PM Modi’s 1 Year in Power Gets Mixed Reviews in US Media #NaMo365 

American media is critical of Prime Minister Modi’s year in power, urging him to face the reality. 

The Quint
World
Updated:
Prime Minister Narendra Modi gestures while speaking at Madison Square Garden in New York, during a visit to the United States, September 28, 2014. (Photo: Reuters)
i
Prime Minister Narendra Modi gestures while speaking at Madison Square Garden in New York, during a visit to the United States, September 28, 2014. (Photo: Reuters)
null

advertisement

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s foreign trips have consistently made headlines in the last one year. His visit to America was widely reported and analysed in India and abroad. While the Prime Minister may have received a rockstar reception in the US then, unfortunately for him, a year on the reviews for his government are not so flattering.

Analysing Modi’s first year in power, the Wall Street Journal (WSJ) noted that “messy realities are sinking in”.

(Photo Courtesy: The Wall Street Journal/Screenshot)

The WSJ is among the many American media agencies that have been critical of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s first year in government.

Even Modi government’s “Make in India” aimed at supercharging the manufacturing growth, “is so far mostly hype”, added the WSJ piece.

One of the reports cited economic parameters like exports to say that the “economy is merely limping along”.

Inflation-adjusted lending for capital investment last year fell to a level not seen since 2004. Exports are down for the fifth straight month in April, corporate earnings are dismal and foreign institutional investors have pulled around USD 2 billion out of Indian stocks and bonds in May so far.

- The Wall Street Journal

(Photo Courtesy: The Wall Street Journal/Screenshot)

The New York Times wasn’t very forgiving either. An analytical piece in the newspaper argued that Modi must face the reality that much of his agenda is “still only potential.”

From abroad, India is now seen as a bright spot, expected to pass China this year to become the world’s fastest-growing large economy. But at home, job growth remains sluggish. Businesses are in wait-and-see mode. And Modi has political vulnerabilities, as parliamentary opposition leaders block two of his central reform initiatives and brand him ‘anti-poor’ and ‘anti-farmer’.
The New York Times article titled ‘After a Year of Outsize Expectations, Modi Adjusts His Political Course for India’

(Photo Courtesy: The New York Times/Screenshot)

The article further added that “most formidable of all is a problem Modi has made for himself: outsize expectations that he would sweep away constraints to growth in India, like stringent laws governing labour and land acquisition.”

(With inputs from PTI)

(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)

Published: 26 May 2015,01:03 PM IST

ADVERTISEMENT
SCROLL FOR NEXT