A structural interrogation of value, human relations, and the architecture of inequality in contemporary India
-Ramphal Kataria
Abstract
The familiar assertion that “nothing in this world is free” is often presented as a universal truth—an ethical reminder that life demands effort and that value must be earned. Yet, beneath its apparent simplicity lies a deeper ideological function. It does not merely describe reality; it legitimizes it. It suggests that all costs are natural, all exchanges fair, and all outcomes deserved. This essay challenges that assumption by examining how “price” itself is socially constructed—shaped by systems of production, patterns of ownership, and unequal distributions of power.
Moving beyond narrow economic interpretations, the analysis extends the notion of price into the domains of human relationships, emotional labour, and collective life. It argues that what individuals pay is not always monetary, nor is it evenly imposed. Instead, the burden of sustaining society—materially and emotionally—is disproportionately borne by those with the least control over its structures.
In the Indian context, this contradiction assumes a particularly sharp form. A state that speaks the language of welfare and inclusion simultaneously enables the concentration of wealth and opportunity. Basic needs such as food, education, and employment are increasingly mediated by access rather than guaranteed by right. As a result, survival itself becomes a negotiation, and dignity becomes conditional. The essay ultimately contends that the idea that “nothing is free” is not an innocent observation, but a powerful narrative that obscures inequality while normalizing its persistence.
Key Words
Political Economy, Inequality, Production, Ownership, Human Relations, Emotional Labour, India, Structural Power, Social Justice, Dignity, Survival
Introduction: The Illusion of a Neutral Truth
“Nothing is free.” It is a sentence spoken with quiet authority, passed down as wisdom, accepted without resistance. It appears to encourage responsibility, to warn against complacency, to ground expectations in reality. But it also performs a subtler function—it erases the question of justice.
For embedded within this simple claim is an assumption: that whatever price exists is justified. That the cost of living, of working, of loving, of surviving, is something that must be borne, not examined. It flattens a deeply unequal world into a single, universal rule, where all are presumed to participate on equal terms.
Yet the world does not operate through such symmetry. The price of existence is not shared equally. It is assigned, structured, and often hidden within systems that determine who gives, who receives, and who decides.
To understand this, one must move beyond the surface of transactions and look into the architecture that produces them.
Production and the Making of Human Life
Every society rests upon a way of organizing production—of deciding how resources are used, how labour is deployed, and how goods are created. This organization does more than generate material output; it shapes the very texture of human life.
In earlier agrarian settings, control over land defined the structure of existence. Those who owned land held power not only over resources but over the lives tied to them. The cultivator’s labour sustained the system, yet the benefits of that labour flowed elsewhere. The price of survival was not merely effort—it was dependence.
Industrial transformation altered the form but not the essence of this arrangement. Labour moved from fields to factories, from open land to enclosed spaces, but the separation between those who worked and those who controlled remained intact. Production expanded, wealth increased, but the ability to determine its direction remained concentrated.
In contemporary India, this structure has become more complex, layered across sectors and geographies. The informal worker, the gig labourer, the small farmer, and the corporate employee all occupy different positions within the same broad system. Yet across these differences, one reality persists: those who produce value rarely control the conditions under which that value is produced.
This separation is not merely economic—it shapes how individuals see themselves, how they relate to others, and how they understand their place in the world.
Ownership and the Unequal Capacity to Live Freely
Ownership is often perceived as a legal or economic category, but its implications run far deeper. To own is to have the power to decide—to determine the terms of engagement, the direction of production, and the distribution of outcomes.
In India, ownership is highly concentrated, not by accident but by design. Land, capital, and resources are controlled within narrow circles, while the majority navigate life without such anchors. This creates a profound imbalance in the capacity to live freely.
For those who possess resources, life offers flexibility. Choices can be deferred, risks absorbed, opportunities pursued. For those without ownership, life becomes immediate and constrained. Decisions are shaped by necessity rather than preference. Time itself is no longer one’s own.
This asymmetry enters human relationships in subtle but persistent ways. It influences who commands respect and who seeks it, who negotiates and who complies. It determines whose voice is heard and whose is overlooked. Even where equality is assumed, inequality is felt.
Ownership, in this sense, is not only about wealth—it is about the power to shape one’s existence and, often, the existence of others.
Distribution: The Silent Narrative of Inequality
If production is the process through which wealth is created, distribution is the story of who benefits from it. It is here that the underlying logic of a system reveals itself most clearly.
In a society marked by deep structural imbalance, distribution does not follow effort alone. It follows power. Those who control resources shape the flow of wealth, ensuring that accumulation remains concentrated.
