There it is, Vikram thought. The Mahalanobis argunt. The belief that you can have central planning without central tyranny.
It sounds reasonable. It's completely wrong.
"Professor Mahalanobis," Vikram replied, keeping his voice respectful but firm, "I have enormous admiration for your statistical work.
Your contributions to probability theory and sampling thodology are genuinely world-class.
But I believe you're making a fundantal error in applying statistical thods to economic planning."
The room went very quiet. Challenging Mahalanobis's expertise was like challenging Einstein on physics — technically possible but socially perilous.
"The error," Vikram continued, "is the assumption that a central planning authority can process enough information to allocate resources efficiently across a complex economy.
India will soon have four hundred million people, millions of enterprises, thousands of products, and countless daily transactions.
The information required to plan all of this centrally is astronomical — far beyond the capacity of any statistical model or any planning commission, however brilliant its mbers."
He picked up the chalk again. "Let illustrate with a simple example. Imagine you're the planning commissioner responsible for textile production.
You need to determine: how much cotton to grow, how much to import, how many spinning mills to build, how many looms to operate, what types of fabric to produce, in what quantities, at what prices, and how to distribute them across the country.
Each of these decisions depends on dozens of variables — weather, consur preferences, transportation costs, labor availability, international prices, technological changes — that are constantly shifting."
"A market economy handles this automatically. Millions of individual decisions — farrs choosing what to plant, manufacturers choosing what to produce, consurs choosing what to buy — aggregate into an information system of extraordinary complexity and responsiveness.
Prices signal scarcity. Profits signal demand. Losses signal inefficiency. No central planner can replicate this."
"A planned economy tries to handle it through bureaucratic allocation. And inevitably — not occasionally, not sotis, but inevitably — it gets it wrong.
It produces too much of what people don't want and too little of what they do. It rewards compliance rather than innovation.
It creates shortages, black markets, and corruption."
Mahalanobis's expression hadn't changed, but his eyes had narrowed. "You're describing a theoretical market economy that doesn't exist in reality.
Real markets are full of imperfections — monopolies, externalities, information asymtries.
The invisible hand is often invisible because it's not there."
"I agree completely," Vikram said — surprising Mahalanobis and several others in the room.
"Markets are imperfect. That's exactly why I'm not proposing pure capitalism. I'm proposing a hybrid model where the state corrects market failures — provides public goods, regulates monopolies, invests in infrastructure and education — while allowing markets to do what they do best: allocate resources, drive innovation, and create wealth."
He turned to the blackboard one final ti and wrote:
THE INDIAN MODEL
State leads: Defense, heavy industry, energy, infrastructure, education, healthcare, nuclear research
Market leads: Agriculture, manufacturing, services, trade, consur goods, technology
State regulates: Banking, monopolies, labor standards, environntal protection
Market determines: Prices, production quantities, resource allocation, innovation
"This is not capitalism," Vikram said. "This is not socialism. This is pragmatism. It takes the best of both systems and applies them where they're most effective.
The state does what the state does best. The market does what the market does best.
And India grows at eight to ten percent per year instead of three to four."
Nehru had been listening with extraordinary intensity throughout the presentation.
Now he spoke, and his voice carried a sharpness that silenced the murmuring that had begun among the other economists.
"Mr. Rathore, your argunts are well-constructed. But you're ignoring the most fundantal question: equity. A market-driven economy may produce more wealth, but it concentrates that wealth in the hands of the few.
India's problem is not just poverty — it's inequality. What good is eight percent growth if the benefits go to industrialists in Bombay while peasants in Bihar starve?"
The equity argunt, Vikram thought. Nehru's strongest card.
And he's right to play it — inequality is a genuine problem that market economies struggle with. But he's wrong about the solution.
"You're absolutely right, sir, that equity matters. A nation where a few grow rich while the majority remains poor is not just morally wrong — it's economically unstable and politically dangerous.
But the answer to inequality is not to prevent wealth creation. It's to create wealth broadly."
He stepped away from the blackboard and spoke directly to Nehru.
"Sir, consider two scenarios.
Scenario A: India adopts central planning. Growth averages three to four percent per year.
After twenty-five years, total national inco has roughly doubled.
The governnt distributes this modest increase according to planned priorities. But the total pie is small, so even equitable distribution ans everyone gets a thin slice.
The average Indian is slightly less poor than today, but still poor by any international standard."
