Lessons from Scotland for South Asia: Satya Sagar

Guest Post by Satya Sagar

Though ‘No’ finally trumped ‘Yes’ and the United Kingdom stayed ‘united’ the recent referendum for Scottish independence holds several important lessons for both votaries of separatism as well as national unity everywhere.

It also raises many questions, chief among them being, on a planet run by corporations and shaped by tsunami-like capital flows, do terms like national ‘independence’, ‘unity’ or ‘sovereignty’ have real meaning anymore? An even more fundamental question would be whether the nation-state, in its current form, has any future at all or not?

Coming to the lessons first, among the most obvious is the fact that it is possible to hold a referendum on independence peacefully, without a single shot being fired or spilling a single drop of blood.This has been hailed as a triumph of democracy and rightly so too.  How many countries around the world, which call themselves democracies, can muster the guts to allow a section of their citizens to exercise their right to self-determination through a simple vote?

This is in fact a lesson of particular significance in South Asia, where millions of lives have been lost in the name of both nationalism, with its fetish for ‘territorial integrity’, and sub-nationalism that insists on  formation of new states from existing ones as the only way. Just think of the numbers killed in the frenzy of nationalist passions during the Partition of India and Pakistan, the Bangladesh war of liberation, the struggle of Kashmir, Nagaland in India or that  of the Tamils in Sri Lanka for their own state.

Today, as South Asia witnesses the inexorable rise of intolerant fundamentalist forces, the reduction of democracy to majoritarian bullying, a deepening economic crisis and an unbridled arms race there is unfortunately much more violence to come in the name of both nationalism and separatism. The dispute over Kashmir, in particular, has an apocalyptic edge due to the presence of nuclear weapons, of uncertain quality and even more uncertain security, in both India and Pakistan.

Without a new framework for managing or defusing nationalist and sub-nationalist tensions on the sub-continent it is only a matter of time perhaps that even the hitherto ‘unthinkable’ can actually happen, with enormously tragic consequences. In that sense, for all the trickery employed by the English ruling class to prevent Scottish independence, the fact that theyused a political process and not violence to handle the issue is worth emulating by regimes throughout South Asia.

A second lesson from the Scottish referendum is that, despite the rhetoric about shared history or culture on all sides,the real debate boiled down to whether or not  the Scottish economy would be a viable one. While those who opposed independence questioned Scotland’s ability to repay debt, raise cheap credit, launch and manage a new currency the pro-independence camp rested its case on increased revenues from North Sea oil, Scotland’s highly educated population and the possible benefits of being part of the European Union.

In other words, shorn of sentiment, the core idea of the nation-state today is not very different from that of an average company, whose life expectancy hinges around the usual business concepts of profit and loss, debt and equity or marketability of its various resources.This brings us to the question asked at the start of this article- in the era of rampant financial and economic globalization, what does it mean to be an ‘independent’ nation?

  1. In the world we live in today is there any nation that is truly ‘independent’ or sovereign, including the United States- the biggest debtor nation in the world? Or is everyone just ‘inter-dependent’ to varying degrees, with the idea of ‘sovereignty’ just a chip for bargaining better terms and conditions in the global marketplace?
  2. When corporations have become way larger than entire countries and the global capital flows determine the fate of even powerful nations why should land and territory alone become synonymous with the idea of a nation?
  3. What does national identity or citizenship really mean in today’s world? Should not all inhabitants of the globe, have equal rights instead of parceling the planet into a few fiefdoms of private property called ‘nations’?

No, I am not suggesting that there can be a nation completely without land or territory, for ultimately populations need the right to live on and have access to, if not own, firm ground somewhere. However, it is my contention that in our times land and territory are no longer the most important part of becoming or being a nation. The central position of land in national economies has been taken over for quite some time by several other resources, namely capital in the form of finance, technology and even human resources.

