Skip to main content

Ram Rajya for many? Sitharaman's budget seeks to promise development for a few

By Gautam Modi* 

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, in her interim Budget Statement (BS) of 2024 speech, lauded about how the BJP government has transformed the economy in the past 10 years but she failed to mention who in the country has benefited from this transformation and where have the crores of jobs that existed in the economy 10 years ago disappeared today.
The BS is a testimony of the countless empty promises made by the BJP government over the past 10 years to the working people and the poor that still remain unfulfilled.

Declining social spending

In the past 10 years, the money government spends on health and education, in real terms, has not increased. The same holds true for the expenditure on MNREGA and other social protection programmes including the ICDS (anganwadi) programme.
Money budgeted for the so called Ayushman Bharat and PM-Awaas Yojna for 2023-24 remain unspent. Capital expenditure, apart from on national highways and the railways, in several key areas including irrigation works, rural roads, small production unit, on research and development, on rail and road safety, etc., remain unspent and incomplete. 
These could have been areas that could contribute to better and stable earnings and livelihoods for working people employed in these projects but the government clearly lack both the desire and the will to complete tasks that do not involve and benefit large corporates.
The BS is replete with numbers of loans given out for all forms of minor self-employment to crores of people. According to the BS the total number of loans given out for self-employment by government exceeds 75 crore. It is for no one to know what is the outcome of these loans and how many safe, stable and sustainable livelihoods have been created by these loans. There is however an exception where we know what the outcome is.
The BS states that, under PM-SVANidhi scheme, 78 lakh street vendors have received loans yet only 2.3 lakh of these are returning borrowers. This implies that out of 100 street vendors only 3 have made good their loans. We are not informed about the plight of the remaining 97 of 100 or 75+ lakh vendors.
The government projects its benevolence in announcing that food rations have been made available through the public distribution system to about 80% of the population. This however does not square up with the government’s claim of having taken 25 crore people out of poverty in the last 10 years. The reach of Ujwala has been included as an anti-poverty measure by government. Ujwala only reaches about 80% of households in Gujarat, Jharkhand and Tripura.
Today one rupee out of every five rupees of union government expenditure goes in paying interest
Furthermore, as a result of the high price of cooking gas, 1.1 crore Ujwala beneficiaries did not buy a single cylinder of gas in the last year and 90 lakhs bought only one cylinder in a year. This tells us that at least 2 crore households, who may be Ujwala ‘beneficiaries’, are continuing to use unsafe and harmful cooking fuels since they cannot afford even subsidised cooking gas.

Development for the few, Mandir for the many

The BS highlights the growing number of airports that have been built in the last 10 years and the number of new air routes that have been introduced, but it fails to tell us that 25% of the second-class seats have disappeared and been replaced by expensive, ‘dynamically priced’, air-conditioned seats and berths on our trains, which have become out of reach of the many who rely on it to travel across the country.
We know that over the last 10 years nearly 2 crore workers returned from cities to their villages. The number of workers ‘employed’ in agriculture has gone up by this number. We also know agriculture is in distress and farmers are unable to make ends meet. The two taken together implies that 2 crore urban workers were forced to return to their villages as they lost their jobs putting their families in the village under more duress.
Household consumption is low and household savings are declining as working people are being pushed into debt to meet their daily needs. This also tells us that while the rich have grown much richer over the last 10 years, working people have been pushed to the wall.
The reality also is that whilst the BJP says it has managed the economy better than every government in past, the country is more indebted than it was 10 years ago. Today one rupee out of every five rupees of union government expenditure goes in paying interest. This is apart from repaying the loans that government has taken itself.
In many ways, the MGNREGA, which provides employment to the largest number of workers in the country signals the crisis that the BJP has pushed us all into. There is demand for MGNREGA work which is not fulfilled. When workers do get work their wages are not paid. As a result there are more workers who are willing to work for less.
The BJP has pushed us into becoming a country of destitution and deprivation yet blinded by a jingoistic zeal for a ‘hindu rashtra’ or ‘Ram Rajya’, symbolized by the Ram Mandir, that promises to bring an end to our collective suffering.
A people cannot rise, and a society cannot develop unless the gains of the economy are shared by all. Until this happens economic development will remain an illusion. This is what we must fight together to change.
---
*National Trade Union Initiative

Comments

TRENDING

Hyderabad protest demands end to Operation Kagar as senior Maoist leaders killed in encounter

By Harsh Thakor*  A protest was held on June 17 at Indira Park in Hyderabad by the Shanti Charchala Committee, calling for an end to Operation Kagar and the start of peace talks with Maoist groups. The event brought together representatives from several political parties and civil society organizations. Among those who addressed the gathering were CPI (ML) New Democracy Central Committee member Vemulapalli Venkatramayya, along with leaders from the Congress, BRS, CPI, CPM, Telangana Janasamithi, MCPI, SUCI, CPI ML, RSP, and VCK. The programme also featured performances by cultural groups such as CLC, HRF, TVV, Arunodaya, Praja Kala Mandali, and Praja Natya Mandali. Public figures including actors Narayana Murthy and Tudundebba Upendar and academics like Professor Anver Khan and Professor Vinayaka Reddy participated as speakers.

