MARGIN SPEAK
10 january 19, 2013 vol xlviii no 3 EPW Economic & Political Weekly
Anand Teltumbde (tanandraj@gmail.com) is a
writer and civil rights activist with the
Committee for the Protection of Democratic
Rights in Mumbai.
FDI in Retail
and Dalit Entrepreneurs
Anand Teltumbde
Questioning the thesis that
foreign direct investment in
retail will have a favourable
effect on the fl edgling class of
dalit entrepreneurs in India
because processes of capitalist
modernisation automatically
undermine the signifi cance of
social identities like caste, creed
and race, this article argues that
only a minuscule section of dalits
has benefi ted from globalisation
while the majority, being
"uncompetitive", has been pushed
to suffer ontological insecurities
and existential uncertainties.
E
conomic issues, barring reservation,
do not count in the political culture
of dalits. If Mayawati's Bahujan
Samaj Party (BSP) Members of Parliament
absented themselves from voting in the
Lok Sabha and voted in the Rajya Sabha
in favour of up to 51% foreign direct
investment (FDI) in multi-brand retail
with the sole purpose of supporting the
United Progressive Alliance government,
it was not for any intrinsic economic
merit of the case but for keeping "communal forces" at bay.
Dalit apathy towards economic issues
can be traced to their contention with
the early communists who had made a
dogma of the Marxian metaphor of base
and superstructure to ridicule all noneconomic struggles, including those of
Babasaheb Ambedkar. It resulted in alienating the dalit movement not only from
the left movements but also from economics in general. In this situation, it was
a pleasant surprise to see an article in The
Times of India (TOI) (5 December 2012) –
"To Empower Dalits, Do Away with India's
Antiquated Retail Trading System" by
Chandrabhan Prasad and Milind Kamble,
both evangelists of dalit capitalism – lauding the government decision to allow up to
51% FDI in multi-brand retail, which paves
the way for the entry of the big global
retail chains like Wal-Mart and Texaco.
FDI and Dalit Entrepreneurs
Prasad and Kamble try to establish that FDI
in retail will have a favourable effect "on
the fl edgling class of dalit entrepreneurs
in India". The main plank of their argument is that the traditional, caste-bound
retail sector does not provide opportunities
for dalit entrepreneurs. FDI is modern and
caste neutral, hence favourable to dalit
entrepreneurship. In support of the argument the authors cited two studies. The
fi rst is a study on dalit enterprise by the
Centre for the Advanced Study of India
(CASI) at the University of Pennsylvania,
which found that most of the dalit entrepreneurs surveyed were fi rst-timers who
had started their business after 1991 when
the pro cess of liberalisation began. It is
construed that the neo-liberal reforms
have been greatly benefi cial to dalits in
general and dalit entrepreneurs in particular. CASI researchers had found "dalit
entrepreneurs of different shades enga ged
in manufacturing heavy duty cranes,
constructing tunnels, building bridges and
building machines". The second, supplementing the fi rst, concerned a search for
dalit adhatiyas (middlemen) in Delhi's
Azadpur fruit and vegetable mandi by the
members of the Dalit Indian Chamber of
Commerce and Industry (DICCI), obviously
fi nding none.
Prasad and Kamble attribute the phenomenon of post-1991 dalit enterprise to the
impetus given to outsourcing and ancillaries industries by global competition. In
this, there was an explosion of entrepreneurship in which dalits also found their
place. The argument is exten ded to syllogistically establish that the tools of modernity will help India progress faster and
FDI being one such tool will surely benefi t
dalits. Of course, the interests of the
dalit masses and dalit entrepreneurs are
assumed to be the same. The authors of the
TOI piece further claim that FDI-propelled
organised retail would provide job opportunities to thousands of food technologists, MBAs, and CAs. Moreover, manufacturers of refrigerated food vans and refrigerators would also generate more jobs.
The dictum that processes of capitalist
modernisation automatically undermine
the signifi cance of social identities like
caste, creed and race, and their role in
affecting economic outcomes is not new.
One could intuitively agree that social
identities restrict market competition, impede institutional change, raise transaction
costs and make markets non- competitive
and that market-driven economies would
undermine ascription-based social identities. Writing in New York Daily Tribune
(5 August 1853), Marx noted:
The railway-system will therefore become,
in India, truly the forerunner of modern MARGIN SPEAK
Economic & Political Weekly EPW january 19, 2013 vol xlviii no 3 11
industry...Modern industry, resulting from
the railway system, will dissolve the hereditary divisions of labour, upon which rest the
Indian castes, those decisive impediments to
Indian progress and Indian power.
India came to possess the fourth largest railway network in the world just
behind US, Russia and China and a large
industrial base with many global companies, but the caste system, instead of collapsing, is menacingly alive and kicking.
Notwithstanding the laments of many
who relish seeing Marx proved wrong,
capitalism did affect the caste system and
even benefi ted a section of dalits. Indeed,
the making of the dalit movement can be
traced to capitalist development in India.
But it is also true that capitalist development strengthened the traditionally dominant castes and accentuated the power
asymmetry between dalits and non-dalits,
making the former more vulnerable than
before. The increased caste atrocities, in
both qualitative and quantitative terms,
are testimony to this complex dynamics.
