Caste as social capital S. Gurumurthy |
Decades
ago, an elderly gentleman speaking at the Gandhi Peace Foundation in
Delhi, asked, "What is it that keeps the country down"? A young man
responded: "Undoubtedly caste. It has kept society backward". The
speaker replied, "may be". He paused for a moment and said "may not be".
The young man angrily
asked him to explain his "may-not-be" theory. The speaker calmly
mentioned just one fact that shocked the audience. He said, "before
British rule, over twothirds - yes, two-thirds - of Indian kings
belonged to what is today known as the Other Backward Castes (OBCs)" -
meaning that the OBCs, who constitute two-thirds of the population, lost
their power, wealth and status to colonists.
The young man changed
for ever after the meeting. The speaker was Dharampal, a Gandhian, who,
like his preceptor, was in ceaseless pursuit of truth, however
unpopular it was. His assertion was backed by decades of painstaking
study in India, England and Germany. But his lonely voice was lost in
the stentorian chorus dismissing caste as total evil.
In the absence of
rigorous, home-grown intellectual work, the contemporary Indian
leadership, too, conveniently approved the received western scholarship
on India. But decades after he spoke, is Dharampal proving right after
all? Read on.
|
Weberians and Marxists |
Studies
have shown that two great thought leaders of the West, Karl Marx and
Max Weber, neither of whom ever visited India, have and still continue
to exert dominant influence on Indian thinking on sociology and economic
development. Take Weber first. Modern West is rooted in Weber's concept
of methodological individualism that saw society as a collection of
individuals, rather than individuals as components of the society.
This thought founded
the concept of social engineering, which consisted of efforts by
government or private groups to influence popular attitudes and social
behaviour on a large scale. Just as the modern state rested on
individualism, rational choice and efficient market theories of modern
economics were premised on methodological individualism.
While communism
believed in social engineering through revolution and state, capitalism
trusted the efficient market hypothesis based on methodological
individualism to achieve the very end. Scholars like Karl Popper said
there was "no such thing as society". Traditional society was seen as an
impediment to individualism that produced entrepreneurs who disturbed
static societies and turned them dynamic. Weber also believed that
Catholic-Hindu-Buddhist cultures discouraged individualism and hence
lacked entrepreneurial spirit, whereas Protestantism encouraged both. He
added that belief in karma, rebirth and caste-base made Hindu-Buddhist
culture inappropriate for modern capitalism.
Likewise, Marx, in his writings in 1853, considered India as semi-barbaric not so much on economic logic, but on what he considered as a frozen and immobile local society, for whose backwardness he cited the custom of worship of monkeys and cows! Marx lauded the British for bringing about social revolution in India by destroying the socio-economic bases of the changeless Indian society, even though he mercifully conceded that the destruction was painful. With the demise of the Soviet Union, Marxian prescriptions have lost their vitality, just as the global economic meltdown in 2008 had led to the questioning of the premises on which the modern economic theories are founded in the guild of economists in the West itself. |
Proved wrong |
But
even earlier, the theories of both Marx and Weber were heavily
questioned by studies into world economic history by Paul Bairoch in
early 1980s and later by Angus Maddison (2001-2010). Both independently
reached the same conclusion, namely, that till almost mid-18th century
India and China were the world's leading economic engines. In 1750,
while India (24.5 per cent) and China (34 per cent) produced more than
twothirds of the global GDP, the combined share of the US and the UK was
just two per cent.
But by 1900, the
combined share of China (6.8 per cent) and India (1.8 per cent) had
crashed to 8.6 per cent, while that of the US and the UK reached 42 per
cent. Angus Maddison postulated that "much more of the backwardness of
the third world - read China and India - has to be explained by colonial
exploitation" and "much less of Europe's advantage can be due to
scientific precocity, centuries of slow accumulation, and organisational
and financial superiority."
That may be dismissed
as history. But Weber has also been proved wrong by the contemporary
rise of India and China. While he had concluded that Hindu-Buddhist
cultures were unfriendly to entrepreneurs, the Global Entrepreneurship
Monitor Executive Report 2002 of the London Business School placed India
ahead of the US and the entire West. The Total Entrepreneurial Activity
[TEA] Index measured by the study for India was 17.9, with China (12.3)
coming second. Others,including the US (10.5), Canada (8), the UK
(5.4), Germany (5.2) and France (3.2) were found way behind. Only after
this study, was Indian economic growth seen by the world as
entrepreneur-led. Weber's conclusion that Hindu-Buddhist culture does
not generate entrepreneurial spirit has been proven to have no
rationale.
|
Caste and entrepreneurship |
But
is entrepreneurial activity in India dominated by forward castes? No.
According to Economic Census of India (2005) which covered 42 million
non-farming enterprises employing 99 million people, the OBCs owned 43.5
per cent of all enterprises, as against their share of 41 per cent in
total population; Scheduled Castes (SCs) owned 9.8 per cent of all
enterprises, against their population of 16.4 per cent; Scheduled Tribes
(STs) owned 3.7 per cent against their population of 7.7 per cent.
It is true that the
SC/ST entrepreneurs are proportionately less. Yet, entrepreneurship
among them is higher than that among African- Americans in the US, who,
despite all the bounties given by the US government, have a
selfemployment ratio of 5.1 per cent, against their population of 13 per
cent.
But considering that
only 2.6 per cent of SCowned units and 3.6 per cent of those belonging
to STs have institutional finance, if more of it could be directed to
them, entrepreneurship among them can improve vastly. Surprisingly,
whether it is SC, ST or non-SC/ST entrepreneurs, more than 92 per cent
of them are self-financed.
Studies show that
competition within communities set off huge entrepreneurial movement
within - as one OBC or SC or ST person sets up a business, it encourages
and even compels others within their communities to copy him. This is
the effect of relation-based lifestyle and explains the growth of
community-driven industrial clusters in India.
According to UNIDO,
there are 350 small-scale industrial clusters and over 2,000 rural
artisan clusters, which contribute to 60 per cent of manufacture and 40
per cent of manufacturing employment. According to the Ministry of Small
Industries, there are 2,042 clusters, of which 819 are unregistered.
Most of them are communitydriven and evolved on their own, with even
education playing little role.
Take Tirupur, one of such clusters dominated by the Gounder community, which now exports close to $ 3 billion of knitwear.
A study by Boston
Consulting scholars has shown more than two-thirds of the exporters to
have studied not even till Std 12, with less than a tenth of them being
graduates. Another example is the diamond business in India, which is
entirely driven by the Palanpuri Jain and Patel communities. Nine out of
ten diamonds in the world are cut today in Gujarat. Of the 35 leading
diamond exporters of Surat, only two had completed higher secondary
education and others even less.
Caste now seems to be
emerging as social capital, as a vehicle for economic development.
Social capital is the product of relations - as distinct from contracts -
that creates kinship among people. Caste constitutes natural kinship.
The idea of social capital entered the global economic development
discourse in the early 1990s, thanks to Francis Fukuyama who expounded
relationbased socio-economy.
Caste in politics has
indeed done a lot of damage. But caste in economics seems to hold high
potential for India's growth. Will the policy makers move away from the
current paradigm on caste and look at India from within - particularly
after the IMF, World Bank and G-20 nations have noted that there is no
single economic model for the world, and each country has to work out
its own?
http://theotherside.org.in/june_2013/s_gurumurthy.html |
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Friday, 8 September 2017
Caste as social capital - S. Gurumurthy
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