Land under siege: A silent crisis, desertification is threatening India’s future

By Raj Kumar Sinha*  Desertification is emerging as one of the gravest environmental challenges of our time. Marked annually on June 17, the World Day to Combat Desertification and Drought reminds us that the fate of our planet’s land—and the billions who depend on it—is hanging in the balance.

Food security crisis persists in Gujarat despite NFSA: Survey reveals grim ground reality

By A Representative  A new field-based survey conducted in January 2025 across Dahod, Panchmahals, Morbi, and Bhavnagar districts has revealed alarming levels of food insecurity among vulnerable communities in Gujarat, ten years after the implementation of the National Food Security Act (NFSA). Conducted by Anandi – Area Networking and Development Initiatives (ASAA) and community organisations working with mahila sangathans, the Gujarat Food Security Survey covered 1,261 households, purposively chosen to reflect the experiences of marginalised populations including Adivasis, OBCs, single women, the disabled, and the elderly. The findings suggest that despite the promises of NFSA and wide coverage under the Public Distribution System (PDS), food deprivation remains widespread and systemic failures continue to exclude the most vulnerable.

Victim to cricketing politics, Alvin Kalicharan was a most organized left handed batsman

By Harsh Thakor* On March 21st Alvin Kalicharan celebrates his 75th birthday. Sadly, his exploits have been forgotten or overlooked. Arguably no left handed batsman was technically sounder or more organized than this little man. Kalicharan was classed as a left-handed version of Rohan Kanhai. Possibly no left-handed batsmen to such a degree blend technical perfection with artistry and power.

Central London discussion to spotlight LGBTQ+ ex-Muslim rights and persecution

By A Representative   On June 13, 2025, the Dissident Club in Central London will host a public discussion to mark the 18th anniversary of the Council of Ex-Muslims of Britain (CEMB) and to commemorate World Refugee Day. The event, scheduled from 7:00 to 9:00 pm, will feature speakers Ali Malik, Maryam Namazie, and Taha Siddiqui, who are expected to address the intersecting challenges faced by LGBTQ+ ex-Muslims globally.

Citizens demand judicial probe into Ahmedabad plane crash, cite neglect of intern doctors, victims' families

By A Representative    A wide coalition of concerned citizens, academics, medical professionals, social activists, and public intellectuals has submitted a petition to the Prime Minister of India demanding an urgent judicial inquiry into the recent tragic airplane crash in Ahmedabad that claimed over 240 lives. The petition, coordinated by the Movement for Secular Democracy (MSD), calls for a high-level judicial committee, headed by a retired High Court justice and comprising eminent citizens, to investigate the incident beyond the scope of the existing technical committee.

Better halves lead the way as organic farmers, entrepreneurs and social reformers

By Bharat Dogra  Two major challenges continue to limit the full participation of rural women in development. First, their crucial roles, potential, and capabilities often remain underrecognized. Second, even when women are encouraged to take on broader responsibilities, the overarching development models may not align with their needs or perspectives and may even appear counterproductive. Under such conditions, it is unrealistic to expect women to engage as enthusiastic and creative participants.

Hope from the Amazon: Land rights, indigenous voices, and the winds of change in Latin America

By Vidya Bhushan Rawat*  After several days of travel and digital silence, I returned from a rare and deeply moving journey into the Amazon region of Colombia. It was not just another field trip, but an opportunity to witness the pulse of Latin America’s land rights movement, firsthand.

Irregularities in Modi-initiated NSDC raise questions about the future of Skill India

By Onkareshwar Pandey  Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Skill India initiative was conceived as a bold national effort—to equip India’s vast young population with industry-ready skills and transform the country into the “skills capital of the world.” At the heart of this mission lies the National Skill Development Corporation (NSDC), a public-private partnership under the Ministry of Skill Development and Entrepreneurship (MSDE). But recent revelations of large-scale financial irregularities within NSDC threaten to undermine not just the institution, but the very promise of Skill India.