Dr Ahluwalia is Right: Future Generations
Must learn from PV’s
Reform Legacy
(Favors PV Reform Journey
as
‘Amar Chitra Katha’
Model narration)
Vanam Jwala Narasimha Rao
Hans India Edit Page (January 7, 2026)
(Dr Ahluwalia stressed
that carrying forward Rao’s reform legacy requires a conscious strengthening of
cooperative federalism. He observed that economic transformation in India
cannot be driven by the Centre alone and that effective coordination and trust
between the Union and the States are essential for sustaining reforms. Rao
intuitively understood this balance and governed with respect for India’s
federal diversity, a lesson that remains central to India’s future economic
progress)-Editor’s synoptic note
In his recent PV
Narasimha Rao Memorial Lecture delivered in Hyderabad on December 31, 2025, Dr
Montek Singh Ahluwalia reflected on PV’s enduring legacy, not merely as a
reformer of the past, but as a statesman whose approach to leadership, economic
management, and political courage remains deeply relevant for India’s future.
He emphasized that PV’s greatness lay not in isolated decisions but in his
ability to combine political realism with intellectual openness at a moment of
national vulnerability.
Dr Ahluwalia began by
recalling the extraordinary circumstances of the 1991 balance-of-payments
crisis, and how PV’s leadership during that period demonstrated calm resolve
rather than panic. He highlighted that the economic reforms were not an
abstract ideological shift but a practical response to crisis, undertaken with
full awareness of political risks. In this context, he drew attention to PV’s
decisive choice of Dr Manmohan Singh as Finance Minister, noting that this
partnership was foundational to India’s reform trajectory.
Dr Ahluwalia referred
to the ‘PV–Manmohan Combination’ as a rare and powerful mix, suggesting
that India’s future leadership would require a similar blend, a ‘PV–Manmohan
Mix’ combining political courage, intellectual depth, administrative
discipline, and ethical seriousness. According to Dr Ahluwalia, sustaining and
advancing PV legacy would demand leaders who understand both the compulsions of
politics and the rigor of sound economics, rather than privileging one at the
cost of the other.
Reflecting on the human
and political pressures of the reform period, Dr Ahluwalia recalled the Harshad
Mehta episode and the turbulence it caused in financial markets and public
discourse. He referred to this episode as a reminder of how fragile confidence
was during the early reform years and how leadership had to navigate not only
economic uncertainty but also political and institutional shock. The episode,
he noted, underscored the importance of strengthening financial oversight and
institutional credibility alongside liberalization.
In one of the most
personal and revealing segments of the lecture, Dr Ahluwalia referred to the
moment when Dr Manmohan Singh offered his resignation as Finance Minister and
reportedly stopped attending office for two days, following political attacks
linked to the market crisis. He emphasized that PV’s intervention at that
moment, persuading Dr Singh to continue, thereby preserving reform momentum at
a critical juncture was decisive, he pointed out.
This episode, Ahluwalia
suggested, exemplified PV’s understanding of leadership, protecting capable
individuals in times of adversity, and insulating economic decision-making from
short-term political pressures. Dr Ahluwalia also highlighted Rao’s instinct
for institution-building and federal balance, observing that many reforms
succeeded because they were implemented with sensitivity to India’s federal
structure.
He stressed that
carrying forward PV Narasimha Rao’s reform legacy requires a conscious
strengthening of cooperative federalism. He observed that economic
transformation in India cannot be driven by the Centre alone and that effective
coordination and trust between the Union and the States are essential for
sustaining reforms. He noted that Rao intuitively understood this balance and
governed with respect for India’s federal diversity, a lesson that remains
central to India’s future economic progress.
Throughout the lecture,
Dr Ahluwalia repeatedly returned to the theme that economic reform is not a
one-time event but a continuous process, shaped by leadership quality,
institutional strength, and political maturity. He emphasized that PV’s true
legacy lies in demonstrating how difficult decisions can be taken within a
democratic framework, without grandstanding or populism.
In fact, a day earlier I
was with him in a small gathering of well-wishers, purely as an informal circle
of achievers from diverse specializations.
