‘Gather the pieces that are left over. Let nothing be wasted.’
These days everyone is talking about austerity measures. Maybe it started with Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi’s appeal. Shri Modi made requests of citizens: to stop buying gold, cut down on cooking oil, avoid imported goods and trips abroad, use less fertiliser and work from home and avoid excessive fuel burning and use public transport.
Technically, these are not austerity measures. These are simple but crucial appeals from a leader who wants to lead the nation from the front. Some of it are wasteful expenditures.
Such appeals could have come only from a sincere Prime Minister. In my view, as citizens in our seventies – some of us could have made such an appeal. In Nagaland, any village elder could have issued that appeal. In other words, these are not restrictions or anything compulsory.
People queue up to buy liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) cylinders at a gas agency office in Noida (social media)
Implementing these appeals is only in the larger interests of the nation. It was all a pragmatic thing to do.
Our respected Shri Modi ji wants people to do what is in the larger interest of the nation. Hence, the panic button of a crisis is uncalled for. But at the same time we cannot look the other way when the world is confronted with a war, especially in a region that supplies oil across the globe.
In the given circumstances, we all should be worried about the impending challenges that may greet us in months and years to come. As a nation, the Indian economy has done well no doubt. But we also know that the Indian economy is often a complex system.
Its operation depends on good monsoon rains and also that the oil prices are in check. So just to prepare well for a future crisis is a wise thing to do and the Prime Minister has rightly asked the nation to understand the gravity of the situation.
Car pooling and work from home are in other words good for the nation because in big cities, traffic congestion and pollution are major challenges.
Now, look at the other side of the coin. The US-Iran war and the resulting closure of the Strait of Hormuz have led to the Indian crude oil inventories experiencing a declining journey by an estimated 15 per cent.
Still the central government under the Prime Minister has handled things well. India is one of the few countries in the South East Asia that has not increased the prices of petrol and diesel for domestic consumers or rationed supplies.
The Oil Marketing Companies are today buying crude, gas and LPG at higher cost, but in order to protect consumers, they have been selling the final products at lower cost leading to massive mounting losses of up to Rs 1,000 crore per day. Can we imagine the scale of it?
In his appeal, the Prime Minister has also linked the global crisis to India’s agricultural imports, saying the country spends heavily on fertilisers sourced from overseas.


No comments:
Post a Comment