Let me be more specific in what I mean by giving some examples. A survey by the magazine Business Insider in 2011 found some very interesting results by comparing the annual turnover of 25 top US corporations to the GDP of entire countries around the world. Here are some results:

  1. If Wal-Mart were a country, its revenues would make it on par with the GDP of Norway the 25th largest economy in the world by, surpassing 157 smaller countries. In 2010 while Norway’s GDP was USD$414.46 billion Walmart’s revenue stood at USD$421.89 billion. (For comparison Scotland’s GDP that year was USD $216 billion)
  2. Exxon Mobil, with a revenue ofUSD$354.67 billion is bigger than Thailand with a GDP of USD$318.85 billion
  3. Apple computers, with revenues of USD$65.23 billion, is bigger than Ecuador with a GDP of USD$58.91 billion

What I am pointing to is the simple fact that is staring us in our face for quite some time now that the giant corporations of the world are on par with or more powerful than many countries in the world in terms of economic clout or even political clout in many parts of the world. The management systems they run are often as much or even more efficient than that of any state apparatus. What they lack in order to declare themselves nation-states and join the United Nations are essentially a national flag or an anthem, which any advertising agency can produce for them in a few days.

As for the want of an army – let me say that if Microsoft sets up an office in New Delhi to recruit well paid soldiers willing to die defending Windows 8.0 copyright half the Indian army will switch loyalties. Let us not forget that a bulk of the soldiers the East India Company and the British Raj used to control the Indian sub-continent were from within India itself. So it is not very strange to imagine a giant corporation forming its own army in the future for that is how it was in the not-so-distant past. (The United States has already for many years deployed thousands of ‘soldiers’, in Iraq and Afghanistan, who are essentially mercenaries employed by security companies)

To understand the tectonic changes underway and how territory is not the basis of economies anymore one has also to look at the world’s financial system, which in the last couple of decades has ballooned to a size way bigger than the real world of tangible goods and services.

According to a McKinsey Global Institute report in 2010, the total value of the world’s financial stock, comprising equity market capitalization and outstanding bonds and loans, touched US$212 trillion and was more than three times as large as the total output of goods and services produced across the planet that year.  The same year cross-border capital flows grew to US$4.4 trillion. Ninety percent of global capital flows run between three regions: the U.S., the United Kingdom and the European countries that use the Euro. It is clear that as far as the world of global finance is concerned, outside these regions, the rest of the planet has indeed fallen off the map!

The point to understand here really is, while many of the nation-states that are around today emerged after the break-up of the big colonial Empires of the past today the same nation-states are being subordinated by the new Empire of Global Capital and the few powerful nations that act as their marketing agents. Corporations are the new monarchs of the globe and while nation-states are not about to disappear anytime very soon they are a much weakened entity shorn of genuine sovereignty or independence.

In the context of terms like ‘independence’ another point to remember is that when one ‘separates’ from an existing nation-state framework, one automatically also becomes part of some other framework globally. The problem with many national liberation movements is usually that while they are very clear about what they are breaking away from they don’t think harder about what they are uniting with after the break-up.

To put it bluntly who are the new friends they want to hangout with and what kind of arrangements are they making to ensure these friends will not let them down in any way? And remember here we are not talking about just countries out there to choose from but global corporations also!

In the case of Scotland for example it is clear that the prospect of joining the European Union’s political and economic frameworkor protective security cover of NATO was what made breaking away from the UK attractive for many of its supporters. Also, though the Scottish National Party, which led the campaign for independence, is a champion of social democracy and the welfare state it is doubtful they would have been able to resist the pressure from global capital to dance to its dictates and implement policies in favour of business and investors.

All this would have made the newly independent Scotland a minor version of the United Kingdom itself, resulting in no particular benefit for either ordinary working class Scots or the people of the world at large. A better way to go forward for the Scottish progressives could be to fight for transforming the United Kingdom, one of the most unequal societies in the developed world and also radicalise the European Union itself in the long run.

Similarly, in South Asia, separatist movements – instead of focusing on forming imitative nation-states of their own- should consider forging a ‘United States of South Asia’ or ‘USSA’ of sorts that will be an example to the world of how very diverse people can live and work together with mutual respect and for mutual benefit. For this to happen however the precondition would be dramatic changes in the federal structure of India, without which there is little chance of anyone accepting to be part of a larger united South Asia.

To be more specific it is my contention, that throughout South Asia and in India in particular there is a need for encouraging the dialectical process of both separation and unityby promoting the right to self-determination at smaller and smaller levels parallel with the construction of a larger region-wide federal unity. The idea is not as crazy as it sounds if you look at the history of the world’s most powerful country, the United States itself, which was born of the union of independent colonies coming together in a way that allowed maximum autonomy with maximum cooperation.