(They included Senior
Journalists, Highly Respected Publisher, Advocate of High Repute,
Vice-Chancellor, Physician, former Rajya Sabha Member, and a Social-Political
Activist cum Technocrat among others, who had come not for ceremony but for
conversation. Dr Montek Singh Ahluwalia, as someone who had watched governments
rise and fall, policies celebrated and diluted, and ideals strained by power,
responded to a wide range of questions. In Small Gathering or Memorial Lecture,
the clarity of Dr Ahluwalia in reverence to PV Narasimha Rao is unparalleled).
When I presented my
book Democracy and Governance through Lens and Blurred Glasses: A Journey
into Distorted Visions of Modern-Day Politics, he did not leaf through it
casually, but enquired whether there is any reference to PV Narasimha Rao in the
book. The episode involving PV while he was Chief Minister AP and his Chief
Secretary Valluri Kameswara Rao, an eminent ICS officer, attracted his
attention as an example of the moral courage of a role-model civil servant and
the humility of a Chief Minister of that era.
During the
conversation, Dr Montek recalled Atal Bihari Vajpayee’s civilizational grace
that transcended party lines, Rajiv Gandhi sending Vajpayee abroad for medical
treatment, his suggestion to Vajpayee to rename the Planning Commission which
Vajpayee politely declined etc. He said that, little contemporary history has
been written after Indira Gandhi. Rajiv Gandhi attempted to understand the
emerging middle class as a new social force. Responding to changing the name of
MGNREGA as VB–G RAM G, he remembered Sharad Yadav, and spoke of a time when
rural employment was treated as a moral responsibility.
(Dr Ahluwalia warned
that communal assertiveness, apart from being morally wrong, is economically
unwise. Speaking of the Ramayana he said that, it is a civilisation of many
telling, with a hundred Ramayanas, each reflecting the society that told it.
This pluralism, he implied, was India’s real inheritance).
Being candid about
liberalization, he made it clear that, what we see today, is not what PV
envisioned. Saying that, institutions must remain central, Dr Ahluwalia felt
that, India needs strong, independent, and uncaptured regulators in every field.
He cited TN Seshan’s uncompromising tenure at the Election Commission as an
example of institutional courage.
Coalition governments,
despite instability, at least introduced checks and balances, a form of
political dharma, said Dr Montek. On the current political leadership, Dr
Montek’s assessment was measured. He noted that one significant shift had been
the breaking of an old elite monopoly in politics. That opening question about
PV to me, by Dr Ahluwalia, was not simply about a reference in a book, but
about whether democracy is still understood as a delicate balance of courage,
humility, and institutional respect. It reaffirmed that democracy lives not in
proclamations, but in quiet moments when power pauses to listen, and that these
moments, if remembered, still have the capacity to guide.
The former Deputy
Chairman of the Planning Commission, Dr Montek Singh Ahluwalia (A globally
recognized economist shaped by institutions rather than ideologies, worked at
the International Monetary Fund (IMF), and advised governments across political
divides) maintained that, remembering PV should go beyond ceremonial homage. He
said that, the real tribute lies in nurturing leadership that reflects PV’s temperament,
intellectually open, politically pragmatic, institutionally respectful, and
morally anchored, and in ensuring that the reform spirit he ignited continues
to evolve in response to India’s changing challenges.
Turning to the question
of legacy transmission, Dr Ahluwalia made a distinctive suggestion that PV
Narasimha Rao’s life and reform journey should be presented to younger
generations in an accessible narrative form, explicitly referring to the ‘Amar
Chitra Katha’ Model. He argued that PV Narasimha Rao’s contributions, particularly
the story of reforms, deserve to be taught not merely as dry policy history but
as a compelling national story of courage, intellect, and quiet determination.
Such inclusion in educational curricula, he felt, would help correct historical
neglect and inspire future generations to appreciate the complexity of
nation-building.
What distinguishes Dr Montek
Singh Ahluwalia is not merely his resume, but his temperament: a rare blend of
analytical clarity and civil restraint. He listens first, speaks later, and
when he does, it is without performance.


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