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Commentary/ Mani Shankar Aiyar

If business becomes politics for the Indian capitalist, why should it be any less so for the foreign capitalist?

When, therefore, the foreigner becomes a stake-holder in our economy, it will not be long before he (or do I mean she?) becomes a stake-holder in our polity.

Rebecca Mark has taught us how this can be achieved. She remote controls even the remote controller. Foreign stake-holders will have quite as many political demands as the Dalit Peedit Sangh or the CII. Liberalisers of the CII kind hate this argument because they say neither they nor the foreign investor is in politics; they are in business. The day of both Jagat Seth and the East India Company are, they insist, over.

But if business becomes politics for the Indian capitalist, why should it be any less so for the foreign capitalist?

Deep pockets are useful for many things, including making deep pockets even deeper. It matters little whether the pocket has been sewed on in Fifth Avenue, Manhattan or by the darzi round the corner. Both need to be filled and both need to be deepened.

If, therefore, CII can become the third chamber of our democracy in the 50th year of Independence, there is no reason why Chase or Citibank cannot evolve into the fourth chamber well before we are into our centenary celebrations.

There is something demeaning to national self-respect about running scared of the foreign hand. But it is self-defeating to imagine that foreign capital can enter the country without assuming a political role.

It will. It has.

The central point of the BJP-Shiv Sena election campaign -- throwing Enron into the Arabian Sea -- has itself been thrown into the Arabian Sea. In the liberalised/globalised marketplace, it will not take too long for the politician to discover just how much deeper is the firangi pocket than the desi pocket. After all, Bill Clinton is in trouble not because of the millions he took from Americans but the billions he collected from strange-looking Asian characters with slit eyes and slit pockets.

The economy cannot get globalised without its polity also getting globalised. Perhaps then will be the time for ASSOCHAM to become Only Whites again. And oust CII from its determining role in the destiny of the nation.

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Mani Shankar Aiyar
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