December 20, 2006
In the Wall Street Journal, Shikha Dalmia has a dim view of Dehli's future.
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Delhi Dilemma
By SHIKHA DALMIA
December 19, 2006; Page A16
India's Supreme Court earlier this year ordered an extraordinary
campaign to close all businesses in the residential areas of New
Delhi because they violate the city's zoning laws against mixed
use. But if the court proceeds with this misguided crusade, India's
capital may never attain its "world class city" aspirations. This
is the lesson from America, where similar laws contributed to the
decay of once-vital core cities and created anemic, sterile
suburbs.
New Delhi, by global standards, is an urban jungle -- a vast tangle
of concrete, congestion and chaos. Its roads are gridlocked,
parking is tight, and housing is scarce. All this was tolerable so
long as it was merely ghar ki baat -- a family matter. But now with
India opening to the global economy, this crowded, squalid capital,
which is often an outsider's first introduction to the country, has
become something of a national embarrassment. Add to this the fact
that New Delhi is due to host the 2010 Commonwealth Games -- a big
deal, for some reason, in these parts -- and the city's makeover
has assumed real urgency.
It is against this backdrop that the Supreme Court revived the
city's long-ignored Master Plan, an urban planning document created
in the 1950s and updated every few years. But the court's
prescribed cure is worse than the disease. Until now, ordinary
citizens arranged their homes, businesses and neighborhoods
according to their own private plans. Over the last 50 years, the
city has quite spontaneously sorted itself according to an inner
logic that no planner could have anticipated, unleashing vast
reserves of entrepreneurial energy.
People with homes on major arteries, for instance, have either
opened their own businesses or rented out rooms to accountants,
doctors, clothing show-rooms, jewelry stores, beauticians, banquet
halls or Internet cafes -- you name it. Many of these businesses
have totally displaced the original homes, creating thriving,
bustling places of commerce such as the super-posh markets in South
Extension and MG Road and their less-plush equivalents in Moti
Nagar and Kamla Nagar.
But commercial activity has not been limited along major roads.
Every Delhi neighborhood is a self-sufficient entity with its own
grocery stores, tailors, dry cleaners and salons -- all within safe
walking distance for kids to run errands. Some of the more upscale
areas such as Defence Colony have about 100 art galleries
sandwiched between houses. The freedom to operate from home has
been a particular boon for Indian women who are able to run roaring
businesses -- most of them catering to other women -- while keeping
an eye on their children. Indeed, residences and businesses have
become so intimately intertwined that most people don't know that a
Master Plan forbidding mixed uses exists. Even the Telecom
Authority of India, the bureaucracy that regulates the telecom
sector, has its main office in Safdarjung Enclave, a residential
area!
The Confederation of All India Traders maintains that enforcing
this plan could potentially shutter 500,000 businesses and render
nearly 2.5 million people unemployed. It is hardly surprising then
that the initial round of business closings ordered by the court
triggered massive protests that caused four deaths and forced
authorities to call in paramilitary units. The drive was
subsequently suspended until Jan. 31. But the question remains:
Will inflicting all this pain and suffering on businesses actually
produce a better New Delhi?
Some of the businesses might be able to pay the exorbitant rents of
newly constructed, Western-style malls and relocate, as the court
wants. But the vast majority won't be able to move, notes Parth
Shah, founder of the Center for Civil Society, a Hauz Khas-based
think tank that he created by carving out office space in his flat.
This is not only a matter of expense; rather, many of these
businesses depend on their communities and can't be transplanted
elsewhere. For instance, neighborhood grocery stores will lose
their function if they are relocated to a strip mall a mile away.
Women who have to balance work with household chores will be unable
to stay in business. The upshot will be a net attrition of the
economy.
But will this anti-business movement improve the quality of life?
In "The Death and Life of Great American Cities," Jane Jacobs, the
brilliant critic of America's centralized land-use planning, argued
that businesses don't just wither without their neighborhoods --
neighborhoods wither without their businesses too. She traced
nearly every familiar urban malaise -- high crime, social
isolation, disintegrating communities -- to the loss of business
diversity caused by laws banning mixed land use. The very presence
of local shops, restaurants and merchants deters crime, she pointed
out, vastly reducing the need for formal policing. Furthermore,
they draw people out of their homes and onto the streets, creating
countless opportunities for social interactions, none of which are
meaningful in their own right but together inject what Indians
would term raunaq -- life and color -- into neighborhoods.
