
When I occasionally stay overnight in Delhi, my friends in power ask me why the coloumn doesn8217;t reflect Boomtime India. Of course, the boom in the country as a whole hasn8217;t left villages untouched. But it8217;s only the creamy layer. In a traditional village from where I had recently reported the frail impact of urban India, the richest farmer had just come back with his family from a trip to Egypt and was quite articulate about babaghanou and mezza. He and three others were farming about seven per cent of the land in the village, having leased land from smaller farmers who had left for the lures of the city. Let8217;s not get carried away, the so-called rich farmer still does not till more than 10 hectares each, unless I have got the conversion from bighas to hectares wrong.
This column today is on the farmer and, of all things, capital account convertibility. As Planning Minister, I advocated capital account convertibility as the ultimate guidepost of the slow and sure reform we had started in the mid-Eighties. The world was against it since the East Asian meltdown had tempered the rah-rah enthusiasm of the early reformers but my argument was that they were wrong then and could be wrong again. Sure and steady reform does not mean standing still and the time was ripe, some of us argued, to move cautiously and firmly towards covering the last mile. This was a rather lonely battle in Yojana Bhavan, but finally, the approach paper of the Plan said: 8220;Capital account convertibility will be sought to be achieved by ensuring that the prerequisites for such convertibility are attained.8221; The original Taraporewala Committee was set up and spelt out the conditions, but we went back to slumber, until the present government started it again.
Some have used this to argue that this behaviour of savers in a fast-growing labour-abundant economy is inevitable and will lead to a saving glut. Since capital will flow only if profits are high and foreigners hardly ever invest in poor agricultural areas. Capital will flow to the areas which ensure high profits. Last week, invited to a global meeting of central bankers, the IMF and ADB at Bali, I argued that it is not inevitable that nirvana in villages will come only in the long run, for truly in the long run many will be dead.