The end of the year can bring a certain
kind of wistfulness over lost time and missed opportunities. Today is one such
day. Former Prime Minister Manmohan
Singh, who ushered in historic reforms and liberated India’s economy, is no
more. Singh passed away late Thursday night. He was 92.
“History will be kinder to me,”
he had remarked in his last speech as Prime Minister. Only a few individuals in
public life can boast of having donned as many
hats as Singh – chief economic
advisor, economic affairs secretary, RBI Governor, Planning Commission deputy
chairman, Finance Minister, and then the head of the government, twice, from
2004-14.
A man with humble beginnings, Singh rose to the pinnacle of power, silently shaping
India as it is today. As Finance Minister in 1991, Singh turned the tide for India’s economy, focusing on liberalisation,
privatisation, and opening up the economy. Singh catapulted Indo-US ties with
the nuclear
deal, making them strategic partners, a
relationship that remains stronger still. His lasting legacy will perhaps be in
the potent
tool he left behind in the hands of citizens – the Right to
Information Act.
The unlikely politician, however, did not have it easy. He was often attacked for
being an “accidental PM” who let then-Congress president Sonia Gandhi steer his
premiership. But as contributing editor Neerja Chowdhury writes
in our pages, Singh proved time and again that he
was no accident. In
2018, when Singh launched his book, Changing India, he
responded to the criticism: “People say I was a silent Prime Minister… I would certainly like to say
that I was not the Prime Minister who was afraid of talking to the press.”
As India bids farewell to Singh, a man
with unfailing foresight, it’s only fitting to imbibe his lesson on looking
ahead. Wrapping up his historic 1991 Budget speech, Singh had
said, “Let the whole world hear it loud and clear. India
is now wide awake. We shall prevail. We shall overcome.”