Monday, September 15, 2025
spot_img

Manmohan an underachiever, says Time

Date:

Share post:

spot_imgspot_img

Washington: Time magazine in a harsh critique of Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh has termed him an ‘underachiever’ – one who ‘seems unable to control his ministers’ and is ‘unwilling to stick his neck out on reform’ at a time when the Indian economy is slowing.

“India can only wait to see if Singh can rouse himself, let alone prevail or overcome,” wonders the cover story of the July 16 issue with the blurb: The Underachiever. India needs a reboot. Is Prime Minister Manmohan Singh up to the job?

Tracing Dr Singh’s journey to the top from his remote farming village in Gah, now in northeast Pakistan, the magazine suggests that the 79-year-old Prime Minister today appears ‘unwilling to stick his neck out’ on reforms that will put the country back on the growth path.

“Last quarter, India’s GDP growth fell to a nine-year low of 5.3 per cent, a steep drop from 9.2 per cent the same period last year and a worrying turn for a country that needs to stay on a high growth path to pull hundreds of millions out of poverty,” the magazine noted.

“With the rupee hitting record lows, a yawning fiscal deficit and a lack of economic direction from the government’s top brass, investors at home and abroad are beginning to get cold feet,” Time said.

Voters too are losing confidence, as rising inflation and a litany of scandals chip away at the government’s credibility, it said, citing a recent national poll suggesting that 66 per cent of urbanites believed Dr Singh and his coalition had lost the right to govern.

“How has India’s technocrat-in-chief fallen so far from grace,” wondered Time magazine, noting that during his first term, India’s economy reached a clip of 9.6 per cent growth.

“Singh’s coalition passed laws to guarantee the right of rural Indians to work while improving civic rights and political transparency. In 2009, when the government was re-elected, the headlines trumpeted: SINGH IS KING!”

Asking whether Manmohan Singh was ‘Asleep at the Wheel’, Time said: “Business-friendly laws that could spur growth to offset that spending are languishing, and industry is struggling.”

Time suggested that “Singh has joined the public soul searching belatedly, and the electorate will let him know what it thinks of his performance in general elections scheduled for 2014”.

Meantime, other players in the Congress, most notably Rahul Gandhi, UPA chairperson Sonia Gandhi’s son, are positioning themselves to take Singh’s place, the magazine said. (IANS)

spot_imgspot_img

Related articles

When Learning Turns To Exhaustion

Editor, I write this as a concerned student of the 5th semester in one of the most prestigious colleges...

Lessons from Nepal

A modicum of order has been established in Nepal with the effective intervention of its army and installation...

The Rs 6000 Cr Urban Overhaul Plan

By Toki Blah “Urban transformation with an investment of Rs 6000 crores across urban centres such as Shillong, Jowai...

Echoes of Change: How Each Generation Shaped the World’s Turning Points

By Jairaj Chhetry History is not written by rulers alone. It is equally shaped by ordinary men and women,...