Budget 2010. Nani ki yaad aayi !!
Looks like India is reasonably happy with Pranabda's performance. This budget has been declared growth oriented by those who 'know'. As for me...well.... this column says it all.
Nani ki yaad aayi
The
most tiresome and seriously annoying aspect of the annual water
torture, also known as the Budget, is the pre- and post- analysis of
the damn thing! Experts all but crawl out of the woodwork around this
time of the year, and give gyaan to the nation via soundbytes and
quotes that nobody can decode. It’s just so much hot air and gas, that
were Brothers Ambani to tap and pipe it, most of their problems would
get automatically solved. After the death of Nani Palkhiwala, the one
man who could effectively deconstruct the bloody Budget for the aam
janata, nobody but nobody has been able to tell us what we already know
- pay more! One just had to read Palkhiwala’s lips as he held
centrestage on the expansive lawns of the CCI, to appreciate his
genius. Take me. I am embarrassingly numbers challenged ( okay, now
that I’ve revealed one secret, I may as well go the whole hog and
reveal another – I can’t read balance sheets!). But even dumbo me would
turn up faithfully to hang on to Nani’s every word. Needless to say
nothing registered!
It was as much for the performance as for the
gyaan – Nani was the SRK of the finance world. Big difference being he
worked without someone else’s script and pretty much relied on memory,
preferring to speak extempore - no teleprompters, cue sheets, not even
a scrap of paper ( take that, Mr. Obama!). His recall for reams of data
was so faultless, he’d leave even the most erudite analysts in the
audience totally speechless as he reeled off numbers effortlessly, and
put the Budget into a comprehensible format for informed citizens. Mind
you, Nani commanded the sort of audience that today’s Bollywood stars
with all their clout, muscle and p.r. power cannot! People would start
queuing up bright and early to grab the best seats on the grounds, and
remain rooted to their uncomfortable chairs till Nani concluded his
speech ( a daunting , marathon effort extending well over two hours).
It was one annual event that attracted the most eclectic crowd. I
cannot imagine any personality other than Sachin Tendulkar being in a
position to pull off a similar feat.But given the present generation’s
shrinking attention span, I also wonder whether Nani would have been
able to attract the same numbers today.
I tried very hard to
comprehend Mamata’s railway budget ( no steam in this engine, alas),
but promptly abandoned the exercise when I acknowledged a basic lack of
interest within myself – when was the last time I jumped on a train?
See?? That’s really how it works, whether we face it or not.
Selfishness rules. We breathlessly await the latest Budget only to
pounce on those aspects which impact our lives directly – be honest. Do
you really get into a blue fog worrying about tax implications
affecting kerosene prices? Do you have toor daal on your mind on Budget
Day? Or even two wheeler prices? All you want to know in the broadest
of terms is – what’s in it for me, if anything? Higher prices are a
given. So are even higher taxes. You have already reconciled yourself
to that. You want to know just one thing – where will the extra lolly
come from?? And how badly are you going to be hit this time?? That you
are going to be hit, has been factored in. Remember darlings - there is
no such thing as a ‘good’ Budget. Every new Budget is a killer, one way
or the other. Which is why it is important to ignore all those grim
faced farts on tv telling us about less pain in the future. Take a
walk, you guys. When will you stop bull- shitting? Spare us your
‘expert’ comments, and the cheesy, ‘no pain, no gain’ rubbish. We
prefer listening to our wallets. And the story they tell is vastly
different.
Each year, we generate hype just before Judgement Day. It
is a particularly masochistic exercise, and no other developed country
in the world makes quite such a ludicrous song and dance over what is
after all nothing more dramatic than a routine annual statement about
the government’s finances. We are the ones who create all the
dramabaazi around the Budget and treat the entire exercise as a Reality
Show, with the F.M. playing the key role. ‘‘Kaun Banega Crorepati??”
You know the answer to that one – nobody! At least, not on paper, and
not if Pranab can help it! Our government’s main aim, it would appear,
is to make sure we stay true to some outdated socialist dream and such
obscenities do not happen. But nobody actually spells it out. Instead
we talk around the subject, and complicate it further. Pranab’s
performance will be taken apart on several levels, since his oratorial
skills, leave most Indians ( okay, make that non- Bengalis) entirely
befuddled. Unlike his predecessors, Pranab does not recite shair
–shairis, quote Shakespeare or Ghalib. Tagore?? But again, unlike his
predecessors, Pranab believes in telling it like it is, minus sugar
coating or frivolous frills. And essentially, he says just one thing –
pay up! That’s the message. “Or else” , follows! The aam janata gets
the message pronto. Pranab does not prescribe to painless surgery.
Whoever
invented the term ‘stimulus package’ was a smart cookie. It sounded
sexy. Was sexy. And the strategy worked. Unfortunately, the stimulus on
offer was not exactly financial Viagra and most companies could not get
it up on demand. Miracles were expected ( as unrealistic as immaculate
conception). Withdrawal of stimulus is like coitus interruptus…but
clearly, it is the UPA government’s call, and gives another angle to
the India growth story. The dream is technicoloured and big. Like Anil
Ambani’s latest venture.Analysts are claiming anything from 8% to 11% -
kuch, kuch hota hai! But all that comes later, once the dust settles
down, and we stop cribbing. India without perennial cribbers would be
so damn boring! We like cribbing! It is our birthright. So, even as we
moan and groan, sulk and sigh, the Budget ki Kahani will not last
beyond this weekend. It is a little like MNIK – so much publicity
before the release of the film. And then what? Money in the bank for
the canny producers. But the aam janata was left trying to figure out
how to pronounce ‘Asperger’s’ and whether or not to admit in public
that nobody had heard of the syndrome till Rizwan came on the scene.
Pranab is as big as SRK - at least at this time of the year. And like
SRK, he too is used to the flack that goes with his portfolio.
I am
not complaining. I am sensibly holding my tongue. You know why?? I
don’t get it – the Budget, I mean. And it’s stupid to try and
deconstruct anything I can’t figure out. As it goes every year, I’ll
simply shrug philosophically and pay up, humming ‘Kabhie Khushi, Kabhie
Gham.”
Nani Palkhiwala…. where are you when we need you the most???
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