The Economist - USA (2022-02-12)

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TheEconomistFebruary12th 2022 29
Asia

DemocracyinIndia

The ailing body politic


I


n the nextfour weeks some 175m Indi­
ans  will  vote  in  elections  across  five
states  with  a  combined  population  ap­
proaching 300m. Their legislatures will de­
termine  the  make­up  of  the  Rajya  Sabha,
the  upper  house  of  Parliament,  and  thus
the  selection  of  the  president.  The  out­
come in Uttar Pradesh, India’s most popu­
lous state, could well shake Narendra Mo­
di, India’s most domineering prime minis­
ter in decades. As an advertisement for de­
mocracy,  India’s  periodic  mobilisation  of
millions of polling officers to provide a say
for hundreds of millions of voters is diffi­
cult to beat. 
But while the face of Indian democracy,
in the form of elections, looks healthy, the
rest of the body is not. From courts and po­
lice to politicians and parties to campaign
finance  and  the  mechanics  of  legislation,
the bones, sinews and organs of Indian de­
mocracy  look  alarmingly  unwell.  Accord­
ing  to  the  Democracy  Index  produced  by
the Economist Intelligence Unit, our sister
company,  over  the  past  decade  India  has
slipped or stayed still on every measure ex­
cept political participation (see chart 1). 

Anx­rayofIndia’sParliamentreveals
several missingorhalf­functioning vital
systems.Thenumberofdaysperyearthat
thenationalParliamentactuallymeetshas
fallenfrommorethan 100 inthe1950sto 66
inthe2014­19termandfurtherstillduring
covid­19.America’sCongress,bycompari­
son,istypicallyinsessionformorethan
160 daysa year.

Manylawsdostillgetpassed,butthey
receivelessandlessscrutiny.Thepropor­
tionofbillsreferredtostandingcommit­
teesinthelowerhouse,theLokSabha,has
droppedfromaround60­70%underthe
previousgovernmentto27%inMrModi’s
firsttermandjust13%inhissecond.Atten­
dancerecordsincommitteemeetingsin
bothhousesforthepastthreeyearsreveal
a meagreaverageof46%.
Ofthe 15 billsrushedintolawduringthe
monsoon sessionlastyear, notone had
beendeliberatedincommittee,andmany
werepassed byperfunctoryvoice votes.
This was partly because of opposition
walkoutsandnoisyprotests.ButMrMo­
di’sBharatiyaJanataParty(bjp) similarly
rammedthrougha packageofagriculture­
marketreformsin2020.Theresult:a 14­
monthmassrevoltbyfarmers,endingonly
whenthelawswerescrapped.
Statelegislaturesarenobetter.Forall
the fuss—and immense expense—over
thismonth’selectionstothestateassem­
blyofUttarPradesh,thefactisthatthebo­
dymetforonly 17 dayslastyearanda mere
13 in2020.Thiscompareswithmorethan
80 daysinthe1950s.
Itisnotjustthebjpatfault;thelegisla­
tureinUttarPradeshmetonjust 24 daysin
theyearbeforethepartytookpower.Con­
gress­ruledPunjab,whoselawmakersmet
fora stately 11 days,waslastyear’slowest
scorer.And whileits rivalsbemoanthe
bjp’sbullyingofthenationalParliament,
theopposition­dominatedassemblyofthe
stateofMaharashtraattemptedtobar 12

D ELHI
Elections aside, the main elements of India’sdemocracyareinpoorhealth

→Alsointhissection
30 CleaningupBangkok’sstreets
31 NewZealand’sunaffordablehousing
31 ElectioneeringinthePhilippines
32 SouthKorea’sgrowingarmsexports
33 Banyan:Japan’s“newcapitalism”

Vital statistics
India, Democracy Index score, 10=maximum

Source:EIU

1

Civil liberties

Political culture

Political
participation

Functioning of
government

Electoral process
and pluralism

Overall score

1086420

20 202
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