One starting point for a movement towards a united South Asia could be the extension of the provisions of Article 370, currently accorded only to the state of Jammu and Kashmir, to all the states of India (both existing and yet to be born). This would enable a far greater degree of autonomy to the states and make India a federal republic in the true sense and attract new partners in South Asia to come and join it.

This article specifies that except for Defense, Foreign Affairs, Finance and Communications, the Indian Parliament needs the State Government’s concurrence for applying all other laws. Thus the state’s residents lived under a separate set of laws, including those related to citizenship, ownership of property, and fundamental rights, as compared to other Indians.

Another specific measure that can be implemented is to give up the idea of citizenship and of ‘one-person, one nationality’, which is anyway becoming obsolete globally with many countries accepting multiple citizenship. Even in India, dual nationality of sorts has been allowed by bestowing various privileges to ‘People of Indian Origin’ or PIO to to citizens of Indian origin living overseas. India can take a decisive step towards the formation of the USSA by extending the current PIO recognition to the people of all neighbouring countries in South Asia.

I realize that, given the current political and geo-political situation in South Asia, my proposal does sound like something dreamt up after a lot of Scotch whisky. I also understand that for the idea of a USSA or a South Asian Union of any kind to actually get implemented it will take not just time but also a very great mobilisation of people and groups across the sub-continent.

And yet considering the threats of globlal imperialism knocking at the doors of South Asia, the unending and bloody ‘property fight’ between nationalists and separatists, as also the real possibility of nuclear war in the region, it is important to  urgently starttalking and debating about alternative ways of running all our societies, before it is too late.

Satya Sagar is a public health activist and writer who believes that the only good nation is a donation. He can be reached at sagarnama@gmail.com

15 thoughts on “Lessons from Scotland for South Asia: Satya Sagar”

  1. If we start allowing private entities within India to determine their own fundamental rights, we’re all done for. I don’t know what good fate India had to have the awesome Constitution we have today, but I’m dead sure that if were were to draw it up again from scratch today, we wouldn’t have our beloved fundamental rights.

    So while finance etc is all very well to be independent in your proposed model, we can’t leave the fundamental rights to chance. I don’t trust either the Indian leaders, or the people of India to value them enough to put them into new laws for each state.

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  2. This issue has become a bitter pill. “To be more specific it is my contention, that throughout South Asia and in India in particular there is a need for encouraging the dialectical process of both separation and unity by promoting the right to self-determination at smaller and smaller levels parallel with the construction of a larger region-wide federal unity. ” — is pretty reasonable. Really a thought-provoking article.

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  3. the smallest unit with powers to decide many of the issues concerning it should be a mohalla committee, instead of which anonymous politicians and bureaucrats make these decisions. And what “benefits’ them is really not of much use to our neighbourhoods.

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  4. The problem with your arguments is that while they criticize the problem well, the alternative you suggest is horrible….. article 370 is a nightmarish article which should be removed at the first instance….. extending this article to all states means having individual civil laws at each state level, meaning that civil laws like right to own property anywhere in India, marriage laws, even criminal laws would vary from state to state meaning that even punishment would vary depending on which state you belonged…… In the US, marriage, right to practise law, medicine etc varies from state to state

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    1. There is nothing specially benevolent about having uniform laws across a vast and diverse country like India, especially when they are imposed from above. Extending Article 370, or some law of a similar nature, to all states in India is based on the simple assumption that as we go along the demands for local autonomy and control over various aspects of economic and social life will only increase, a la Telangana. Ignoring these demands will only create a pressure cooker situation that will explode from time to time in various forms of violence and outright demands for secession. The United States, for all its other problems as a country, has by far the most successful federal union mechanism in the world because of the kind of leeway given to each of its states. Uniform laws are convenient only to those who want to establish empires (corporations love uniformity) as they don’t want to deal with real people and their demands at the local level but dismiss their existence with exercise of centralised power.

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  5. After making interesting observations about the relevance of nation-state framework (though nothing new), the author goes on to prove that he was indeed intoxicated on something far more powerful than scotch whiskey :-) The two specific proposals of extending Article 370 and PIO status to all south asians will only lead to anarchy. More powers to states, cities, villages, is different from extending Article 370 kind of thing to the whole country.

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  6. I agree with the idea of decentralisation, but as someone mentioned before, I think we need to modify this proposal by making provision for fundamental rights to be maintained across state boundaries.
    Self-determination can allow and in fact, facilitate the entrenchment of existing hierarchies, like caste and patriarchy. While our current safeguards against these hierarchies are almost laughable, I shudder to imagine how much more powerful they can grow with the kind of decentralisation proposed here.

