Recently, the central
government disclosed that its total spend on the
Delhi Commonwealth Games is likely to be Rs 11,494
crore. This number is disconcerting for two reasons.
One, because it is an
order-of-magnitude away from its original estimate
of Rs 655 crore.
Two, because the real
cost of the games will be much higher if we were to
include: Rs 16,560 crore additionally spent by Delhi
government on upgrading the capital’s infrastructure
— a new airport terminal, wider roads, new flyovers,
Metro rail extensions, and so on; Real cost of
labour — labourers got sub-minimum wages, worked in
unsafe conditions, and were housed in sub-human
tenements; The human cost of driving the poor out
of streets and out of sight.
The term ‘commonwealth’ originally meant
public welfare, things that are for the greater good
of society. Do the Commonwealth Games pass this
commonwealth test? Is this Rs 28,000-crore drain on
public funds for the greater common good?
Before I respond to the question, let me clarify my
position on the Games themselves. The desire to
celebrate runs deep in our collective psyche. The
teachings of a spiritual master, the creation of a
nation, the birth of a child —
celebrating each of them is important because they
are our cultural compass; they remind us of things
we value most. There are few things as uplifting as
watching a sportsperson push physical and mental
limits to achieve the incredible. The Commonwealth
Games, like the Olympics, are a celebration of the
human spirit of excellence. Therefore, in itself,
the Games are a worthy endeavour.
However, given the thousands of crores being spent
on the Delhi Commonwealth Games, we need to ask if
this is money spent wisely. As a country, we are
constantly forced to compromise on funds. For
instance, India needs more schools, and the existing
schools need better infrastructure and more
teachers. This will require us to spend 6% of our
GDP on education, but we manage just over half that
figure. Similarly, the country has very little
sports infrastructure on the ground. To encourage
sports, our first step has to be to ensure children
get access to playgrounds, good equipment and
quality coaching. To not have this, and to instead
spend on a grand sporting spectacle sounds like we
have got our priorities wrong.
Despite the wonderful economic strides of the past
two decades, the reality is that India is a poor
country. A recent study by the University of Oxford
measured levels of education, health and living
standard in the world’s poorest countries. This
study shows that India continues to be predominantly
poor. In fact, there are more poor people in eight
Indian states than in the 26 poorest African
countries combined.
Delhi has amongst the lowest occurrences of poverty
in India, while at the other extreme, 81% of Bihar’s
population is poor. No surprise then that many of
the 100,000 labourers who worked for unfair wages to
prepare Delhi for the Commonwealth Games were from
Bihar.
The capital already boasts of some of India’s best
infrastructure. Instead of spending crores to widen
Delhi’s roads, should we not prioritize building
roads and schools in Bihar where none exist in the
first place? If we have Rs 500 crore to spare,
should we use it to build basic sports facilities in
thousands of government schools, or should we spend
it all on renovating one stadium?
In real terms, such choices are not all that easy to
make. For instance, it is important for our cities
to have great infrastructure, and money spent on a
metropolis like Delhi will in turn catalyse our
national economy. Our leaders have to constantly
juggle and prioritize among many equally deserving
needs, and it is not as if they are uninformed or
wrongly intentioned. Over the last decade, the
Indian government has
taken
important strides in social welfare and inclusive
development. The National Rural Employment Guarantee
Act and Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan are but two examples.
However, it is not enough to have specific schemes
such as the NREGA. Rather, equity and inclusion
considerations must underlie each and every policy
decision. Let me suggest that all public policy must
recognize that GDP growth is meaningless if it does
not uplift the most underprivileged of our country.
How can we forget that for Rs 28,000 crore we could
have established primary schools and health centres
in tens of thousands of villages?
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