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Matthew's avatar

I read this with my Indian wife and there were two huge gaps in this story.

1) Environment - I just came from Northeast India and the Air Quality Index was 290. Like we could stare directly at the sun in broad daylight and according to accuweather, "Any exposure to the air, even for a few minutes, can lead to serious health effects on everybody. Avoid outdoor activities." This is an area where the BJP government has done almost nothing.

I can only talk about Assam where we were, but the infrastructure being built in the city was all highways and flyovers. There were no subways or public transport being built, it was the same sort of road focused construction that has caused such sprawl and gridlock in the US.

If India wants to shift to manufacturing, it has to do so in a way that doesn't just pollute and poison everyone. While the BJP is popular, they aren't the CCP. Popular opinion matters. India needs to grow, but it has to grow clean.

2) The effect of Hindutva - An exploration of the ideology of Hindutva and the effects this might have on India's development is sorely lacking. This is Modi's raison d'etre. This is very much a "blood and soil" ideology asserting that India belongs to the 75% - 80% of the population who are Hindu. There has been violence and anti intellectualism associated with this. I don't know what the development literature says, but I seem to recall that the devotion of the American South to maintaining segregation and a racial hierarchy was a significant drag on its ability to industrialize. (Seriously, go read up on "cow protection" and compare it to the history of lynching in the American South.)

You talk persuasively about how America is stronger because of our immigrant history and how our ability to attract/integrate immigrants is a key driver of our success. Now, it is odd that the strong nativist sentiment of the BJP wasn't brought up as a possible obstacle to future growth. There are political prisoners and the crushing of dissent. Similarly, by omitting any mention of the dangers/excesses of the Hindutva, this post very much comes off as a "But Mussolini looks like he is making the trains run on time... so good show."

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Simon T's avatar

Your last line has an optimism that I do not share. India has always been, and is condemned to always be, a country of great potential. India as a whole largely fails at the basics- basic healthcare, basic education, basic infrastructure, basic manufacturing, basic governance. It focusses all it's efforts on delivering for the shiny top, whether it's space programs or IITs. It's the product of a caste mentality that elites don't see the need to lift the many, not the few. India is a Singapore floating on an Africa. Perhaps in a few years it will improve into a Germany floating on top of a Africa, but that's about it. There are also stark provincial differences. The deep South of Tamil Nadu and Kerala, have managed to create inclusive identities that subsume caste, and deliver broad human development. Punjab has remittance income. And Gujarat and Maharashtra have an advantage in manufacturing and entrepreneurial culture. But the demographic, cultural, political core of India is the Gangetic plains, which is stagnant and reactionary and post-feudal. This is a part of the world where standards of living rival that of the worst parts of subSaharan Africa. That said, there is time. India's sweet spot of demographic S curve of low dependency ratio is going to be smoother and longer, less sharp and short than China, which was artificially shortened by one-child policy. India will enjoy low dependency ratio till 2050s, and has been enjoying the boosted growth for a while now. Indian infrastructure is improving. There is increasing understanding basic governance needs to improve, though the system of a few thousand IAS officers governing a country of a billion hasn't changed. There is increasing political impetus to improving health and education. But until there is a widespread cultural renaissance that breaks feudal caste identities and molds them into a collective identity, particularly in the Hindi heartland, there won't be a collective uplift. What is needed is a sharp focus on making and exporting clothes, toys, furniture and basic circuits. Massive literacy/numeracy campaigns. Rural roads, health centers and schools. Everyone in India needs to finish 1st grade, before thinking about increasing the numbers of the few who graduate college.

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