
Perhaps this the real picture of Rural India still languishing without any facilities of proper schools, roads, or other infrastructure, basic health, food security, and so many opportunities a villager should have so that migration to the cities does not take place. At the same time, cities are beaming with most modern developments at present in the world. India is progressing rapidly for the city development only and Rural sectors remain untapped. Imagine if 76% of the country’s 1.2 billion people living in rural India become developed, then how much demand in economy will be brought about.
This is the age of a welfare economy and capitalist economy is becoming obsolete day by day; and all developed countries like USA, UK, Japan are trying to shun war budget and start a welfare economy to combat the serious recession the world is facing at the moment, perhaps the worst since the 1929 US recession. India as practicing welfare economy has come of age since 1991’s economic liberalization undertook by the late PM P V NarSimha Rao and the present PM Dr. Manmohan Singh (who was the Foreign Minister in those days ). India, once a loan taker in 1991, is now giving loans to even developed countries.
India needs to change rapidly in its rural part as India needs 5000 developed villages with all kind of facilities a city have – turning them into a modern village without compromising the environment; and it is possible that if India takes some solid measures on rural entrepreneurship, we can dig goldmines in villages of India, if properly dig. So many village industries can generate millions of employment opportunities there without people migrating to cities.
About the Author
Asim Boral, a science graduate from Calcutta University of West Bengal, India, is a retired Senior Marketing Manager of the largest Steel Company in India. After retirement, he joined the Indian National Congress and started writing regular articles in Times of India, a national English daily, on various issues from politics to social causes. He is now engaged for service to a big NGO – Bharat Sevashram Sangha – which serves worldwide, from USA to Fiji. Now 64, he lives in a Mega city Ahmedabad, Gujarat state of India and enjoys practicing his expertise in rain water harvesting and biodynamic farming system.