Many
arguments can be advanced for why West Bengal should have a government
headed by a revitalised Left Front government. Several of these
reasons relate to the broader necessity for taking forward the struggle
for democracy in all its various forms, including both economic
justice and broader mass participation. But there can also be arguments
that are based on the genuine achievements of the government that
has been in power in the state. I propose to consider two of these
areas of achievement in particular, not only because they are important
for the life of the people, but also because these are largely neglected
in the media and therefore do not form a sufficient part of popular
perception.
The first relates to the agrarian question, which in turn is critical
in determining the balance of class forces in the countryside. This
may seem surprising to some, because recently the land question
in West Bengal has become the subject of much controversy and there
has been a tendency to portray the state government and the parties
that dominate it as being insensitive to this matter. In fact, nothing
could be further from the truth.
Land use and rural property relations have dominated policies and
policy discussion in the state of West Bengal ever since the Left
Front government came to power in 1977. From the early - and continuing
- focus on land reforms, to current debates around processes of
land use and land acquisition, the land question has been the most
significant political economy issue in West Bengal for more than
three decades. Indeed, this is the primary point of difference between
the Government of West Bengal (along with other Left-led state governments)
and other state governments in India: that it has confronted the
agrarian question directly.
This has been associated with different strategies, ranging from
the distribution of land to the landless and the registration of
sharecroppers, to the attempts to shift some land to non-agricultural
use as part of a broader process of industrialization. These strategies
and the processes that they are associated with obviously have strong
implications for human development. And because they seek to change
agrarian relations, they have inevitably created controversy, whether
in the form of resistance by large landowners to a diminution of
their control and power because of land reforms, or in the recent
highly publicised resistance of a section of peasants to land being
diverted to other uses, notably industry.
The fact that land reforms were a major plank of the state government’s
activity in the early decades is well known. Cultivated area in
West Bengal accounts for less than 4 per cent of the national total,
but even so West Bengal has accounted for 23 per cent of the total
land distributed in the country as a whole since Independence, and
more than half (55 per cent) of the total number of beneficiaries
of land distribution programmes in the entire country. The total
number of gainers from all the various land reform programmes in
the state is even more, including recorded bargadars (more than
15 lakh) and recipients of homestead land (around 16 lakh), bringing
the total to more than 50 lakh beneficiaries. This means more than
half of rural households have benefited from land reforms in the
state since 1977, and SCs, STs and Muslims benefiting disproportionately.
Women have also been recipients of joint pattas since 2003.
This part may be recognised, but what is not so well known is that
the process of land distribution has continued apace, making West
Bengal one of the very few states in the country where agricultural
land still continues to be distributed to landless recipients, or
pattadars. All the publicity was given to the relatively few attempts
at land acquisition for industry. But the amount of land that was
associated with such moves is actually tiny. West Bengal is not
even among the top ten states in the country, with states like Karnataka,
Maharashtra and Andhra Pradesh taking over many multiples of the
amount of land that was even attempted in the state.
In fact, the agricultural land distributed under land reform has
been much larger, on average well more than double the amount of
land acquired for all purposes, including industry. Even in the
period between 2005-06 and 2007-08 when the state government was
being accused of seeking to deprive peasants of their land because
of its industrialisation drive, nearly 30,000 acres was distributed
to landless peasant cultivators. This was three times the amount
that was acquired by the state government for all purposes, including
road building and other development. In 2007-08, the same year when
the violent agitation in Nandigram was grabbing national headlines,
no one bothered to report that the same state government had distributed
nearly 11,000 acres, to more than 25,000 peasants.
This continuing emphasis on land distribution is quite remarkable,
not only because it has been sustained for three decades, but also
because the very experience of decades of successful land distribution
has meant a much narrower base of land available for redistribution
in recent years. It also singles out West Bengal from other states
of the country, where there is no such active and continuing programme
of land distribution.
This record of the Government of West Bengal in terms of land distribution
is not just laudable, but also far more impressive than that of
any other state government in India. The only states that come close
are those that have been or are ruled by other Left Front governments,
that is Kerala and Tripura. This is important because land distribution
remains an essential element to prevent or restrain the control
of landlordism in the countryside. Without it, not just landlordism
but also the adverse and regressive social tendencies, which are
so evident in other parts of rural India, would once again become
significant in West Bengal. For this reason alone, it is critical
to retain the political power of the Left Front.
The second important achievement of the Left Front government in
the state relates to improvements in health indicators. Until about
a decade ago, this was not an area of much progress, with health
indicators in West Bengal basically keeping pace with the national
average. But recent data - not from the state government, but from
the central government’s office of the Registrar-General of India
using the Sample registration Surveys (SRS) - show that West Bengal
is now one of the best-performing states in the country in terms
of the most basic health indicators.
