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India's march towards 'Aatmanirbharta'
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Mohan Kumar (Source: IANS) | 16 Aug, 2022
It was in May 2020 that Prime Minister Narendra Modi gave the clarion
call for a Bharat that was 'Aatmanirbhar'. It is important to clarify
what this meant and what it did not.
While a rough
translation of the word is no doubt 'self-reliant', it is nevertheless
not the kind of self-reliance that India arguably believed and practiced
in the early years of its Independence up until the seventies and
eighties.
It is easy to state what it is not. It is certainly
not autarchy; it is certainly not inward-looking; and it is most
certainly not stopping imports and making every product at home. It may
be more prudent to think of 'Aatmanirbharta' as Self-Reliance 2.0.
In
this framework of Self-Reliance 2.0, the PM clarified that rather than
being self-centred, India will open up even more to the world outside,
guided by its motto: 'Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam', or our Earth is just one
family.
Modi went on to say that Aatmanirbharta will stand on
five pillars: Economy, infrastructure, technology, demography and
demand. The PM explained the raison d'etre of Aatmanirbharta by saying
that this should prepare India for participation in global supply chains
and that this is a battle India cannot afford to lose.
There is
little doubt that the global Covid-19 pandemic played a significant
role in India's push for Self-Reliance 2.0. Take the simple example of
PPE (Personal Protective Equipment) and N-95 masks. At the beginning of
the pandemic, India was not making any N-95 masks. Today, India
manufactures at least 200,000 N-95 masks a day, if not more.
Even
more impressive is India's own record of vaccinating its mammoth
population. When Covid emerged in 2020, almost no one believed India
could ever fully vaccinate its population and that such an exercise
would take years. Yet, in July 2022, about 18 months after the first
vaccination, India completed two billion doses of vaccines for its
citizens.
The story of how this was achieved is worthy of a case
study, which will cover vital issues such as public-private
partnership, Centre-state cooperation and not to forget, building
awareness among citizens and getting their participation willingly in
this exercise.
Indeed, the WHO and others have praised India and
the best practices here will be emulated the world over. Proving that
Self-Reliance 2.0 is not just for Indians, the country also exported a
large number of vaccines and PPE kits to countries all over the world.
The
latest statistics from the MEA website talks of 240 million (approx)
vaccines which have been delivered to 101 countries, including
developed, developing and least-developed nations. The story of India
being the pharmacy of the world is too well known to bear any repetition
here. All of this is real Aatmanirbharta at work.
The Co-WIN
platform that India used for administering vaccines to its mammoth
population was remarkable. Co-WIN is essentially a cloud-based IT
solution for planning, implementing, monitoring and evaluating Covid
vaccination in India.
By July 2021, India decided to make this
open platform available to all countries for their use. In the Co-WIN
global conclave organised in July 2021, as many as 142 countries
expressed interest in adopting it. Again, this is Aatmanirbharta at
work.
The war in Ukraine has had a profound impact not just in
Europe, but more importantly for developing and least-developed
countries. Specifically, the war has impacted food, energy and commodity
prices adversely. Wheat shortage in particular is expected to affect
Africa and the Middle-East quite significantly.
At a time like
this, it is comforting to know that India's position when it comes to
food security for its huge population is satisfactory. This is yet
another manifestation of Self-Reliance 2.0. Indeed, not only was India
able to give away food-grains and lentils to 800 million of its citizens
as part of the Pradhan Mantri Garib Kalyan Yojana, India was also able
to carry out modest exports of food-grains to low income countries that
needed it. Again, Aatmanirbharta at work.
Yet another amazing
success story of Aatmanirbharta is the case of Unified Payments
Interface (UPI) which is a government-backed centralised digital payment
gateway that is widely popular in India.
To understand the
significance of UPI, consider this: India accounted for the largest
number of worldwide digital transactions in 2021 at a whopping 48
billion, a number that is nearly three times bigger than China's 18
billion, and is at least six times bigger than the transactions of the
US, Canada, the UK, France and Germany combined. Voices in the US are
saying that we must learn from India which is leapfrogging into the
future. Again, Aatmanirbharta at work.
The above is not to
suggest that everything is rosy. India faces monumental challenges with
regard to eradication of poverty, job creation and investment in
health/education/skills of its vast population. But the lessons are
clear: India is sui generis and it is only an "Indian" model that will
work for India and Indians. Hence, the capital importance of
Aatmanirbharta. After all, as we have seen above, 'Aatmanirbhar Bharat'
is not just good for India, but also for the world at large.
(Dr Mohan Kumar is a former Indian Ambassador who is a full-time academic now. The views expressed are personal)
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