From the economy to an encounter: How to argue on Twitter, Indian style

When the current Commerce Minister and former Finance Minister took to a Twitter fight, things strayed away as far as possible from the main argument.

April 25, 2016 04:44 pm | Updated 05:09 pm IST

When RBI governor Raghuram Rajan recently described India as the “one-eyed king in a land of the blind” (he was assessing the Indian economy in a relative measure to the global outlook), Nirmala Sitharaman, the Minister of State for Commerce and Industry, was not exactly pleased with his choice of words.

Yesterday (April 24), the former Finance Minister, P. Chidambaram, decided to write a full-fledged column in a leading daily, defending Rajan and saying the present government “sees enemies even among friendly and neutral commentators.”

He proceeded to give statistical proof that the country was indeed witnessing a good growth rate, but was lagging on many other indices such as fiscal stability, employment, education, health care, inflation and poverty ratio — equally important parameters for a healthy economic outlook.

So the Commerce Minister did what one usually does in this day and age: take the fight on to Twitter.

@nsitharaman 18h18 hours ago

That’s a good start — yes, he agreed with what Rajan had to say.

@nsitharaman 18h18 hours ago

So far, so good. We’re still on the same subject …

@nsitharaman 18h18 hours ago

Okay, that escalated quickly.

And the return blows were not far away either. Chidambaram took to his keypad in no time and seemed to stay on track initially with the original premise:

Ah, “intolerance”. Good to see you again.

That’s a good value add too! The adage, “In the land of the blind, the one-eyed man is king” was coined by the Renaissance-age Dutch philosopher Erasmus.

But after a few tweets, all gloves are off:

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