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The Rediff Special

'If we ignore the long-term good of society, we will only invite harm upon ourselves'

L K Advani On December 11, the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry hosted its 69th annual session. Its theme: Success through synergy between government and business and India and the world. The keynote address for this session, attended by important players from the Indian business industry, was delivered by BJP leader Lal Kishinchand Advani. Excerpts:

Synergy' is an important buzz word today especially, it seems, in the world of business. Business is all the time looking for synergy in everything it does: in its production techniques and technologies, between its processes of backward and forward integration, between the various kinds of its human resources and also between companies engaged in compatible areas of activity. 'Growth through synergy' is an axiomatic statement of modern business. But synergy is also one of those seminal concepts which has a generalised meaning transcending the specific confines of business.

One of the best books I have read during the year is Stephen Covey's The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People. It presents a holistic, principle-centered approach for solving personal and professional problems.

One of the habits Covey has specifically identified is the ability to synergise. He writes: "Synergy is the essence of principle-centered leadership. Simply defined, it means that the whole is greater than the sum of its parts. One plus one equals three or more. The essence of synergy is to value differences, to respect them, to build on strengths, to compensate for weaknesses."

At the outset, I must point out that, though synergy may be a new word in business parlace, the concept of compatiability and harmony between two entities providing potential for growth and new creation is indeed the cornerstone of this country's fundamental world view.

Synergy and integral humanism

The late Pandit Deendayal Upadhyaya, who was the president of the Bharatiya Jana Sangh and whose 'integral humanism' is the guiding theory for the BJP, believed that harmony and compatibility - and not conflict - was the basic law of nature, including the nature of human society. He expounded the meaning of the 'four purusharthas' or four-fold goals of life - dharma or right conduct; artha or satisfaction of material needs; kama or satisfaction of sensuous needs and moksha or communion with the Creator, thereby fulfilling spiritual needs - by outlining a societal structure which makes it possible for its members to cooperate in the pursuit of all these goals.

This has been the viewpoint of all our ancient thinkers and social reformers, as also modern ones like Swami Vivekananda, Mahatma Gandhi, Rabindranath Tagore and Yogi Aurobindo. I am saying this by way of a conceptual preface only, to underline the fact that "Success through synergy between government and business and between India and the world" is a perfectly Swadeshi thought.

Five expectations from a sound economy

Broadly stated, what does a society expect from its economic system? I would list five basic expectations:

  1. Generate real, not just notional, wealth for the nation in the form of a cornucopia of goods and services to meet the needs of the people.
  2. Create employment and productive opportunities for all, in a structure which allows for minimum socio-economic disparities.
  3. Develop the country's physical infrastructure, which acts as a growth multiplier, as well as the social infrastructure in areas of education, health-care, drinking water, housing, sanitation, etc, which helps to uplift the living conditions of the disadvantaged sections of the society.
  4. Protect the environment and pass it on unharmed and unpolluted as a precious inheritance to whom it truly belongs - our future generations.
  5. Achieve all this in a manner so as to consciously enrich the cultural and spiritual base of society.

Why we have failed

It is obvious that India has performed rather poorly in all these respects. This, according to me, is because both the government and business seem to be working for themselves instead of working as partners and striving together to serve their common constituency: the people. In order to create true synergy between government and business, they have to question themselves at each step: Are we guided in this by what is good for society, or by only what is good for ourselves?

For the purpose of this discussion, I shall extend the meaning of government to include the political class as a whole and assert that if the political and business classes pursue only what they narrowly consider to be good for themselves, unmindful of the long-term good of society, they will only invite ignominy and harm upon themselves. Let me give a couple of examples...

If our pharmaceutical industry and government had acted together in a healthy partnership to promote public health, instead of adopting an increasingly expansive and narrowly-focussed private health care programme, we would perhaps have been spared the shame of the dengue epidemic in the national capital and the plague in Surat.

Similarly, if the building industry and government had acted together in an enlightened partnership, we would have been spared, at least to some extent, the ubiquitous ugliness and decay in almost all our cities. And our builders, contractors and other sections of the construction industry - which ought to be seen as a vital and proud player in the nation building industry - would not have earned the bad reputation they presently possess.

Continued
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