The economy has suffered during the last four to five years. The reputation of India has taken a beating abroad during the last six to eight years. During 1999-2009, when China was mentioned three times in boardrooms abroad, India was mentioned at least once. Today, India is not mentioned even once when China is mentioned 30 times. Good governance rests on seven important attributes: equity, fairness, transparency, accountability, honesty, secularism and a robust, consistent and responsive legal system. Most public governance experts tell me that we have seen the steepest fall in these attributes during the last five years. Therefore, the first task for the new PM is to restore these attributes at least to the level they were during the 1990s.
If we want to raise the hope and confidence of the Indian youth, we have to create jobs for them — jobs with good disposable income. We have to create 150-200 million jobs during the coming decade. The only way we can spend more on social welfare programmes is by collecting more taxes that come from growth in corporate activities. The new PM has to articulate India’s commitment to the seven attributes. Our embassies, immigration and customs officials must be empowered to make the visit of every foreigner a pleasant experience. Our state governments must become active partners in this task.
A trusted and well-informed Cabinet group should visit the global capitals every three months and reiterate these messages and make sure that enough investments come in. We have excellent people to lead such groups on both sides of the aisles. These are modern, well-informed individuals who can raise the confidence of senior corporate leaders.
The new PM must accept that, at this stage of our development, jobs can be created only in urban and semi-urban areas. The need of the day is to make our cities more attractive not just for Indians but for foreigners too. We must keep our ego down and realise that the foreigners have umpteen global options for investment. The PM must make the visit and stay of foreigners hasslefree. It is amusing that the visa-on-arrival facility is not available for even one country that is among our top five trading partners in software. The PM must create a ministry of urban governance. An apolitical expert with a proven track record has to lead this ministry since this is essentially a Centre-state issue.
It is time that we made life better for our poor people. We have to focus on education, healthcare, nutrition and shelter. All programmes that provide such facilities must use Aadhaar identity to deliver services efficiently and without corruption through a voucher scheme. You cannot run any such directed schemes without strengthening Aadhaar. Therefore, the new PM must appoint a smart, modern and a results-oriented technocrat to run UIDAI. While continuing with the right to education ideology, the new government must provide full subsidy to the private sector players in these fields through vouchers without making these institutions debilitated.
Taking about education brings me to initiatives in higher education. The new PM must give top priority to pass Bills on welcoming foreign universities and starting innovation universities. Without adequate focus on research and higher education, India’s future is shaky.
Ever since the mid-1970s, population control has been given up. I have hardly seen any PM speak about it since then. It is time we resurrected this important initiative.
Peace at our borders is extremely important and the new PM must give priority to that task. We have not seen any major move with Pakistan since A B Vajpayee’s time. It is time we acted as the elder brother to Pakistan and helped that country overcome the trauma they are facing. A happy India requires a happy Pakistan.