Skip to main content

Equality for what?

 Poverty is the effect of inequality as well as the prime signifier of inequality. In a report that came out in 2017, it was found that income inequality in India is at the highest level since 1922 and that the top 1% earners corner 22% of income. This can only have increased during the pandemic.

To be unequal is to be denied the opportunity to participate in social,



economic, and cultural transactions from a plane of equality. This violates the code of justice. People who have been wronged are entitled to ask for justice. If justice is not delivered, inequalities are reinforced and compounded over time.

The implications of inequality violates a basic democratic norm: the equal standing of citizens. There is therefore urgent need, in the face of Government inaction and insensitivity towards people trapped in inequality as a social relation, to invoke the collective conscience of Indian citizens.

Neera Chandhoke

Ahead of the upcoming Union Budget, the Congress has stated that the Narendra Modi government should work to address the ‘economic epidemic’. They said that the income disparity between the rich and poor has increased during the pandemic. In this article dated September 14, 2017, Neera Chandhoke explains how inequality is fundamentally against justice and democracy.

In 1820 the German philosopher Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, in his magnificently crafted Philosophy of Right, had written with some despair of the moral squalor and of the ravages that poverty brings in its wake. The state of poverty, he argued, is not an aberration, it is a product of industrial society, of the overproduction and underconsumption which marks this social order. But it is precisely society that banishes its victims to the twilight zone of collective life. Here, removed from the advantages of solidarity that civil society offers, the poor are reduced to a heap of fragmented atoms, rabble, poebel. When the standard of living of a large mass of people falls below a certain subsistence level, he wrote, we see a loss of the sense of right and wrong, of honesty and of self-respect. “Against nature man can claim no right, but once society is established, poverty immediately takes the form of a wrong done to one class by another.”

Hegel suggests that poverty is a social phenomenon. One, society is complicit in the creation and recreation of poverty. Destitution, that is, is the outcome of a skewed economy. Two, poverty breeds unfortunate consequences, such as suffering, which seriously demoralises human beings. Three, the existence of large numbers of the poor pose a direct threat to the social order, simply because the poor are (justly) resentful of their exclusion from the benefits of society.

We should be seriously reflecting on Hegel’s criticism of a society that refuses to correct the wrongs it has heaped on its own people, in the light of the research findings of the economist Thomas Piketty and his colleague Lucas Chancel.

Inequality in India

In a paper aptly titled ‘Indian income inequality, 1922-2014: From British Raj to Billionaire Raj?’, they conclude that income inequality in India is at the highest level since 1922, when the country’s income tax law was conceived, and that the top 1% earners corner 22% of income. These research findings should send a powerful warning signal to power elites, leaders who prefer to concentrate on the politics of beef, brutal repression of dissent, and curtailment of basic human freedoms, even as the lives of thousands of Indians are mired in mind-numbing poverty.

There is more to the proposition that some persons are poor beyond belief, and others are rich beyond belief in India. P is poor, we can say, when she does not possess access to the basic resources which enable q, or s, or m to consume nutritious food, avoid ill health, attend school, take up a job, and own a home, let alone go on holiday or possess a car. This implies that p is not just poor, she is unequal to q, s, or m, since the latter three, unlike p, have access to certain advantages that p does not. Poverty is the effect of inequality as well as the prime signifier of inequality. And inequality is demeaning.

Implications for society

Arguably, inequality is not only a matter of statistics. It is a shattering reflection on the kind of society we live in. Logically, if the economic ordering of society is responsible for ill-being, it is obliged to remedy the wrongs that it has visited upon the heads of the poor. This constitutes a basic code of justice. People who have been wronged are entitled to ask for justice. If justice is not delivered, inequalities are reinforced and compounded over time.

Resultantly, people fated to occupy the lowliest rungs of the social ladder are not only denied access to basic material requirements that enable them to live a decent life, they are likely to be socially overlooked, politically irrelevant except in times of elections when their votes bring parties into power, disdained, and subjected to disrespect in and through the practices of everyday life. To be unequal is to be denied the opportunity to participate in social, economic, and cultural transactions from a plane of equality.

Starkly put, the presence of massive inequality reflects sharply and pejoratively on the kind of social relations that we find in India. Because these social relationships are indisputably unequal, they cannot but be entrenched in massive discrimination and exploitation. Can we reflect on inequality without taking on exploitation and discrimination? And unless we confront these background inequalities directly, will not inequality continue to be produced and reproduced along with the production and reproduction of a lopsided social order, indeed as an integral part of this order?

Morality of mutual respect

Let us not understate the implications of inequality, it violates a basic democratic norm: the equal standing of citizens. Persons have equal standing because each human being has certain capacities in common with other human beings, for instance, the capacity to make her own history in concert with other human beings. Of course the histories that persons make might not be the histories they chose to make, but this is not the issue at hand. What is important is that each person realises this ability.

