Modi is polarising society, his economic policies disastrous: Manmohan

03:02PM Mon 7 May, 2018

Former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on Monday launched a scathing attack on the Narendra Modi government for its “disastrous policies” and “economic mismanagement”, and also accused his successor of trying to “polarise” society in the Karnataka assembly elections. Singh attacked the government over a series of banking frauds, saying the money swindled almost quadrupled from Rs 28,416 crore in September 2013 to Rs 1.11 lakh crore in September 2017. “Perpetrators of these frauds escape with impunity. The economic mismanagement of the Modi government, and I say this with great care and responsibility, is slowly eroding the trust of the general public in the banking sector,” he said. “Our nation today is experiencing difficult times. Our farmers are facing an acute crisis, our aspirational youth are not finding opportunities, and the economy is growing below its potential,” Singh said. “It pains me to see how rather than standing up to all these challenges, the government’s response has been to stifle dissent when deficiencies are pointed out,” he said. Noting that economic policy has a significant impact on the lives of people, he said it was essential that those tasked with decision making pay careful attention to policies and programmes and not act on mere whims and fancies. “India is a complex and diverse country and no one person can be the repository of all wisdom,” he said in an apparent dig at Modi. Singh said the intentions of the Modi government which it claimed were good, had resulted in “massive” losses for the country. He said investment under the UPA government had gone up to 34%-35% of the GDP but it was a “casualty” under the Modi dispensation. “If investment does not grow, there cannot be sustainable growth,” he said, adding employment generation would also suffer. Inadequate investment, he said, was the “single biggest weak point” in the management of the economy under Modi. Singh alleged attempts were made to change data about growth rate. The Modi government, he alleged, was making deliberate efforts to paint a “rosy” picture of the economy that was not backed by hard facts. Talking about non-performing assets (NPA)s of public sector banks, he said it was easy to blame everything on the UPA or the 70 years of Congress rule. He said the “phenomenal” growth in NPAs after 2013 was a “telling picture” of the truth. Source: Hindusthan Times