|
|
India and the World: Are we moving with the global social progress?
|
|
|
|
Top Stories |
|
|
|
|
Amit Kapoor | 24 Sep, 2018
The conversations on development have finally moved beyond the barriers
of GDP and entered the arena that caters to the needs of the citizens of
the nation.
With the release of the Social Progress Index
2018, it is evident that the global performance varies from the status
of progress in Norway, which tops the charts at 90.26 to the Central
African Republic, ranking last at 26.01. A difference of 65 points is
enough to show that even though the world's social progress outcomes
have improved, giving way to a better standard of living for all the
citizens in the country, there remains regional disparity. India
stands at a crucial juncture in terms of its economic development,
wherein it is currently the fastest growing world economy. However, it
is necessary to understand that the sustainability of its economic
development will be dependent on the social progress of the nation.
So,
where does India stand? In 2018, at 100, which is only 7 points behind
the state of social progress of the world as a collective. This
indicates that India is in tandem with the world average in terms of
social progress, and it has had an uphill climb since 2014. The view for
India's social progress looks quite decent and lays a foundation for a
stronger future for the nation. However, even though India's
performance has improved over a period of time, it is necessary to see
two things: one, where is India moving ahead and how can it escalate the
progress via the domain that is already well-performing? Second, it is
important to capture the backlogs India is carrying forward in the hope
for creation of a sustainable nation? The answer lies in the trajectory
for progress that India has been following, especially in the last four
years. Even the world has improved by only 1.66 points in the
last four years, India has moved by 2.29 points, indicative of potential
for even greater social progress in the future. India's social
progress is currently driven by information and communication as well as
the enhanced access to higher education. India is witnessing an upward
movement of telephone subscribers growing at a monthly rate of 0.51 per
cent, which is complemented by the growing network of companies that are
making connectivity accessible aligned with a supportive regulatory
environment. The telecom sector in India is getting strengthened,
especially with the recent conversations on adoption of 5G in India,
enabling digital transformation. The ongoing fourth industrial
revolution demands strengthening of the access to information and
communication. Therefore, what India needs on its way forward is capture
the abilities of the nation and convert the potential to progress.
Connectivity
and accessibility via use of regional languages in India can speed up
the process of social progress and take the nation forward. It
is not only the communication domain, but the enhanced higher education
system in India too that has lifted the social progress of the nation.
However, the aspect of higher education in India needs more grilling to
be honed to be the driver of social progress. As per the OCED data,
India does have 24,300 doctoral candidates, which is the 4th highest
across the world, preceded only by US, UK and Germany. Even the quantum
of enrolment in Ph.D. stands at 126,451 for the year 2015-16, as per
AISHE data. However, the fact of the matter remains that even though
higher education in India is showing strength at the global level, it
needs to strengthen the reach and accessibility of higher education and
ensure percolation of access to the bottom of the pyramid. that India's
manpower meets the needs for the future of work. Even though
India is doing well on the aforementioned pillars and strengthening its
social progress, there are possible factors that can drag down the state
of development. The progress across the world remains uneven, wherein
the progress is uneven since three of the 12 pillars that form the
foundation of social progress have shown a decline. A similar trend is
also visible for India, wherein the threat to India's social progress
lies in the domain of personal rights, the access to which has declined
over the last 4 years, and the domain of inclusion, which has barely
shown any improvement. If not catered to, the concerns of personal
rights and absence of inclusion can drag the state of the nation and
derail the process of social progress.
Here, it becomes
important to understand that even though India has domains that fuel the
social progress, there cannot be laggards within the concept of social
progress for India. Recently, with the decriminalisation of
homosexuality, India has taken a move towards provisions of personal
rights and inclusion. Complementing this is the need for amendments in
the SC/ST Atrocities Act due to the exclusionary processes. The problems
that are arising out of identities, whether the identities are
historically present or evolved after birth, they continue to remain a
problem for India. An inclusive society needs to be supported to ensure
the personal rights of all individuals equally, otherwise the social
progress of the nation will be curtailed in the absence of such
catalysts. The important thing is to understand that these
factors wont simply singularly push social progress, instead build the
other pillars, for example, digital infrastructure will enable social
inclusion. The idea is to ensure social progress and ensure that the
strengths are focused on to accelerate the process, and the threats are
dealt with to ensure nothing brings the social progress trajectory down.
The focus remains on actionability for social progress.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Customs Exchange Rates |
Currency |
Import |
Export |
US Dollar
|
84.35
|
82.60 |
UK Pound
|
106.35
|
102.90 |
Euro
|
92.50
|
89.35 |
Japanese
Yen |
55.05 |
53.40 |
As on 12 Oct, 2024 |
|
|
Daily Poll |
|
|
Will the new MSME credit assessment model simplify financing? |
|
|
|
|
|
Commented Stories |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|