“India must not obsess with how fast its
economy is growing and instead pay more attention to its human development
indicators which are worse than even that of Bangladesh”
-Amartya Sen (Nobel Laureate)
Day in day out, all the national newspapers,
journals, magazines, web portals etc are talking about the international
economic situation, its palpable effects on the Indian economy, its survival
chances and the cushion factors to avoid the major international impact on the
domestic markets. It’s all about growth rates, inflation figure, purchasing
power figures, GDP numbers and more economic numbers. But does a country’s
overall growth depends only on economic numbers? Can a country prosper only
with one section of society flourishing at a greater speed than the other? And
can the economy only depend upon the production rates or the inflation rates?
An assertive NO is the answer to all the above questions.
To make a country move on the right path of progress
there are many factors other than the economic figures that play a vital role
i.e. The Human Development and the societal gains. It has been starkly
mentioned by Mr. Amartya Sen that just running behind the 8-9% growth rate
won’t make India’s image in the world more superior until its economic factors
pushes the human development and the societal factors in the same
direction.
We as a nation are bound to break the unenviable
record of the most densely populated country of the world and we also feel
proud to cherish the demographic dividend which our country would benefit from
in the coming future but this can only be possible if the entire population has
the basic demands of food, shelter, clothing and education within their reach.
And towards this direction the incumbent government has formulated The Food
Security Bill which would definitely help the poor for the basic intake of the
nutrition and in order to avoid the appalling malnutrition data which shows the
backwardness of our human development factor.
Though in the Human Development Index we are growing
at a good pace but still there is a daunting task which needs to be addressed.
The literacy rate directed towards the Millennium Goal looks elusive. The rate
of unemployment is also on a rise coupled with lack of sufficient shelter and
food for the 1.2 billion plus countrymen. If the government pays a little more
attention towards these aspects and tries to break the reform paralysis, then
the magical economic figure of 8-9% growth rate of GDP can be achieved without much
effort. These underlying factors’ growth is the real reason for an economy to
boom.
So be it 6.9% or 9% GDP growth rate, it would not
matter much if the real underlying factors are not given enough space to grow.
Let the economy stand on the robust fundamentals.
Hii Dhruv...wat wud a Food Security Bill will do??The politicians will take its advantage to fill their pockets & increase their balances in Swiss Bank A/c's..The NREGA scheme was also aimed to benefit the poor but wen it comes 2 the ground level the local govt. officials sarpanch's they make the best use of it.
ReplyDeleteI appreciate ur effort to bring up these issues but wen schemes like these are initiated it leads only to a multi crore fraud or a scam in country like India!!!!
Hi Sarab, I truly agree with you that there are flaws in the structure as well in the mind sets but in order to reach the Bottom Of Pyramid where the majority of Indians live the government is bound to take initiatives like this Act.
ReplyDeleteThough corruption is synonymous to our society today but it doesnt mean that we would stop working for the people and bring in reforms, but i agree with you that corruption should be rooted out to make the execution smooth.