Since 1997, both crude birth rates and crude death rates have improved
much faster in West Bengal than in India as a whole. The crude birth
rate (live births per 1,000 people in a year) in West Bengal declined
by 28 per cent from 22.4 to 17.5 between 1997 and 2009 (or by 28
per cent), compared to a decline of 19 per cent for India as a whole.
The death rate in West Bengal fell by 25 per cent over the same
period, as compared to 20 per cent for India as a whole.
As a result, among the major states, West Bengal in 2009 had the
fourth lowest birth rate (after Kerala, Tamil Nadu and Punjab) and
the lowest death rate among the major states, even lower than that
of Kerala. What is also noteworthy is that the state’s rural-urban
gap has closed for the death rate. In 2009, the rural death rate
in West Bengal was 6.1, which was lower than the urban rate of 6.4,
whereas for India as a whole the rural death rate was higher by
34 per cent - it was 7.8 in rural compared to 5.8 in urban areas.
Even Tamil Nadu, the state that has otherwise performed very well
in health indicators, shows a high rural-urban gap in the death
rate of 29 per cent.
One major - and positive - reason for the decline in death rates
in West Bengal is the decline in infant mortality rates (IMR) in
the state. The infant mortality rate - expressed as the ratio of
the number of death of infant of one year old or less per 1,000
live births - is often regarded as the single most important indicator
of overall health conditions in a particular area. The decline in
IMRs in West Bengal has been the most rapid in the country after
Tamil Nadu. This made it one of the best performing among major
states with the IMR of 33 putting it in fourth position after Kerala,
Maharashtra and Tamil Nadu. The rural-urban gap in the IMR has also
improved, making it one of the smallest in the country. It is also
remarkable to see that in 2009, the urban IMR for West Bnegal, at
27, was lower than the urban part of Delhi state, which has one
of the highest per capita incomes in the nation as well as a much
larger per capita health budget.
What is worth noting is that West Bengal throughout this period
has had a very low - almost negligible - gender gap in IMR, thereby
making it very different from several other states of the country.
This is also confirmed by other survey data - for example the various
rounds of the National Family Health Surveys have found the gender
gap in IMR to be always among the lowest in the country.
The other very important indictor of both health conditions and
the status of women is the maternal mortality ratio (MMR) which
is the rate of maternal deaths per 100,000 live births among women
aged 15-49 years. Once again, MMRs are lower in West Bengal than
the national average, and have been declining faster as well. The
lifetime risk of maternal death (defined as the probability that
at least one woman of reproductive age of 15-49 years will die during
or just after childbirth assuming that the chance of death is uniformly
distributed across the reproductive span) was only 0.3 per cent
in West Bengal in 2004-06, compared to 0.7 per cent for All-India
and 0.2 per cent in the best-performing state, Kerala.
What accounts for this recent improvement of health indicators in
West Bengal, especially in relation to the rest of the country other
than Tamil Nadu? A number of possible explanations can be considered.
First, there has been a general improvement in institutional conditions,
especially in the West Bengal countryside, in terms of the number
of hospitals and health facilities and the increase in access of
women to ante-natal and post-natal services. This has been enabled
not only by increased public expenditure in certain areas, but also
by a programme of more decentralised public health delivery, with
greater autonomy given to local and village health committees in
terms of spending and care systems. Thus, the NFHS surveys have
found that there was a gradual increase in the percentage of mothers
who made at least three ante-natal visits during their last birth
in West Bengal, from 50.3 per cent in 1992-93 to 62.4 per cent in
2005-06. This compares favourably with the national averages, which
were significantly lower.
Second, since health is intimately related to both sanitation and
nutrition, some improvement in both of these variables is also likely
to have played a positive role. The extension of better sanitation
facilities to rural areas has accelerated, and the state has been
recognised by the central government as a star performer in terms
of improvement, though these facilities still remain inadequate.
It is likely that the improvement in both IMR and MMR has been most
marked in those districts where the sanitation programme has been
more successful.
More significantly, the state government has been able to use to
a greater extent the decentralised panchayat system for implementing
greater autonomy to village health committees and allowing for more
flexibility in health treatment that has allowed the resources for
public health to be used in the most effective manner. This builds
on the other great achievement of the Left Front government, of
first creating and then continuously strengthening, the locally
elected bodies. This has had many positive effects, but it is noting
how this institutional arrangement, which has been such an important
feature of Left run governments in the country, has also enabled
improvements in basic conditions of longevity and health.
Both of these point to some very significant successes, but of course
there is still a long way to go. And this means that it is crucial
to consolidate these gains and move forward, rather than allow them
to be dissipated or even reversed. For concerned citizens of the
state, these would constitute very important reasons for voting
Left.