Former Nepal PM Baburam Bhattarai at IIT Bombay: South Asia’s chronic poverty a result of failed institutions, weak democracy
MUMBAI: Former Nepal prime minister Baburam Bhattarai on Saturday offered a wide-ranging critique of South Asia’s political economy, arguing that the region’s persistent poverty, inequality and instability are the result of extractive institutions, weak state capacity and a failure to build inclusive democracies. Speaking at IIT Bombay’s TechFest, Bhattarai said Nepal’s own turbulent political history — marked by monarchy, conflict and fragile governments — holds important lessons for the region.
Bhattarai, an architect by training who later entered politics through Nepal’s pro-democracy movement, reflected on the country’s decade-long struggle against monarchical rule, saying it ultimately gave him the opportunity to help draft Nepal’s new constitution. He said Nepal consciously drew from India’s constitutional experience. “I borrowed many phrases and ideas from the Indian Constitution, whose author was the Babasaheb Ambedkar,” Bhattarai said.
06:17
Describing Nepal’s recent uprisings as a “wake-up call” for the political and economic elite, Bhattarai said they were rooted in deep institutional failures. He cited corruption, low state capacity and chronic political instability, noting that Nepal has seen “30 governments in 30 years”, which has prevented sustained policy-making and long-term development.
Linking Nepal’s experience to wider regional trends, Bhattarai said South Asia’s development record was deeply troubling. “Forty percent of the world’s poor live in South Asia. That is a slap to the face,” he said, arguing that a nation’s prosperity depends on inclusive institutions rather than “extractive and feudal” ones.
Bhattarai said Nepal stagnated for decades under authoritarian monarchies and rigid traditional hierarchies. “While the West criticised, thought and voted, we remained stuck,” he said, adding that Nepal’s geopolitical position had further constrained its growth. “We have been caught between two powers and isolated for a millennium, and we got trapped in a cycle of dependency and unequal relationships,” he said. As a result, Nepal today has the lowest levels of foreign investment in South Asia, he added.
Calling for structural reforms, Bhattarai stressed the need for land, labour and social justice reforms to address inequality and exclusion. He also warned of widening wealth gaps and environmental degradation across the region. “We share the rivers and the mountains, so we have to get together to take care of them,” he said, making the case for regional cooperation on climate and natural resources.
Bhattarai also underlined the importance of deeper economic integration in South Asia as a pathway to prosperity. Recalling the SAARC summit in the Maldives in 2011, he said he had urged then Indian prime minister Manmohan Singh and Pakistan’s prime minister Yusuf Raza Gilani to set aside bilateral disputes and cooperate for regional growth and stability.
Critiquing ideological extremes, Bhattarai said South Asia must move beyond what he described as the binary of unregulated economic liberalism and rigid state fundamentalism. He argued for a pragmatic middle path, which he termed “scientific humanism”, that balances markets, the state and social justice.
“We have fought for democracy,” Bhattarai said. “Now we have to use it wisely.”Get the latest lifestyle updates on Times of India, along with Happy New Year wishes, messages, and quotes !
Indias Backyard In Flux: Nepals Gen Z Revolt To Pakistans Court Chaos Shakes South Asia In 2025
Describing Nepal’s recent uprisings as a “wake-up call” for the political and economic elite, Bhattarai said they were rooted in deep institutional failures. He cited corruption, low state capacity and chronic political instability, noting that Nepal has seen “30 governments in 30 years”, which has prevented sustained policy-making and long-term development.
Linking Nepal’s experience to wider regional trends, Bhattarai said South Asia’s development record was deeply troubling. “Forty percent of the world’s poor live in South Asia. That is a slap to the face,” he said, arguing that a nation’s prosperity depends on inclusive institutions rather than “extractive and feudal” ones.
Bhattarai said Nepal stagnated for decades under authoritarian monarchies and rigid traditional hierarchies. “While the West criticised, thought and voted, we remained stuck,” he said, adding that Nepal’s geopolitical position had further constrained its growth. “We have been caught between two powers and isolated for a millennium, and we got trapped in a cycle of dependency and unequal relationships,” he said. As a result, Nepal today has the lowest levels of foreign investment in South Asia, he added.
Calling for structural reforms, Bhattarai stressed the need for land, labour and social justice reforms to address inequality and exclusion. He also warned of widening wealth gaps and environmental degradation across the region. “We share the rivers and the mountains, so we have to get together to take care of them,” he said, making the case for regional cooperation on climate and natural resources.
Critiquing ideological extremes, Bhattarai said South Asia must move beyond what he described as the binary of unregulated economic liberalism and rigid state fundamentalism. He argued for a pragmatic middle path, which he termed “scientific humanism”, that balances markets, the state and social justice.
