of development (especially after 1970, when there was clear evidence that this path was doomed), they suppressed growth and jobs and denied their people an opportunity to rise above poverty. It is ironic that men and women of goodwill created this order and they were widely admired. After all, they had succeeded in institutionalising democracy. The tragedy is that they pig-headedly refused to change course in the Seventies in the name of the poor. The worst indictment of Indian socialism is that in the end it did very little for the poor. All the countries of East Asia did far better. Our failure in the end was less from ideology and more from poor management.

To top this tale of India's lost decades members of the Indian ruling elite are not contrite. They complacently proclaim, ``after all, we have done rather well compared to the 3.5 per cent Hindu rate of growth''. There is no more defeatist expression in the dictionary than this fatalistic phrase. They feel no humiliation that India has lagged behind in a Third Worldish twilight while its neighbours in East and South East Asia have gone ahead. There is no feeling of shame that countries with a fraction of India's natural and human resource potential have created some of the most prosperous societies in the world. They have used the recent troubles of East Asia to justify our incomplete and frustratingly slow reforms. When individuals blunder, it is unfortunate and their families go down. When rulers fail, it is a national tragedy.

Indians have not traditionally accorded a high place to making money. Hence, the merchant or bania is placed third in the four- caste hierarchy, behind the brahmin and the kshatriya, and only a step ahead of the labouring shudra. Since the economic reforms, making money has become increasingly respectable and the sons of brahmins and kshatriyas are getting MBAs and want to become entrepreneurs. India is in the midst of a social revolution rivalled, perhaps, only by the ascent of Japan's merchant class during the 1968 Meiji Restoration, which helped transform Japan from an underdeveloped group of islands into a thriving, modern society and economy.

The beginning of the 21st century is a time of ferment. Two global trends have converged - both of which work to India's advantage, and raise the hope that it may finally take-off. One, is a liberal revolution that has swept the globe in the past decade, opened economies that were isolated for 50 years and integrated them spectacularly into one global economy. India's economic reforms are part of this trend. They are dismantling controls and releasing the long-suppressed energies of Indian entrepreneurs. They are changing the national mindset, especially among the young. Because we are endowed with commercial castes, we may be in a better position to take advantage of this global tendency. Banias understand from birth the power of compound interest; hence, they know how to accumulate capital.

Meanwhile, the information economy is transforming the world - this is the second global trend. We may not be tinkerers, but we are a conceptual people. Thus, the knowledge age potentially plays to our advantage and our success in software and the Internet is the first emerging evidence. We have wrestled with the abstract concepts of the Upanishads for 3,000 years. We invented the zero. Just as spiritual space is invisible, so is cyberspace. Hence, our core competence is invisible. In information technology, we may have found the engine that could drive India's take-off, and eventually transform our country. The Internet has also levelled the playing fields so that any passionate Indian entrepreneur can write our country's future.

India embraced democracy first and capitalism afterwards and this has made all the difference. India became a full-fledged democracy in 1950, with universal suffrage and extensive human rights, but it was not until 1991 that it opened up to the free play of market forces. This curious historic inversion means that India's future will not be a creation of unbridled capitalism, but it will evolve through a daily dialogue between the conservative forces of caste, religion and the village, the leftist and Nehruvian socialist forces which dominated the intellectual life of the country for 40 years, and they new forces of global capitalism. These ``million negotiations of democracy'', the plurality of interests, the contentious nature of our people, and the lack of discipline and teamwork imply that the pace of economic reforms will be slow and incremental. It means that India will not grow as rapidly as the Asian tigers, nor wipe out poverty and ignorance as quickly.

The Economisthas been trying, with some frustration, to paint stripes on India since 1991. It does not realise that India will never be a tiger. It is an elephant that has begun to lumber and move ahead. It will never have speed, but it will always have distance. A Buddhist text says: ``The elephant is the wisest of all animals/the only one who remembers his former lives/and he remains motionless for long periods of time/meditating thereon.'' The inversion between capitalism and democracy suggests that India might have a more stable, peaceful, and negotiated transition into the future than say China. It will also avoid some of the deleterious side effects of an unprepared capitalist society, such as Russia.

Although slower, India is more likely to preserve its way of life and its civilisation of diversity, tolerance, and spirituality against the onslaught of the global culture. If it does, then perhaps it is a wise elephant. The struggle of one sixth of humanity for dignity and prosperity is a drama of the highest order and of great consequence to the future of the world. It has meaning for all of humanity and sheds new light on the future of liberalism in the world.

(The writer is an author and management consultant. This Aricle has taken from archive of The Hindu).