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    1. What I had proposed was not just decentralisation alone but in combination with larger regional and even global frameworks than what the existing nation-state (in this case India) offers. So the idea is not to vest all powers in the smallest unit and forget about it but do it in a way that the local also imbibes the global within itself to uphold universal values- if necessary adapted to local conditions. However, caste and patriarchy will not disappear through either centralisation or decentralisation of administrative structures as that requires a social fight of a different order altogether. However, since caste and patriarchy are both essentially about concentrations of power the concept of decentralisation of power could be helpful in challenging them.

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      1. Actually, I would argue the opposite regarding many social problems. Oppression is often local, hyper-local, and Ambedkar opted for a centralized state and federal safeguards in India as the best guarantee against the tyranny of the “idyllic” village community. In fact, “states rights” in the US are often codewords for perpetuating such things as slavery, anti-LGBT laws, etc.

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  7. Free Kashmir. Hold the referendum like Scotland so we can have azaadi. The sooner Indians understand the better we will all be. A major difference between UK and India: UK never deployed thousands of troops, UK never subjected the Scottish people to grave injustices and violence, UK never hurt the sentiments of the local Scots like India did to us time and time and time again. That’s why we will vote YES YES YES.

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    1. Kashmir is the most obvious example of how modern nation-states value territory over people and are willing to carry out even genocide if needed to hold on to the ‘land’ part of the ‘motherland’. They are hardly alone though in their misery as places as far apart as Baluchistan, Nagaland and Tamil Eelam can testify. However, there is little chance of any of these getting any independence without the rest of South Asia getting its freedom too from the mix of corporate agents and feudal lords running these nation-states in the region. That is why the freedom of individual communities is predicated on the freedom of every other community at the same time and what is needed is a collective fight throughout South Asia to ‘separate but together’ or in other words create an entity that gives maximum autonomy with maximum cooperation to every identity group. Limiting one’s options to creating new nation-states out of old ones will only create dozens of mini-Kashmirs all over the place without resolving the problem of the big existing one.

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    2. @Sayyeda:
      This article and the referendum on which you have based your argument for azaad Kashmir is exactly opposite of your own demand.
      Lessonsto be learnt from this referendum are for Kashmir
      Indepence should make economic sense and strategic defense sense for which geography is also to be considered.
      Your reasoning for a independence is based on religion. isn’t it?
      If India as a nation state follows your reason, then India should reclaim and merge whole of Pakistan, Bangladesh, etc etc. Yes, “reclaim” is the important word here.

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  8. more than a problem of scale and centralisation, the problem is the legalistic notion of citizenship. also, i feel there is a generalisation of the history of the modern nation state and capitalist development. perhaps scotland might not be the best example to understand the separatist movements in india. also, the author’s federalist proposal has already been a hot subject of debate in many separatist movements for the last few decades. for some, in assam for instance, proposals such as the author’s would even have had some purchase in some circles. except that the same theoretical exercise would be done on assam’ not ‘ussa’ – the difference only being the author’s argument takes place on a sub-continental scale. in fact, in assam many were toying with ideas of a broader southeast asian identity, etc. to complicate the author’s account, what happens when one would rather join the ‘southeast asian’ union than the ‘south asian union’? the point being that the problem is not one of scale, but of defining the inside and outside of any such unit. and this is a necessarily historical question.

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  9. I do agree with many issues such as mini Kashmir & pressure cooker situation, however I think referendums are for a aware, rational and free society. For example, a woman in Haryana will be far more comfortable being governed by consitution of India then the rulings of Khap.

    The line where swaraj begins & centeral control ends cannot be drawn in India taking reference to EU or USA. We as a society will surely like to move in direction of decentralisation but not in a way that people end up getting stuck with obsolete, irrational and destructive laws.

    Decisions for a village, like whether to invest in a primary school or a canal, should be made by village itself. But not by a small group of villagers who oppose schooling for girls.

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  10. Well presented argument for the use of non violent means to achieve independence from the UK for Scotland. Then one can argue that because of peaceful protest and referendums, Scotland is not achieving what she strives for.

    As for corporate business companies, there is nothing going back. We can bring in employee ownership trust into capitalism to save his man rights from being disappearing

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