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Sherman Stanley
British Imperialism in India
A Chart of the Exploitation of 375,000,000 People
(October 1939)
From New International, Vol.5 No.10, October 1939, pp.308-310.
Transcribed & marked up by Einde O’Callaghan for the Encyclopaedia of Trotskyism On-Line (ETOL).
“The history of British Imperialism is written in letters of blood from Congo to Canton.”
(Statistics compiled by Sherman Stanley from The India Year Book: Industrial Labour in India – ILO publication – series A, No.41; Simon Commission Reports; Times of India; The Hindu; Congress Socialist, National Front; Bulletins of the Kisan Sabha, etc., etc.)
The Facts:
- The British have been in India for 250 years.
- They have been the complete masters of India for 150 years.
- There are 285,000 Englishmen in India – that is, 1 Englishman to 1,300 Indians.
- The British Army comprises 60,000 soldiers, plus British officers for the native army of 600,000.
British Profits:
- (1800-1860) – 1,000,000,000 sterling in gold, jewels, interest, etc., taken out of India.
- Total Capital Investment: approximately $7,800,000,000 – yielding annual average return of $900,000,000.
- September 21, 1931 to December 31, 1932: $298,-000,000 in gold bullion was shipped to London from India.
- Interest collected annually on Indian National Debt: $100,000,000.
- Marx's Estimate of England's Profits:
Rent plus dividends on capital investment plus railway profits plus civil and military pensions plus war taxes equals annual income of 60,000,000 Indian workers.
The Peasantry:
- There are 270,000,000 peasants.
- They are divided into 700,000 villages.
- There are 40,000,000 unemployed agricultural workers.
- The Halis (slaves): average of 12 years debt slavery each; 4½ annas (9¢) fixed wages per year.
Interest, Debts and Taxation:
- Bengal peasants: Total annual taxation equals 40% of total harvest value.
- (1929-1939) 50% of Bombay Presidency peasant debts paid by seizure and sale of peasant lands.
- Interest rates on loans: 25% (minimum) to 200%.
- Total agrarian debt: $4,500,000,000.
- Peasant Taxation and Debt Burden:
- Rent to local, private landlord.
- Land tax payable to province or native state government.
- Land tax payable to British government.
- Interest on loans from local money lenders.
- Taxes on water wells, streams, cattle, grazing lands, forests, license fees, wood-chopping, etc.
- Tax on imported and exported agricultural products.
- Feudal obligations: forced labor on roads, buildings, etc.; marriage, birth and death taxes; religious dues; hunting taxes, etc.
- Land Hunger:
Bengal (1931) : 9,995,000 landless laborers (25% of total Bengal peasantry).
Bombay: below 5 acres – 1,128,732 families. 1 to 25 acres – 2,047,986 families.
- “Making a Living”:
Bihar Province:
|
Annual expenses
|
Annual Income
|
Rent
|
$ 85,000,000
|
$250,000,000
|
Interest
|
$100,000,000
|
|
Cultivation
|
$ 85,000,000
|
Total
|
$270,000,000
|
$250,000,000
|
Deficit: $20,000,000
plus: Central government land taxes
plus: Livelihood of peasantry
Total: Permanent Slavery
The Workers:
- There are 51 million “Untouchables” (outcasts) with no rights whatsoever. They constitute the bulk of the industrial and agricultural proletariat.
- Average Annual Income: (per capita)
India
|
|
England
|
|
United States
|
$13.50
|
$369.00
|
$680.00
|
- Percentage of population with annual income over $300: 7%
- Bombay Wages: (highest in India)
Men
|
|
Women
|
|
Children
|
27¢ per day
|
20¢ per day
|
7¢ per day
|
The Native Princes:
- There are 562 native rulers (Maharajas) in India.
- Estimated wealth of the Nisam of Hyderabad:
Annual Income
|
$ 50,000,000
|
Gold Bars
|
$ 250,000,000
|
Jewelry
|
$2,000,000,000
|
Total
|
$2,300,000,000
|
The Indian Budget: (1935-1936)
|
Percent
|
Military Expenses
|
23.9
|
Interest on National Debt
|
22.5
|
Police and Jail Expenses
|
9.6
|
Civil Administration
|
8.7
|
Education
|
5.7
|
Medical and Public Health
|
2.6
|
Agriculture and Industry
|
2.1
|
Miscellaneous
|
24.9
|
Total
|
100.00
|
Police Rule:
- At the height of the Civil Disobedience Movement (1931) the following number of arrests took place in some of the districts of one of the 11 provinces:
District
|
|
No. Arrests
|
Midnapore
|
13,731
|
Arambagh
|
906
|
Tamil
|
3,942
|
Karnatak
|
4,633
|
Kalra
|
4,715
|
Ahmedabad
|
2,793
|
Surat
|
837
|
Total
|
31,557
|
Note: This was during a 6-month period (Jan.-June 1931).
The Government of India:
- War-time India is ruled by the Viceroy; the provincial Governors; the British “advisors” in the native states.
- Each of these men possesses full military and decree powers in his area.
- Parliamentary representation under new Constitution:
|
British India
|
Native States
|
Population
|
256,859,787
|
81,310,845
|
Number of Seats (both houses)
|
400
|
229
|
General Conditions of Life:
- Illiteracy: 345 million people cannot read or write any language.
- Education: 2/3 of 700,000 Indian villages have no schools.
- Life, Death and Infant Mortality:
|
India
|
England
|
Life Expectancy
|
23 years*
|
55 years
|
Death Rate per Thousand
|
26.8
|
12
|
Infant Mortality per Thousand
|
250
|
51
|
* Life expectancy in 1881 was 30 years.
|
- Deaths:
- 6,000,000 die annually in India.
- 44% of deaths are due to malaria.
- Bengal province: 750,000 under the age of 15 years die each year.
- Housing: Calcutta: An average of 9 to 10 people inhabit rooms having an average size of 8 ft. x 6 ft.
- Nourishment: (Estimate of Sir John Megaw).
39% – Well nourished
|
41% – Poorly nourished
|
20% – Badly nourished
|
- Hospitals: There are 6,700 hospitals – that is, 1 hospital to each 163 square males.
Miscellaneous:
- Bengal – 1771: 10,000,000 died in food famine.
- 1858-1922: There were 72 military expeditions on the Northwest Frontier.
- Upkeep of one British soldier equals 4 times that of an Indian soldier.
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