Globalisation undoubtedly benefi ts
people, including dalits, but only a minuscule section. The majority, being "uncompetitive", is pushed to suffer ontological
insecurities and existential uncertainties.
Ideologically, the votaries of globalisation
are favourably disposed tow ards extreme
individualism, social Darwinist competition and belief in the free market as a
panacea for social mobility. All that the
poor are comforted with is "trickle down"
theory, which is theoretically untenable
and empirically false. Over the last three
decades, globalisation has produced an
alarming degree of inequality, a crisis of
well-being for the world's poor, an
upsurge of primordial identities and the
decimation of demo cracy. Indeed, it has
pushed the planet to the verge of extinction. Extreme concentration of wealth in
the hands of the few can only be celebrated
if one deliberately chooses to ignore the
marginalisation of the multitude.
From a methodological viewpoint, the
CASI study is fraught with fl aws and
smacks of motivated propaganda. Entrepreneurship is integral to the majority
sub-caste of dalits (for instance, Mahars,
Chamars, Malas and Parayas). These subcastes grabbed every opportunity that
came their way. Although they are
preponderantly farm labourers, there are
also weavers, masons, carpenters, tailors,
manufacturers, peddlers, shopkeepers,
moneylenders, contractors, etc, in their
ranks. It is thr ough such entrepreneurship
that a section of dalits has amassed wealth.
One could easily fi nd hugely wealthy
dalit individuals in every part of the
country in the decades before 1990. As a
matter of fact, it is precisely these entrepreneurs who constituted the base for the
Ambedkar-led dalit movement. There fore,
to attribute dalit enterprise or its success
to globalisation is purely motivated. If at
all dalit youths are impelled to entrepreneurship, the reason is the non-availability
of job opportunities due to constriction of
public sector jobs. In 1997, employment
in the public sector peaked at 197 lakh,
which consistently declined thereafter and
came down to 180 lakh in 2007, spelling
the virtual end of reservation. While
entrepreneurship may be associated with
risk-taking among the higher castes, it
spells a reverse syndrome for dalits –
that of risk-taking for sheer survival. As
there are no jobs, dalit youth venture
into starting something on their own and
become so-called entrepreneur. The Economic Censuses of 1990, 1998, and 2005
reveal a more truthful picture than motivated ad hoc studies since a census does
not have any hypothesis to prove or disprove. Caste-wise data related to ownership of enterprises are available for 1990,
1998 and 2005 and have been put
together in a 2011 Harvard Business
School study as summarised in Table 1.
Average employment per enterprise
for 2005 was 2.3, indicating that a vast
majority of fi rms was a single-person
enterprise. The incidence of such enterprises was far higher among the SC and
ST categories. In the context of dalits,
enterprise ranges from a roadside cobbler
to a millionaire member of the DICCI. As
the data (Table 1) clearly shows, over the
globalisation period the share of dalit
ownership of enterprises more or less
remained the same, refuting the claim
that globalisation has boosted dalit entrepreneurship. Even the Harvard Business
School study cited above obser ved that
the dalit millionaires claimed by the
DICCI do not represent the broad swathe
of SC/ST entrepreneurship.
While the growth of ancillary industries
or outsourcing has surely been accelerated
by globalisation, it is presumptuous to
assume that dalit entrepreneurs will beat
others on price competitiveness to grab
a share of outsourced processes or products. Given the intrinsic social handicap
they suffer from, they can only do so by
extra-exploitation of their employees and
intoxicating them with caste identities.
Prasad and Kamble's arguments make a
mess of concepts. For instance, they
claim dalit entrepreneurs succeed in the
modern sectors – these businessmen
build bridges, tunnels, machines, etc.
Actually, dalit enterprises fall in the
traditional (brick and mortar) sector in
which dalits have operated for ages. The
modern sector comprises knowledgebased enterprises in which dalit entrepreneurs still do not exist. The claimed
success of dalits in the brick and mortar
industry may perhaps indicate non-dalits
moving up in the value chain, leaving
the low end for dalits. Next, modernisation is erroneously under stood as undermining the caste system. It actually represents cultural hybridisation and coexists with tradition. Capitalist modernity
coexists with the caste system but with
globalisation, caste consciousness has
deepened. The simplest example of such
hybridisation can be seen in matrimonial advertise ments by highly educated
Indian Americans working in frontier
industries seeking brides from their
own sub-castes.
If globali sation has been such a facilitator of dalit enterprise, why should the
DICCI seek "reservation", the non-market
dole, for itself?
Table 1: Enterprise Ownership and Employment
Generation by Caste Category (1990-2005, in %)
1990 1998 2005
Population share
Non-SC/ST 75.8 75.8 75.9
SC 16.6 16.5 16.4
ST 7.6 7.7 7.7
Share of enterprise ownership
Non-SC/ST 87.5 87.3 86.4
SC 9.9 8.5 9.8
ST 2.6 4.2 3.7
Share of employment
Non-SC/ST 90.6 89.4 88.5
SC 7.4 6.9 8.1
ST 2.0 3.8 3.4
Source: Lakshmi Iyer, Tarun Khanna, Ashutosh Varshney,
"Caste and Entrepreneurship in India", Working Paper 12-028,
Harvard Business School, 18 October 2011.
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