New Delhi's challenge is to hang on to its raunaq as rapid economic
growth creates land-use conflicts. This is a balancing act that
many American cities have obviously failed to perform, as any
Indian who has visited a lifeless American suburb or driven through
hollowed-out cities like Detroit and Cleveland can testify. "It
will require radical steps," notes Barun Mitra, director of the
Liberty Institute in New Delhi. "But they run in a direction
opposite to the top-down approach that the Supreme Court is
pushing."
In fact, what's needed is the extension of property rights and the
decentralization of land-use planning. The Delhi Development
Authority -- the government monopoly that owns all the city's land
-- only leases land to homeowners in small parcels. This means, for
instance, that homeowners have no room to erect private garages,
increasing their reliance on street parking. Nor can private
entities buy large tracts of land and arrange its use according to
local needs. All neighborhood land is held by a cooperative that is
legally required to stick to the DDA's rigid formula for open
space, street size and parking. Homeowners routinely violate this
formula, but can't change it.
If New Delhi moves forward with the court's draconian
prescriptions, it might well join the ranks of moribund American
cities. If it follows a different path, it might become an example
and a beacon of hope. This might take longer than the deadline for
the Commonwealth Games. But surely it would be a better prize than
a glittering ghost town.
Ms. Dalmia, who grew up in New Delhi, is a senior analyst at the
Reason Foundation in Los Angeles.
Thanks to whoever pasted that in. Some of us don't have WSJ
subscriptions.
Fascinating portrait.
I was looking for such analysis in indian newspapers as the
controversy dragged on. Yet there were paens to the wisdom of the
Supreme Court, and disgust at 'lawbreaking' shopkeepers.
Kudos to Shikha and the Wall Street Journal for rising up to the
challenge...
PS: Any hope for a Reason India anytime soon?
Speaking of India, my prediction is that it, not China, will be the great power in mainland Asia. Even if its major cities are rundown :)
Who's to say that Indians don't WANT to live in vast, anemic
suburbs? Just like Americans...
my prediction is that it, not China, will be the great power in
mainland Asia
Only if the Commies remain in power in China. I think India's a bit
more fractured culturally - potential for lots of ethnic &
religious violence there.
Rhywun,
Of course, that's the big IF. I don't think a seamless transition
from a totalitarian state to a liberal one is likely. I also think
that the growing middle class in China is apt to cause some serious
trouble at some point. When China's market (esp. the U.S.) hits a
major recession again, look for big problems. India is better
suited politically to stay afloat over the long haul. Its
relatively large number of English speakers also gives India a big
advantage.
Of course, that's the big IF.
Yeah, that's true. I'm not gonna speculate on it any more. I
enjoyed China a lot when I visited recently so I have some fondness
for it - here's hoping things get better for everyone there. And
India too. And Africa, and ...
Wow. No private property in Delhi. That's their problem right there. One wonders if the city planners of Delhi have ever been to New York which is all about mixed use. Shops on the ground floor and living space above.
What Pro Libertate said about the advantages of India having a large English-speaking population. China has a rapidly aging population thanks to the one child policy, not to mention the likely dramatic increases in crime as a result of so many single men. Remember 20 years ago when so best-selling books warned us of the coming Japanese hegemony? Now we are reading the same things about China and they will probably be wrong for some of the same reasons.
Kent,
Though Rhywun's point is a good one. On the off chance that China
liberalizes politically in the near future, it could indeed become
a monster economic power. There's no doubt that the Chinese
people--as opposed to their government--are born merchants. Pretty
much everywhere the Chinese have gone, they've been successful
businessmen. Interesting that such a business culture evolved under
oppression (and under communism, over the last half century).
Still, even if that happens, Indians are no slouch at business,
either. It would be nice if all of the Asian powers could become
true economic powers and dump any military ambitions (à la Europe).
Then Russia would be the last major power that needs work :)
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