Nirmala Sitharaman’s ‘Swan Song’ Budget Speech Is Virtually An Ode To Modi

By K Raveendran

Finance Nirmala Sitharaman’s interim budget speech sounded like a well-crafted compendium of compliments to Prime Minister Narendra Modi. It was as though she was singing her swan song, and an ode to the greatness of her mentor, rather than on what the government planned to do in the days ahead. It also had a well-disguised appeal for votes in the 2024 elections.

As such, the focus was more on the track record of the Modi government since 2014, and there was no attempt to apportion any part of the credit to herself as finance minister for more than one term. It listed the achievements of the Modi government and reeled out pieces of statistics to support her claims. At the same time she did not forget to flog the dead horse, by comparing Modi government’s achievements to the ‘mismanagement’ during the previous regimes. In fact, she promised a whitepaper on the subject.

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Obviously, there was no dearth of platitudes, including inclusivity and ‘whole of nation’ approach, which the finance minister claimed was a marked departure from the ‘provisioning up to village level’ approach followed by the previous governments, which was built around entitlements. She also sought to showcase the new kind of ‘socialism in action’ by the Modi government in which there were only four castes: ‘Mahilayen’ (women), ‘Yuva’ (youth) and ‘annadata’ (farmer), a new line that Modi has been propounding at his roadshows and rallies. Also, there was enough stress on how previous regimes used social justice more as a political slogan rather than as an administrative goal.

The message appeared to have hit the bulls eye. Prime minister Narendra Modi was seen thumping the desk non-stop as his trusted minister wound up her speech, heaping praise on his vision and commitment to the poor and vulnerable sections of the people. Modi gave the finance minister full marks, when he described her budget as ‘inclusive and innovative’. He couldn’t hold back his penchant for eye-catching numbers and terminologies by describing the current situation as a ‘sweet spot’ in which capital expenditure has been at a record high of Rs. 11,11,111 crore.

As an interim budget, the task cut out for Nirmala Sitharaman was rather limited. So, there were hardly any dramatic announcements. No changes were proposed in taxes and levies nor structures and administration. Here again, claims of benefits and improvements were benchmarked against records of governments before 2014.

For most part, Nirmala Sitharaman sounded like delivering an election speech. She claimed people are living better and earning better. Average real incomes have increased by fifty per cent while inflation remained moderate. “People are getting empowered, equipped and enabled to pursue their aspirations. There is effective and timely delivery of programmes and of large projects,” she claimed.

Empowerment of women was a theme that run through the presentation. The finance minister referred to the empowering women through entrepreneurship, ease of living, and dignity in the past ten years. These included 30 crore Mudra Yojana loans to women entrepreneurs, increase in female enrolment in higher education by 28 percent in ten years and In STEM courses to 43 percent of enrolment, which was claimed to be one of the highest in the world.

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The listed women-friendly initiatives also included making ‘Triple Talaq’ illegal, reservation of one-third seats for women in the Lok Sabha and State legislative assemblies, and giving over seventy per cent houses under PM Awas Yojana in rural areas to women as sole or joint owners.

The finance minister further exuded confidence that these programmes would continue in the next five years as she was confident that the voters of the country would bless the Modi government with another tenure.“With confidence arising from strong and exemplary track-record of performance and progress earning ‘Sabka Vishwas’, the next five years will be years of unprecedented development, and golden moments to realize the dream of developed India@2047. The trinity of demography, democracy and diversity backed by ‘Sabka Prayas’ has the potential to fulfill aspirations of every Indian,” she declared. (IPA Service)

The post Nirmala Sitharaman’s ‘Swan Song’ Budget Speech Is Virtually An Ode To Modi first appeared on Latest India news, analysis and reports on IPA Newspack.

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