"Scenario B: India adopts the hybrid model. Growth averages eight to ten percent per year.
After twenty-five years, total national inco has increased six to eight fold. Even if distribution is imperfect — even if so people get larger slices than others — the total pie is so much bigger that everyone's slice is dramatically larger than under Scenario A.
The average Indian achieves a middle-class standard of living. Poverty doesn't just decline — it plumts."
He paused. "The point is simple, sir. You can't distribute wealth that doesn't exist. Growth is not the enemy of equity — it's the prerequisite for equity.
Create the wealth first. Then use taxation, public investnt, and social programs to ensure it's shared broadly.
But if you strangle growth in the na of equity, you condemn the poor to permanent poverty."
The room was electric. Vikram could feel the intellectual currents shifting — not decisively, not yet, but perceptibly. Matthai was nodding slightly.
Rao was making rapid notes. Even Narayan, the Gandhian, seed to be listening with less hostility than before.
Mahalanobis spoke again. "These are projections, Mr. Rathore. Assumptions. You project eight to ten percent growth under your model, but you have no empirical basis for that projection.
No large developing country has achieved sustained growth at that rate."
Not yet, Vikram thought. But Japan will. And South Korea. And Singapore. And China. And eventually, even India — sixty years too late.
"You're correct that the empirical record is limited, Professor. But the theoretical foundations are sound, and the early evidence from countries that are beginning to adopt market-oriented policies is encouraging.
Japan's post-war recovery, for example, is combining state direction with private enterprise in exactly the way I'm describing — and achieving extraordinary results."
"Japan is a special case—"
"Every country is a special case. That's precisely the point.
India's model should be designed for India's specific conditions — not imported wholesale from the Soviet Union or the United States.
What I'm proposing is an Indian model, built on Indian strengths, addressing Indian challenges."
Nehru raised his hand, silencing the crosstalk that had erupted. The room fell quiet imdiately.
"Mr. Rathore," Nehru said, "I'm going to be honest with you. I ca into this session expecting to dismantle your argunts.
I've spent years thinking about these questions, reading extensively, consulting experts.
My instincts tell that central planning is the right path for India."
He paused. The room held its breath.
"But instincts can be wrong. And so of your argunts — particularly about information processing and the limitations of centralized decision-making — are troubling.
Not because they're obviously right, but because I can't easily refute them."
Vikram felt his heart hamring but kept his expression composed.
"Here is what I propose," Nehru continued. "I'm not going to accept or reject your model today. Economic policy for a nation of four hundred million people deserves more careful consideration than a single morning's debate.
What I will do is commission a study — a rigorous, detailed comparison of the planning model and your hybrid model, applied to India's specific conditions.
Professor Mahalanobis will lead the planning analysis. Mr. Rathore, I'd like you to lead the hybrid model analysis.
Both teams will present their findings to within three months."
Mahalanobis's expression was stone. He clearly did not relish being placed in direct competition with a twenty-four-year-old. But he nodded.
Vikram nodded as well, keeping his face neutral while his mind raced. Three months. That's August — around independence.
Nehru will be overwheld with political responsibilities. The study could be delayed, diluted, or overtaken by events.
But it's also an opportunity. Three months of direct access to Nehru's economic thinking.
Three months to build the empirical case. Three months to recruit allies among the economic establishnt.
"I accept, sir. Thank you for the opportunity."
"Don't thank yet," Nehru said, with a smile that was equal parts warmth and challenge.
"You'll need to work very hard to convince . I'm not an easy man to convince."
"I've been told, sir."
Nehru laughed. The tension in the room broke. Tea was called for. Conversations fragnted into smaller groups. Matthai approached Vikram imdiately.
"That was impressive," the moderate economist said quietly. "You held your own against Mahalanobis — which is more than most professional economists manage.
I'd like to discuss your ideas further. Perhaps I can help with the comparative study."
"I'd welco that, sir. Enormously."
V.K.R.V. Rao appeared at his other elbow. "Mr. Rathore, your information-processing argunt is the most interesting critique of central planning I've heard.
It has echoes of Hayek, but with a practical focus that Hayek lacks. I'd like to explore it empirically."
"I'd love to work with you on that, Professor Rao."
Two allies, Vikram thought. Not enough to win, but enough to fight. And the fight is what matters — every day that Nehru spends considering alternatives to pure socialism is a day where India's economic future improves.
To be continued..
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