Indian Social Republic
From Roach Busters
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| - | The unicameral Parliament of India is the supreme legislative body in the country. Any bill can become an act only after it is passed by majority vote of the Parliament and assented by the President. Its members are directly elected by popular vote to five year terms. Voting is limited to all Hindus aged 18 and older and voting is done by open ballot. Because there is only one candidate per constituency (hand-picked by the government), voters are offered the options of "Yes" or "No," but the presence of security officers at the polls means that nearly 100% of voters choose "Yes." | + | The unicameral Parliament of India is the supreme legislative body in the country. Any bill can become an act only after it is passed by majority vote of the Parliament and assented by the President. Its members are directly elected by popular vote to five year terms. Voting is limited to all Hindus aged 18 and older and voting is done by open ballot; voting is compulsory (and enforced). Because there is only one candidate per constituency (hand-picked by the government), voters are offered the options of "Yes" or "No," but the presence of security officers at the polls means that nearly 100% of voters choose "Yes." |
The constitution stipulates that the Prime Minister must enjoy the confidence of Parliament, but in practice the Parliament is a largely powerless body which exists solely to rubberstamp his decisions. | The constitution stipulates that the Prime Minister must enjoy the confidence of Parliament, but in practice the Parliament is a largely powerless body which exists solely to rubberstamp his decisions. | ||
Revision as of 04:47, 16 April 2008
| Indian Social Republic | |
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| Flag | Emblem |
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| Motto "Ittefaq, Itmad aur Qurbani" (Hindustani) "Unity, Faith, and Sacrifice" | |
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| Anthem Vande Mataram (I bow to thee, Mother) | |
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| Capital Largest city | New Delhi 28°34'N, 77°07'E Mumbai |
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| Official languages | Hindi (de jure) English (de facto) |
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| Demonym | Indian |
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| Government - President - Prime Minister | Dictatorship Jaibhan Singh Pawaiya Keshav Upadhyaya |
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| Independence - De facto - De jure | from England January 26, 1944 August 15, 1947 |
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| Area - Total - Water (%) | 3,166,414 km² 1,222,559 sq mi 9.56 |
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| Population - 2007 estimate - Density | 616,209,148 194.6/km² 504/sq mi |
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| GDP (PPP) - Total - Per capita | 2007 estimate $4.034 trillion $6,548 |
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| GDP (nominal) - Total - Per capita | 2007 estimate $6.087 trillion $9,879 |
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| Gini (2004) | 57.7 (high) |
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| HDI (2006) | |
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| Currency | Indian rupee (₨) (INR)
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| Time zone - Summer (DST) | IST (UTC +5:30) not observed (UTC +5:30) |
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| Internet TLD | .in |
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| Calling code | +91 |
Contents |
Politics
India is a unicameral, semi-presidential, unitary republic in which the governing political party, the Indian Nationalist Party (INP), enjoys a monopoly on power, as provided by the constitution. The country is universally described by analysts abroad as a "fascist dictatorship," but India describes itself as a "revolutionary authoritarian democracy."
The Indian Nationalist Party (INP)
To be added
President
The head of state of India is the President (currently Jaibhan Singh Pawaiya), who is indirectly elected by an electoral college. While in theory the President has vast powers, in practice he is a figurehead limited to performing mainly ceremonial functions. He carries out the following duties:
- Appointment of the federal government: The President appoints federal judges, federal civil servants, and military officers. All such appointments require the counter-signature of the Prime Minister.
- Dissolution of the parliament: The President may, at his discretion, dissolve parliament and call new elections.
- Promulgation of the law: All federal laws must, after counter-signature, be signed by the president before they can come into effect. Ordinances must be signed by the agency which issues them, and then by the President
- Foreign relations: The President takes part in foreign visits and receives foreign dignitaries. He or she also concludes treaties with foreign nations, accredits Indian diplomats and receives the letters of accreditation of foreign diplomats.
- Pardons and honors: The President grants pardons if the person concerned had been convicted under federal jurisdiction (which is rare) and confers decorations and honours.
- Military: The constitution designates the President as the commander-in-chief of the armed forces, and all military personnel must take an oath of loyalty to him. However, his role is strictly ceremonial, and de facto command of the military lies with the Prime Minister.
- State of emergency: In the event of a national crisis, the President may dissolve the parliament, suspend civil liberties, and rule by decree (although in practice, the Prime Minister would do the latter on the President's behalf).
The President is expected to be impartial and non-partisan, and for the most part, rarely involves himself in day-to-day politics. While in practice he has little to no power, he still commands great respect among Indians and serves an important role as a symbol of national unity.
Prime Minister
The head of government of India is the Prime Minister, in whom the constitution invests with central executive authority. His authority emanates both from the provisions of the constitution and from his status as General Secretary of the INP, of which he is ex officio leader.
The Prime Minister determines the composition of the cabinet. The President formally appoints and dismisses cabinet ministers, at the recommendation of the Prime Minister; no parliamentary approval is needed. The Prime Minister sets the number of cabinet ministers and dictates their specific duties. He is responsible for all government policies and any formal policy guidelines issued by him are legally binding directives that cabinet ministers must implement. Cabinet ministers are expected to introduce specific policies at the ministerial level that reflect the Prime Minister's broader guidelines.
While in theory the Prime Minister's actions must at all times be in full concordance with the constitution (which has been suspended since 1953), in practice he wields dictatorial powers and governs as he sees fit, with no checks, balances, or other restraints on his authority.
