What's new

Rural India is in transition

Brahmos_2

FULL MEMBER
Joined
Feb 19, 2013
Messages
1,412
Reaction score
0
Country
India
Location
India
Rural India is in transition, but why bother? It’s not about politics


Rural India is changing and how!

The obsessive focus of the media on the grievances, imaginary or actual, of urban India has virtually blinded us to developments in the ‘other India’. While the urban intellectuals have been busy pretending that it does not exist, rural India has been undergoing a dramatic change. It is no more about idling buffaloes in village ponds, skeletal cattle in a nondescript drought-hit town, rain-starved cracked fields or about the despondent old farmer staring blankly at the empty sky for monsoon rains.

The traditional picture of rural India is changing fast.

Rural India is urbanising fast with agriculture losing its predominant position in its economy. It is experiencing massive structural changes and the consumption pattern in the villages has changed gears. During 2005-2010, according to NSSO data quoted in an article in The Hindu, the number of people in rural areas below the poverty line has declined from 32.58 crore to 21.72 crore. It is sharper than the decline in urban India in the corresponding period. However, that is only part of the story. It does not quite explain other changes happening in the hinterland.

Let’s check a Credit Suisse report mapping the process of change in rural India which came out in 2012.

It says:

* The transition away from agriculture has accelerated. The drop in male employment in agriculture over the past five years is equal to the shift away over the previous 27 years.

* Agriculture is the prime driver for the rural economy – this assumption is increasingly becoming invalid. A decade ago agriculture was about half of rural GDP, but it is now only about one-fourth The transition from agriculture to industry and services has been rapid in rural India over the past decade.

* Almost 75% of the new factories during the last decade came up in rural India, contributing to 70% of all new manufacturing jobs created. As a result, manufacturing GDP in rural India witnessed an 18% compound annual growth rate (CAGR) during 1999-09, and is now 55% of India’s manufacturing GDP. Growth in services employment is equally robust.

* Net value added (comparable to GDP) by manufacturing in rural India saw an 18% CAGR over the ten-year period of 1999-09, much faster than urban manufacturing growth, and is now around 55% of the national total.

* Urbanisation in India is progressing along a path very different from the conventional migration from villages to large cities… Instead, the number of census towns (habitats with population more than 5,000 where less than 25% of working males are in agriculture) grew three-fold, and is now half of the total number of towns.

* Consumption trends in rural India have been shifting sharply towards a more urban consumption pattern


This trend has accelerated since the middle of the last decade. As habitations urbanise, jobs migrate away from agriculture and productivity as well as awareness gets boosted by the spread of roads, electricity and phones, incomes and consumption patterns start to change as well. NSSO surveys of rural consumption have been indicating a continued trend towards a more urban consumption pattern. Spending on durables, education, consumer services (entertainment, transport, etc) and fuel has grown faster than the average in the past decade.

Economic and social dynamics are shifting gear in rural India, for the better. Like everything in India, people have discovered their own way of adapting to the challenge of change. The moves of governments – both regional and national – have started paying off. How did we miss all that? Well, truth be told, it’s not a negative story. It offers us nothing to whine about, to play political games. It is possible our universe has been limited to where television cameras go. Also, the new developments disturb our settled understanding of rural India, which we still believe is about bullock carts and lazy buffaloes. We love to stay cocooned in our set of beliefs.



Rural India is in transition, but why bother? It
 
. . . .
i experienced it..many of our villages in a.p are urbanizing at a rapid rate..expect some shortage of power they have every facility right from decent medical facilities to shopping
 
.
Yes it is
But I personally think that Quality of life in villages is much better than cities

Yes, you are correct, in many western countries, the countryside and villages are the best places for living. But in China, the best public facilities such as schools, hospitals and even big shopping malls are located in the cities...only qualified citizens could enjoy the benefits, in many rural areas, people cannot get the equal treatment.
 
.
I would appreciate if any Indian member living in the rural areas can post some pictures. It is an era of rapid change, and it would be interesting to record the changes through your lens.
 
.
I would appreciate if any Indian member living in the rural areas can post some pictures. It is an era of rapid change, and it would be interesting to record the changes through your lens.

There are plenty in Youtube! But don't ever read comments or reply in Youtube! lol People get very defensive and start calling nasty names.
 
.
Rural India is in transition, but why bother? It’s not about politics


Rural India is changing and how!

{.....}


Rural India is in transition, but why bother? It

If I were running a country with a billion citizens, I'd make darn sure my country can produce enough food for itself, especially with global populations still expected to increase further (on an already tight/expensive food market).

