Opinions

Language free market will pay dividends



Political wrangling over language imposition is well known, but it never fails to strike a raw nerve. Two recent examples: Donald Trump has declared English the official language, reversing a 2000 policy by Bill Clinton that required federal bodies to offer language assistance to non-English speakers. In India, yet another war of words has erupted between Tamil Nadu CM M K Stalin and GoI over National Education Policy (NEP) 2020 and its three-language formula. Stalin claims GoI is pushing Hindi under the policy, while the latter insists that under NEP, language choices are left to states. However, with TN refusing to adopt the formula and GoI withholding Samagra Shiksha funds, the controversy has taken a life of its own.

At the heart of language conflicts is a key question: should language policies be dictated from above, or should they evolve through organic demand? The right approach is to encourage a ‘language free market‘ – where supply and demand dictate linguistic prominence, allowing governments to incentivise learning but not impose it. Consider China’s model, where Mandarin has been standardised and enforced across all regions, often at the expense of linguistic diversity.

India has historically resisted centralised linguistic prescriptions. English thrives not due to imposition but because it offers economic and social mobility. Similarly, regional languages flourish where cultural pride and local utility drive their use. Chandrababu Naidu makes a compelling point when he says Andhra Pradesh will promote not three but 8-10 languages so that ‘youth can equip themselves to go and work in different countries’. Like markets, languages function best when they are nudged, not coerced – flourishing in response to need, not diktat.

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