Parliament
The unicameral Parliament of India is the supreme legislative body in the country. Any bill can become an act only after it is passed by majority vote of the Parliament and assented by the President. Its members are directly elected by popular vote to five year terms. Voting is limited to all Hindus aged 18 and older and voting is done by open ballot; voting is compulsory (and enforced). Because there is only one candidate per constituency (hand-picked by the government), voters are offered the options of "Yes" or "No," but the presence of security officers at the polls means that nearly 100% of voters choose "Yes."
The constitution stipulates that the Prime Minister must enjoy the confidence of Parliament, but in practice the Parliament is a largely powerless body which exists solely to rubberstamp his decisions.
Supreme Court
The Supreme Court of India is the highest court of the land. According to the constitution, its role is that of a federal court, guardian of the constitution, and the highest court of appeal. Politically-reliable appointees dominate the court, which, in over 45 years of existence, has never ruled against any action taken by the government.
State and local governments
India is a unitary state in which all power is concentrated at the federal level. State and local governments have no autonomy and exist as mere administrative divisions. State governments are appointed by the Parliament on the recommendation of the Prime Minister, while local governments are directly elected. Both state and local governments are beholden to the federal government, and are charged with implementing and executing its decisions at the state/local level.
Economy
India has a complex economic system that defies easy categorization. The Indian government itself adds further confusion by its ambiguous description of its economy as "neither capitalist, nor socialist, nor in between." Various political analysts abroad, depending on their own personal political leanings, describe India as "socialist," or "state capitalist," depending on who one asks, however, there is near-unanimity in their description of India as corporatist and dirigiste.
State intervention in the economy, whether on behalf of politically-connected corporations (many of which are granted legal monopolies in recognition of their services to the regime) or on behalf of the workers whom it claims to represent, is pervasive. Price and wage controls are strictly enforced. Workers' wages are artifically set to a low level, while prices are set to a high level. The purposes of this are two-fold: To ensure that workers are required to work as many hours as possible, to ensure that they have neither the time nor the energy to dissent; and to maximize the profits of politically-connected corporations. Strikes and collective bargaining are illegal and, when they do occur, are ruthlessly suppressed. The government maintains at least nominal support of the workers by providing generous pensions, subsidized healthcare and housing, paid vacations, and other benefits.
The government's adherence to "self-reliance," and "economic independence," i.e. autarky, means that the country's trade with the outside world is kept to a bare minimum, as is foreign investment. Tariffs are among the highest in the world, and Indian businesses are massively subsidized. Farmers, too, enjoy generous subsidies, which serves to both protect Indian agriculture from foreign competition and win the support of farmers for the government.
Several public sector corporations exist, all of which enjoy monopolies in their respective areas. Examples include the Oil and Natural Gas Corporation, National Thermal Power Corporation, Bharat Heavy Electricals Limited, Indian Railways, Steel Authority of India Limited, National Fertilisers Limited, Life Insurance Corporation of India, Air India Air Transport Services Limited, Coal India Limited, National Aluminium Company Limited, National Mineral Development Corporation, Defence Research and Development Organisation, Goa Shipyard Limited, and Hindustan Aeronautics Limited are just a few examples. All are 100% government-owned and publicly funded.
There are very few small or medium sized businesses in India, due to the extremely cumbersome, costly, time-consuming process of setting up a business, coupled with the myriad regulations and bureaucratic red tape to wade through. This is a deliberate action by the government which serves to preclude the emergence of a strong middle class that would threaten the many powerful corporations that survive through their symbiotic relationship with the state.
While on paper India has a progressive tax rate, in practice its tax rate is regressive, meaning that the higher one's income is, the less he pays in taxes.
Often the question is asked (outside India): "Do the corporations run the government, or does the government run the corporations?" While both hold true to a certain degree, the latter does more so; more than one corporation has been nationalized, and its board of directors thrown in prison, for wavering in their support of the government.
On a more positive note, unemployment in India is almost non-existent. Conscription and extensive public works projects (most related to construction) ensure that jobs, both skilled and unskilled, are plentiful.
Society
India is a richly diverse, multicultural state with numerous religions, ethnic groups, dialects, customs, and cultures. Hinduism is the state religion and is actively promoted by the government. The government subsidizes the construction of Hindu temples, funds Hindu missions at home and abroad, and ensures that all laws enacted by the government are compatible with Hinduism (although many Hindu dissidents, in prison and abroad, maintain that the government's human rights policies are anathema to Hinduism). While there is a high degree of tolerance and mutual good will between different ethnic groups (racism is explicitly proscribed, and all expressions of ethnic nationalism are brutally crushed as "subversive"), India has one of the lowest levels of religious freedom in the world. Since independence, tens of millions of Muslims have been executed or interned in concentration camps, while millions more have fled. Other religious minorities were forcibly relocated, at gun-point, to small, highly densely populated "reservations," where they remain to this day. Their movement is severely restricted, they enjoy even fewer civil liberties than Hindu Indians. They cannot vote or serve in the armed forces, and most are destitute and work in conditions little different from slavery.
The exception to India's racial tolerance is its treatment of Englishmen, most of whom were killed or deported shortly after independence. All vestiges of English culture, with the exception of the English language, have been wiped out, and Englishmen are banned from entering the country. The government briefly toyed with the idea of banning the English language, but the fact that most of India's bureaucrats and educated people were fluent in it, and the fact that it served as a useful medium between Indians that spoke different dialects, forced them to abandon that idea.
India is a very hierarchical society organized along strict caste lines. India has a de facto system of class apartheid, and people of different castes are segregated and are forced to go to different schools, hospitals, etc. All public places have separate rooms, accomodations, etc. for the different castes. Women are not segregated, but are nonetheless unofficially second-class citizens. Spousal abuse and sexism are rampant.
