Delusions of Development – Opinion on India’s Growth Claims and Developmental Reality

Context:
This editorial critically examines India’s claim of becoming a “developed nation by 2047” and questions whether India’s current economic and social trajectory aligns with the requirements of a truly developed country.

Key Highlights / Details:

  • PM’s Vision vs Reality:
  • PM Modi recently reiterated India’s goal of becoming a fully developed nation by 2047.
  • Author argues that while ambition is necessary, structural gaps remain in human development, governance quality, and public services.
  • Definition of Developed Country:
  • Earlier, “developed” and “developing” were not officially defined.
  • World Bank now classifies high-income economies as developed – per capita income >$14,000.
  • At India’s current growth, it may take decades to reach that level.
  • Development Challenges Highlighted:
  • Unemployment: Youth unemployment rising; limited job creation.
  • Infrastructure gaps: Poor public utilities like power, water, sanitation in many regions.
  • Quality of Governance: Bureaucratic delays and policy inconsistencies.
  • Social issues: Inequality, rural distress, political polarization.
  • Education & Health: Government schools and hospitals underfunded.
  • Critique of Political Leadership:
  • Political leaders focus on religion, symbolism, and event politics rather than structural reforms.
  • Governance often driven by populist schemes instead of long-term planning.
  • Author suggests India needs practical, realistic goals and solid institutional reforms.
  • Call for Realistic Development Strategy:
  • Focus on job creation + industrialization.
  • Strengthen human capital (education + health).
  • Encourage innovation and investment climate.
  • Reduce bureaucratic hurdles and improve accountability.

Relevant Prelims Points:

  • World Bank Income Classification (GNI per capita, Atlas method):
  • Low Income: < $1,135
  • Lower-Middle Income: $1,136–$4,465
  • Upper-Middle Income: $4,466–$13,845
  • High Income: > $13,845
  • India’s status: Lower-middle income economy.

Relevant Mains Points:

  • Development requires inclusive growth + human development.
  • Importance of good governance and institutional reforms.
  • Link between demographic dividend and labour force participation.
  • Economic nationalism vs grounded economic planning.
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