In India, this produces a visible paradox. Economic growth is celebrated, markets expand, and indicators rise. Yet the lived experience of large sections of the population remains defined by constraint. Rising costs, unstable incomes, and limited access to services form the backdrop of everyday life.
This contradiction is rarely confronted directly. Instead, it is absorbed into narratives of aspiration, where individual success stories are used to mask structural limitations. The collective reality of inequality is thus reframed as a series of personal challenges.
The result is a silence—not the absence of inequality, but the absence of its recognition.
From Survival to Relationship: The Expansion of Price
The logic of price does not remain confined to markets. It seeps into relationships, into emotions, into the very ways in which people connect with one another.
When survival itself becomes uncertain, relationships cannot remain untouched. Care begins to depend on capacity. Time, once freely given, becomes scarce. Emotional support, though deeply needed, is often constrained by exhaustion and anxiety.
Within families, financial strain alters dynamics. Expectations shift, tensions rise, and silence replaces expression. In communities, shared hardship can foster solidarity, but prolonged scarcity often produces competition instead.
Even affection begins to carry an implicit calculation—not of intention, but of possibility. The ability to give, to support, to sustain, becomes tied to one’s material condition.
In this way, the system transforms not only how people live, but how they feel, how they relate, and how they imagine connection.
Basic Needs and the Fragility of Dignity
Food, education, and employment are often described as fundamental, yet their accessibility is deeply unequal. They do not exist as assured rights but as outcomes shaped by one’s position within the structure.
To secure food is, for many, not a guaranteed act but a recurring effort. Access depends on income, on inclusion within systems, on the ability to navigate bureaucratic and market constraints. Hunger persists not because food is absent, but because access is uneven.
Education, widely seen as a path to transformation, reflects similar inequalities. The quality of education available to an individual often determines not only opportunity, but identity. When access is stratified, education ceases to be a bridge and becomes a boundary.
Employment, which should anchor dignity, increasingly produces uncertainty. Work is available, but without stability. Income is earned, but without assurance. The individual remains exposed to fluctuations beyond their control.
In each of these domains, dignity becomes conditional. It must be earned repeatedly, often against odds that are not of one’s making.
The State: Between Promise and Practice
The modern state speaks in the language of welfare, inclusion, and empowerment. Policies are framed to address inequality, to provide relief, to expand opportunity. Yet, their impact is shaped by the structures within which they operate.
Efforts to alleviate hardship often coexist with policies that reinforce accumulation. Support for the vulnerable is extended, but within limits. At the same time, measures that enable concentration of wealth proceed with consistency and clarity.
This creates a dual reality. On one hand, there is a visible commitment to welfare. On the other, there is a sustained reinforcement of structural inequality. The two do not cancel each other out; they coexist, producing a system that manages inequality rather than transforming it.
The language of care thus becomes part of the system it seeks to address.
The Internalization of Inequality
Perhaps the most enduring effect of this structure is its ability to shape perception. Over time, individuals begin to internalize the logic of the system.
Struggle is seen as personal inadequacy rather than structural constraint. Success is interpreted as merit alone, detached from the conditions that enable it. Inequality becomes normalized, even justified.
The phrase “nothing is free” then ceases to be an observation and becomes a belief. It enters consciousness, shaping how individuals understand themselves and others. It discourages questioning and reinforces acceptance.
In this way, the system sustains itself not only through institutions, but through thought.
Rethinking Price, Reclaiming Value
To question the idea that nothing is free is not to deny the existence of cost. It is to ask whether the distribution of that cost is just.
It is to imagine a society where value is not extracted but shared, where production is not controlled by a few but shaped collectively, where access to basic needs is not conditional but assured.
Such a vision does not eliminate effort or responsibility. It redefines them. It shifts the focus from individual survival to collective well-being, from competition to cooperation, from accumulation to dignity.
Conclusion: Beyond the Illusion
“Nothing is free” may contain a fragment of truth, but it conceals a larger reality. It presents price as natural, while hiding the structures that assign it. It suggests inevitability where there is design.
The question, therefore, is not whether life has a cost. It is whether that cost must continue to be borne so unevenly, so silently, and with so little challenge.
To confront this question is to move from acceptance to awareness—from illusion to clarity.
The world does demand a price.
But it does not decide who must pay the most.
That decision is made in structures we inherit,
and in silences we agree to keep.
To see this clearly is not to despair.
It is to begin—quietly, deliberately—
to question the terms on which we live.