How to Resolve India's Helium Quandary

 

During a visit to West Germany, the redoubtable second chief minister of West Bengal, B.C. Roy, came across the hot springs of Baden Baden and was immediately impressed by the medical and curative properties of the water for relief from rheumatism and chronic diseases like arthritis. Returning to Calcutta, Roy asked the famous physicist, S.N. Bose, to look into developing similar possibilities at the hot spring at Bakreswar, near Santiniketan. Bose’s protégé, S.D. Chatterjee, then working at the Indian Association of Cultivation of Science, was entrusted with investigating the potential of the Bakreswar thermal spring. Chatterjee, who benefited from an original bent of mind, came to the conclusion after intense research that, first, the helium content of the natural gas emanating from the hot spring at Bakreswar was unusually high, at about 1.4 to 1.8 per cent, and second, the water was rich with minerals with curative properties, and third, its natural temperature was about 72 degrees Celsius.

In 1977, at the insistence of H. N. Sethna, then chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission, and A.S. Divatia of the Variable Energy Cyclotron Centre, the helium recovery scheme was transferred from the IACS to the VECC. The scheme started operating from March 1978, and the field-work related to the scheme, at that time run by the department of atomic energy, was also transferred to VECC in 1982. Bikash Sinha came to VECC in 1984 from the Bhabha Atomic Research Centre and involved himself in the project. Many discoveries were made and helium extraction started from the nearby field at Tantloi, now at Jharkhand. A purification plant was installed that could improve the helium content to 99.99 per cent. The actual volume of helium extracted was, however, nowhere near the requirement for the superconducting cyclotron, since the emanation of helium was restricted to the surface area.

In time, this activity pursued by VECC was suspended, the reason being that helium could never be extracted in sufficient quantities for engineering purposes. The importance of the research already carried out and the knowledge base that accrued were not taken into account. Nevertheless, Sinha in his later capacity with the department of atomic energy, continued with the programme, now funded by the ministry of earth sciences, and arrived at two important determinations; namely, that the entire area, Bakreswar, Tantloi and the environs, was positioned over a huge reservoir of helium at a depth of about 1-2 kilometres from the earth’s surface, and that the surface content of helium was only a tiny fraction of what was actually available in that deposit — which was what had been correctly predicted long ago by S.D. Chatterjee. Additionally, this area would be ideal for setting up a geo-thermal energy reactor, of which there is none in India yet. It will be for the ministry of alternative energy to proceed with the geo-thermal project once the customary inertia of the government has been overcome.

The Defence Research and Development Organization has now approached Sinha and his team to attempt large-scale helium extraction by digging a bore-hole of several kilometres, a process which is expected to touch the ‘oceanic’ reservoir of helium. This exercise is turning out to be extraordinarily critical for India.

Our nuclear reactors, the space department (especially for rocket launching) and the defence industry, all need helium on a large scale. Helium being one of the most non- interactive inert gases, the dome of the reactors and the burnt-out fuel tank of spacecraft need helium to fill in the empty space. Apart from these requirements, magnetic resonance imaging and TV screens also need helium. When helium gas is cooled to approximately — 270°C, it becomes liquid.

Some material such as niobium-titanium turns superconductive, which means that electric current at this temperature faces no electrical resistance. Superconducting technology is the frontier technology of tomorrow, and in the Cyclotron Centre there is a superconducting cyclotron, which needs 400 litres of liquid helium at a time. The Large Hadron Collider at Cern, incidentally, needs thousands of litres of liquid helium.

There is a crisis looming for India because the United States of America is slowly but surely going to turn off the helium supply to India. The US needs to cut its export not for the lack of a friendship with India, but because the US needs the helium to satisfy its domestic demand, which is increasing very rapidly. There is no known substitute for helium to date that is economically viable. Any suspension of exports from the US will not violate any bilateral inter-governmental agreement, though it would be appropriate for New Delhi to try to negotiate one even at this belated stage. Helium consumption in India is approximately 0.15 billion cubic feet, about 2.3 per cent of global helium consumption, all of which is imported by India from the US, there being no other significant exporter. Poland and Qatar are among the countries that produce helium, but have very limited export surpluses.

We have, for too long, taken the Micawberish attitude that something will turn up to save the situation. India will now have to initiate its own programme to produce helium on a large scale. There are many other sources of helium arising from thermal springs in India, and not just in Bengal, but curiously no comprehensive effort to map and extract helium has been initiated, and our reliance on the US is total. In the late 1970s, a similar dependence on the US for uranium proved nearly disastrous. It appears that lessons from that precedent have still to be digested. Once bitten should not become twice shy.

B. Sinha is Homi Bhabha professor in the Department of Atomic Energy. K. Srinivasan is a former foreign secretary.This Article has taken from The Telegraph.