“We have fought for democracy,” Bhattarai said. “Now we have to use it wisely.”Get the latest lifestyle updates on Times of India, along with Happy New Year wishes, messages, and quotes !
Top Comment
K
Kaushal Dalal
2 days ago
Why free entry to Nepalis are continued.... it's a hub for druggies and possibly terrorists an use the route to enter India. Why alow them to take our jobs?????Read allPost comment
Popular from City
- Gig workers' stir: Riders say accidents, shrinking payouts drove strike call; restaurants bypassed apps to deliver orders
- ‘We can’t indulge in idol worship’: Actor Nushrratt Bharuccha’s Mahakal temple visit sparks row; fatwa issued by Muslim leader
- Faridabad gang rape: How clash with mother spiraled into night of horror for Gurgaon woman; hurled from van at 90kmph
- Mumbai receives surprise morning showers on 1st day of 2026
- Water contamination kills 7: Crowned cleanest city 8 times, Indore now faces tap-water crisis
end of article
Trending Stories
- Gig workers' stir: Riders say accidents, shrinking payouts drove strike call; restaurants bypassed apps to deliver orders
- Zack Wheeler and Dominique Wheeler combined net worth in 2025: A closer look at the Philadelphia Phillies star's earnings, salary, family life and more
05:58 'I'm in Dubai,' says Hadi killing suspect Dhaka accused India of sheltering- Sophie Cunningham vs Angel Reese Net Worth 2025: Exploring career earnings, brand endorsements and more of WNBA athletes
- Will Saudi Arabia succeed in turning its vast desert landscape green by planting 10 billion trees?
- NBA update: Anthony Davis to Dallas Mavericks? Trade buzz heats up as Mavs test the market while Golden State Warriors and Atlanta Hawks weigh risky options
- Smelling of liquor, AI pilot detained at Vancouver airport on X'mas eve before operating Delhi flight
Featured in city
- Delhi vehicle sales hit record 8.2L in 2025: Surge in private two- and four-wheelers exposes public transport gaps, pollution risk
- Gurgaon–Faridabad road horror: Woman gang-raped after leaving home post-argument with mother; thrown from van at 90 kmph
- Kargil hero in Bengal voter drive: Ex-soldier queues up to reclaim voting rights after SIR gap
- Traffic curbs to stay on New Year Day: NH-44, central & south Delhi roads affected; commuters urged to plan
- Indore water contamination deaths: Minister Kailash Vijayvargiya 'admits mistake’; 7 dead, over 1,100 ill
- New Year, same air: Delhi starts 2026 with ‘very poor’ AQI at 372; Anand Vihar worst hit
Photostories
- 10 signs you are raising an intelligent child
- Partied hard for the New Year 2026? 5 fruits that may help with hangovers
- What kids hear vs What parents mean: Fixing everyday communication gaps
- Minimalist baby names for today’s parents
- 8 objects used in homes that are the dirtiest and how to clean and disinfect them
- ‘Paatal Lok’, ‘Panchayat’, ‘The Family Man’: How 2025 became the year Indian OTT finally learned to get franchises right
- From boardrooms to weddings: 5 global luxury brands Indian men are wearing right now
- What 2025 taught us about health: The biggest lessons of the year
- 10 best New Year traditions to celebrate the start of 2026
- Food poisoning vs. gastrointestinal infection: What’s the difference?
Videos
07:59 Midnight To Morning: How India Rang In 2026 With Fireworks Prayers Music And Mass Celebrations08:19 Khaleda Zia’s funeral: EAM Jaishankar Hands Over Modi’s Letter To BNP Chief Tarique Rahman In Dhaka09:46 Throwback 25: Five Indian Weapons That Crushed Terror And Dominated Pakistan in Operation Sindoor13:34 Terror, Tariffs, Polls: PM Modi’s Mic-Drop Moments That Set The Agenda In 202511:44 Top Moments Of 2025 When Indian Diplomats Took On Pakistan, Tore Apart Lies & Hypocrisy At UN08:26 Throwback 2025: Five Big Moments When India Defied Pressure And Delivered Diplomatic Masterstrokes07:39 Ayodhya Faced Conspiracies But Sanatan Prevailed, UP CM Yogi Adityanath Says At Ram Temple Event06:17 India’s Backyard In Flux: Nepal's Gen Z Revolt To Pakistan's Court Chaos Shakes South Asia In 202503:38 Army Trains Village Defence Guards In J&K In Automatic Rifles, Self-Defence | Watch
Up Next