Sunday, March 22, 2026

Missing Good in the noise of goodness.

India today avoids asking one fundamental but uncomfortable question:

Is policy being designed for nation builders or merely for vote banks?

A civilizational economy cannot survive if the discussion is only about distribution and never about creation. A country grows when producers, risk-takers, professionals and taxpayers expand wealth. But our policy discourse often speaks as if wealth already exists and only needs redistribution.

Yes, a majority may not pay income tax directly. But the deeper question is different: Should contribution be measured only by numbers or also by responsibility?

Today we see three silent pressures building:

• The compliant middle class feels punished for honesty (No job security model).
• Aspirational families are crushed under education, healthcare and housing costs ( No health insurance for the middle classes).
• Policy signals sometimes reward economic passivity more than upward mobility (Unhealthy social signals).

This creates a dangerous psychological shift — when effort does not feel respected, motivation declines. And when motivation declines, national productivity declines.

Another contradiction is rarely discussed.

We borrowed taxation structures inspired by Western models like VAT and regulatory frameworks from Europe and the UK. But did we equally adopt their taxpayer protections? Did we adopt their strong social security accountability? Did we adopt their administrative efficiency?

We imported extraction mechanisms faster than protection mechanisms.

Even outdated "Mafia aligned" legal ideas like adverse possession continue, raising a simple moral question:-

If property rights are the foundation of economic confidence, why tolerate doctrines that weaken ownership certainty?

So the real governance debate should be:-

Is democracy only arithmetic of votes?
Or is it also recognition of contribution, compliance and nation building?

A stable society requires balance, just like the original functional logic behind Varna:

• Protection for the vulnerable.
• Opportunity for the striving.
• Respect for the contributors.

Remove any one pillar and imbalance begins.

India does not need a debate only on redistribution , India needs a serious debate on:-
wealth creation,
taxpayer dignity,
and pathways of mobility.

Because civilizations decline not when poverty exists,
but when productivity stops being respected and personal ideas of greatness start dictating the fate of the majority.  Today when I see crowds resisting progressive policies, like population control I'm reminded of the wrongs done by the then policy makers.

In my next Book- "The Heroes we couldn't have", I will be  discussing more about such misalignment between the democratic ideals and the ground reality.

#India #Economy #Governance #Taxation #PublicPolicy #MiddleClass #EconomicReforms #book

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