The principle of equal standing generates at least two robust principles of democratic morality. For one, equality is a relation that obtains between persons in respect of some fundamental characteristic that they share in common. Equality is, morally speaking, a default principle. Therefore, and this is the second postulate, persons should not be discriminated against on grounds such as race, caste, gender, ethnicity, sexual preferences, disability, or class. These features of the human condition are morally irrelevant.

These two postulates of political morality yield the following implications. To treat persons equally because they possess equal standing is to treat them with respect. The idea that one should treat persons with respect not only because some of these persons possess some special skill or talent, for example skilled cricketers, gifted musicians, or literary giants, but because persons are human beings, is by now part of common sense morality. If someone were to ask, ‘equality for what’, we can answer that equality assures equal standing and respect, and respect is an essential prerequisite for the making of human beings who can participate in the multiple transactions of society from a position of confidence and self-respect. If they cannot do so, the government is simply not taking the well-being of its citizens seriously.

There is urgent need, in the face of government inaction and insensitivity towards people trapped in inequality as a social relation to invoke the collective conscience of Indian citizens. If the right to equality is violated, citizens should be exercised or agitated about this violation. But for this to occur, for society to feel deeply about the right on offer, we have to incorporate the right to equality into political thinking, into our values, and into political vocabularies. The project requires the harnessing of creative imagination and courage on the one hand, and careful reasoning, persuasion, and dialogue on the other. The task also demands the investment of rather high degrees of energy and time. But this is essential because a political consensus on what constitutes, or should constitute the basic rules of society, is central to our collective lives. The political is not a given, it has to be constructed, as Karl Marx had told us long ago, through determined and sustained political intervention

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

A GLIMPSE OF ONE OF THE FIRST LOVE.......

True spirit amongst aspirants TUMHE DEKHA TO LAGA KI...  ABHI ABHI MERA JANM HUA HAI, TERE AANE KI AAHAT, MERE DIL KI YE GHABRAHAT..., ROSHANI KA TUMHARE SATH AKAAR, KYA YE HAI MERE MAN KI PUKAR..., TU MUSKURAI MAI STABDH RAH GAYA, HAN MAIN BHI MUSKURAYA...... AUR  MUJHE PYAR HO GAYA.... MAIN YE SONCHATA HE RAH GAYA... ISWAR AAJ SURYODAY KE ANTIM PAHAL ME, RASTA KYUN BHOOL GAYA..... IN ENGLISH WHEN I SAW YOU I FELT THAT I WAS BORN JUST NOW, THE FEAR OF YOUR ARRIVAL, THE FEAR OF MY HEART, THE LIGHT WITH YOU, IS THIS THE CALL OF MY HEART...., YOU REMAINED STILL IN  SMILE, YES I ALSO SMILED IN LOVE  I HAVE BEEN THINKING THAT WHY DID GOD FORGET THIS WAY  IN THE LAST MOMENT OF SUN.....

VAGUENESS IN FEDERALISM......

 Chhattisgarh Chief Minister Bhupesh Baghel and Rajasthan Chief Minister Ashok Gehlot on Friday wrote to Prime Minister Narendra Modi opposing the proposed amendments to the Indian Administrative Service (Cadre) Rules 1954. The proposed amendments will give overriding powers to the Union government to post All India Services (AIS) officers such as the IAS, the Indian Police Service and the Indian Forest Service (IFoS) to Central Ministries and departments without the State government’s nod. Mr. Baghel and Mr. Gehlot are second in line after West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee to convey their opposition against the proposed amendments to Mr. Modi. Sense of ‘instability’ Mr. Baghel said the amendments could be misused and “a sense of instability and ambiguity is likely to arise among the officers of the All India Services, who are posted at various important posts in various districts and also at the State level.” He said the proposed amendment granted the Centra...

ACTUAL FEELING OF SOLVING REAL.......

to prepare you to face Aasma hai behad khoobsoorat, Rangaeen roshni aa rahi hai falak pe..... Sampoorn dharatal hai bheega,  Jeevan ke pahar mein Ambar bhi mahak raha, Vasudha ke upvan mein Chintan mein hai dhara, Aas lagaye sunya se, Milogi mujhe ya rah jaogi chitiz mein...... IN ENGLISH The sky is very beautiful, Colorful light coming on the sky.... It's complete strike, It will be wet in the mountain of life, The sky is also fragrant(garden) in the wake of vasudha (earth), The river is in the thoughts. Hope you will meet sunya(sky) or you will remain in the chitiz(at the location where sky and earth will meet)............ SKY MEANS SOMEONE ELSE EARTH MEANS MYSELF.

TOURISM IS THE NEED OF HOUR WHY ?