The way to do this, is ofcourse by irrigation. Surely India has areas that experience flooding. Instead of letting that fresh water go to waste, make sure you transport it and store it near to the farms that experience regular drought (absence of rain).

Hell, if you really want to get smart, Indians from India, you make a deal with Bangladesh to build water infrastructure projects there on the cheap, projects that transport-to-India the water from the regular floods that that country experiences.
 
.
I would appreciate if any Indian member living in the rural areas can post some pictures. It is an era of rapid change, and it would be interesting to record the changes through your lens.

Trust me dude, you don't want to see pictures.

Anyone who would equate development potentials of China and India is a fool. I have been to both countries, not extensively but enough to get a feel of it.

When I hear 'India is the next China' I just roll my eyes and if I'm talking to someone trustworthy I go into gross detail describing India, and there's PLENTY of gross detail. For a Westerner, India is simply unfathomably f!lthy.

I would go as far as sign in blood that the gap between the two countries will only widen, in China's favor.

(Haha, apparently f!lthy is a banned word. I wonder why...)
 
.
If I were running a country with a billion citizens, I'd make darn sure my country can produce enough food for itself, especially with global populations still expected to increase further (on an already tight/expensive food market).

The way to do this, is ofcourse by irrigation. Surely India has areas that experience flooding. Instead of letting that fresh water go to waste, make sure you transport it and store it near to the farms that experience regular drought (absence of rain).

Hell, if you really want to get smart, Indians from India, you make a deal with Bangladesh to build water infrastructure projects there on the cheap, projects that transport-to-India the water from the regular floods that that country experiences.

You are talking about the Indian Rivers Inter-link which was already proposed and discussed in 1972. In 1974 the cost estimate for doing that was 140 Billion $.

Any Idea how much it would cost now and who will pay for it ?
 
.
If I were running a country with a billion citizens, I'd make darn sure my country can produce enough food for itself, especially with global populations still expected to increase further (on an already tight/expensive food market).

The way to do this, is ofcourse by irrigation. Surely India has areas that experience flooding. Instead of letting that fresh water go to waste, make sure you transport it and store it near to the farms that experience regular drought (absence of rain).

Hell, if you really want to get smart, Indians from India, you make a deal with Bangladesh to build water infrastructure projects there on the cheap, projects that transport-to-India the water from the regular floods that that country experiences.

already doing it.india is one of the global leaders in agriculture.we stand either first or second in the production of many agricultural products. the river u mentioned is brahmaputra whos course will be changed frequently flooding the occupied places.hppe govt takes some measure to prevent it
 
.
Trust me dude, you don't want to see pictures.

Anyone who would equate development potentials of China and India is a fool. I have been to both countries, not extensively but enough to get a feel of it.

When I hear 'India is the next China' I just roll my eyes and if I'm talking to someone trustworthy I go into gross detail describing India, and there's PLENTY of gross detail. For a Westerner, India is simply unfathomably f!lthy.

I would go as far as sign in blood that the gap between the two countries will only widen, in China's favor.

(Haha, apparently f!lthy is a banned word. I wonder why...)

when people say india is developing they doesnt mean that a westner would enjoy india.it means india is getting better day by day..the problems u saw in india were worse few years back.if u gonna compare india's development compare it with india few years back not with china or some other country.and im sure nobody is foolish enough to say that india is more developed than u.s or china.for an outsider its easy to judge my country is "f!lthy" but for an indian who knows india for quite some time know that insipte of the difficulties it is facing inspite of its colonial history and economic exploitation for a country of 1.2 billion people with countless diversities in mere 65 years after independence countries around the globe started to discuss the growth rates of india.....is very much an achievement .as i said there are problems in india but we had them bigger in the past..
 
.
USA is 3 times the land size of India and has 1/3 of the population of India. In short it has 10 times more resources than India or 1000% more resources than India. It had 200 years of Independence to build itself and got to control the global economy after the british screwed up in WW2. US still feels the need to come down here and criticize India to feel good about themselves :lol:

China has 3 times the land of India with almost the same population. i.e it has 3 times more resources or 300% more resources than India. In spite of this , India is going to rock the world. .......LOL...hates are gonna hate.
 
.
Yes, you are correct, in many western countries, the countryside and villages are the best places for living. But in China, the best public facilities such as schools, hospitals and even big shopping malls are located in the cities...only qualified citizens could enjoy the benefits, in many rural areas, people cannot get the equal treatment.

No no not that
Quality of Air,lush green fields ,trees greenery everywhere no sound pollution

You cannot get that in a city
 
.
Back
Top Bottom