BIG QUESTION There is an awareness in the government that the absence of tourist infrastructure is a major reason why India loses out to Southeast Asia.                 India has a vast basket of living and diverse cultural traditions, Traditional expressions, intangible cultural heritage comprising masterpieces which need institutional support and encouragement with a view to addressing areas critical for the survival and propagation of these forms of cultural heritage. Preserving our heritage is enshrined as a Fundamental Duty in our Constitution .   STEPS HAVE BEEN TAKEN Prime Minister Narendra Modi recently inaugurated the Kushinagar international airport.   ● The airport in eastern UP, the third international airport in the election-bound state, will mainly service the Buddhist tourism circuit. ●   The Sri Lankan Airlines flight carrying monks and dignitaries was the first to land at the airport. st Asian nations such as Indon...

The Budget spells green shoots for agri-subsectors

At the time it was presented, and in the context of the Assembly elections in five States — now underway in Uttar Pradesh, Punjab, Uttarakhand, Manipur and Goa https://sites.google.com/view/insightsdev/home  the Union Budget was expected to contain measures to boost consumption expenditure. But the Government chose instead to focus more on capital expenditure. There were no major announcements on agriculture or rural development. Given the recent turmoil as a result of the farmers’ protests and the repeal of the farm laws, this was a little surprising. However, a closer look at the Budget presents a different picture. Allotments, key subsectors It is important to look at the budgetary allocations for agriculture from the perspective of agricultural growth and farmers’ income. Agriculture has registered a robust performance during the COVID-19 pandemic and has clocked decent growth rates of 4.3% and 3.6% during 2019-20 and 2020-21. Growth is projected to be about 3.9% i...

GLOBAL HEALTH PROFILE VULNERABILITY.......

  THE ONGOING GLOBAL HEALTH EMERGENCY HAS PARALYSED ECONOMIES WORLDWIDE AND REVEALED THAT THE HEALTH SYSTEMS IN MOST COUNTRIES ARE UNDER-PREPARED TO COPE WITH ANY MAJOR HEALTH EMERGENCY. It has posed large-scale health challenges as millions of people (172,430,557 as on 3 June 2021) have been infected and lakhs of casualties (3,706,682 as on 3 June 2021) have occurred. The importance of public health does not need elucidation as the pandemic has revealed that inadequate attention to public health can have disastrous consequences on the masses. High-income countries such as Canada, Sweden and Germany, despite their exceptional public health systems, have had to struggle to contain the pandemic by experimenting with a number of uncertain alternatives. Understandably, the struggle for middle and low-income countries, having weak public healthcare systems, limited finances and large populations has been grim.   India too, has been grappling with the pandemic and the ...

first ever scientific bird atlas......

 The Kerala Bird Atlas (KBA), the first-of-its-kind State-level bird atlas in India, has created solid baseline data about the distribution and abundance of bird species across all major habitats, giving an impetus to futuristic studies. Conducted as a citizen science-driven exercise with the participation of over 1,000 volunteers of the birdwatching community, the KBA has been prepared based on systematic surveys held twice over 60 days a year during the wet (July to September) and dry (January to March) seasons between 2015 and 2020. The KBA accounts for nearly three lakh records of 361 species, including 94 very rare species, 103 rare species, 110 common species, 44 very common species, and 10 most abundant species. “The KBA offers authentic, consistent and comparable data through random sampling from the geographical terrain split into nearly 4,000 grids. We are in the process of bringing out papers on interesting trends based on a scientific analysis of solid dat...

INS L3

  so good morning everyone so welcome to the third class and uh in this class probably we'll be covering our backlogs and we'll be entering the extremist era sorry moderate era and once we are done with the moderates we'll have to rush to the extremists and then probably will have to welcome gandhi so always like will keep the class interesting and entertaining but today in order to cover the backlogs i need to cut other stuffs and focus only on the subject fine please bear with me for today and tomorrow onwards the classes will be as usual fine uh this is a request on my side and sorry for the inconvenience cost yesterday there was a like power cut for last three to four hours yesterday therefore like there was a failure of the system and uh that led to the inconvenience we regret it fine so we'll start so yesterday like let us have a slight recap of things that we studied yesterday one thing is like good morning and even today please promise fine if you want to meet g...

R&D .......ANTRIX PVT ORGANIZATION UNDER ISRO

  The Antrix-Devas saga may be the most high-profile case of a technology deal gone sour in India, but little has changed in India to incentivise high-technology deals involving private and public companies and prevent similar occurrences in the future. The Supreme Court upheld a decision by the National Company Law Tribunal to disband Devas Multimedia, though this is not necessarily the end to the dispute. International courts have given verdicts favouring the private consortium seeking compensation from Antrix for cancelling a 2005 deal to lease satellite spectrum to the company to offer multimedia services. The deal was cancelled in 2011 by Antrix, a public company and marketing arm of the Indian Space Research Organisation, on grounds of “national security”. Clarity lacking Though there have been several space missions and the government has announced steps to have greater collaboration with the private sector, experts say nothing rules out the reoccurrence of a s...

MY SONOROUS JOURNEY FOR BENGALURU.....

Is jahan mein hai aur na hoga Mujhsa koi bhi kushnaseeb.