Youth Wants Job Security & Leakage-Free Exams

‘Youth Wants Job Security & Leakage-Free Exams From Modi 3.0’

Mahendra Vikram, a B. Tech from Kanpur, says Modi in his third term must focus on youths by enhancing job avenues in existing as well as unexplored domains. His views:

I believe among all the issues that the Indian youth are concerned about today, job security sits on the top. The situation is particularly grave in densely populated states like Uttar Pradesh and Bihar, The shrinking margin of victory for the Narendra Modi government must force the policy makers at the Centre to address this issue.

Besides generating more and more employment in the public sector, the government should also amplify its focus in various other areas of its influence too by creating incentive-based regulations for private players. These should not be focused to a particular region or a state but it should also be extended across the country. In more populous region, for example, the focus could be on labour-intensive skilled jobs.

To begin with, this government should start clearing the backlog vacancies that are in lakhs in almost all the state departments. The backlog is also a major factor of corruption – take for example the electricity sector. In my district itself, most of the power houses are short of engineers and a senior engineer is executing the responsibility of the Ex.En, AE, JE, etc. He is overloaded with work and so is his work which often leads to hushing up responsibilities for obvious gains. This not only affects the quality of work, but also creates scope for pilferage and corruption.

Examination paper leakage is another raging issue that needs to be strictly dealt with. The UP government has introduced the stringent UP Public Examinations Ordinance which includes severe provisions like life imprisonment and fines up to ₹1 crore for those found guilty of leaking examination papers. The Modi government should also work on these lines to check the nuisance which is not only ruining careers but is also costing the aspirants dearly.

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In addition, the government should also focus towards better transportation for students and aspirants who routinely face several hardships in reaching the exams centres. My advice is that the government should shun its plan of reducing sleeper bogies and, instead, add additional sleeper and general bogies in the trains at least during the time of examinations.

The government should also focus on opening more and more professional studies institutes like the recently started UP State Institute of Forensic Science in Lucknow. Similar institutes can be set up in the field of media, law, para-medics, performing arts, etc. The ongoing PM Kaushal Vikas Yojana could be further amplified by adding new professional skills into the scheme. At present, the focus of the scheme is to only produce a particular work force such as plumbing, masonry, electrician, carpenter work etc.

The Startup India initiative has been a successful initiative. However, the youth in the Tier 3 and Tier 4 townships are not getting the desired support and avenues. The initiate must penetrate deeper into the country and widen its reach. These are, as I can at present make out, are the aspirations and concerns of the youth who are eagerly waiting to see positive changes in the community and the country.

As told to Rajat Rai

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Modi 3.0 Needs to Focus on Employment

‘Modi 3.0 Needs to Focus on Education and Employment’

Shivangi Juneja, who is pursuing Chartered Accountancy course, shares her views on the expectations from the newly elected government in its third term

The NDA Government has come into power yet again, but this time it has been a hard earned victory. ‘With more power comes greater responsibility’, making it imperative for the newly elected government to relentlessly work towards the nation’s growth. As a country where the people have the right to decide who will form the Government, we bestow a duty upon the elected leadership to abide by the fundamental premise of a democracy – of the people, by the people and for the people. Being the most liberating form of Government, it is quite apparent for us to expect the administration to outperform its previous virtues and overcome the setbacks.

One of the most crucial aspects that affects people all across the country is how to sustain themselves amidst the rising inflation coupled with a constantly evolving economy. The Coronavirus outbreak brought in a lot of chaos, uncertainty and instability leaving myriads of people unemployed. Businesses were also shut down as a consequence of unsettled overheads, besides other reasons. To top it all, companies like Amazon, Google and the like, laid off tons of people and this trend continues. This leads us to the fact that both job creation and job security are absolutely essential.

To bring about equilibrium in the economy, the government should strive to create more job opportunities and provide aid to people willing to set up businesses by providing financial assistance, technical support, tax concessions and regulating the demand and supply of goods. Though artificial intelligence and machine learning are rapidly burgeoning, it is extremely important to acknowledge that they have been devised to assist rather than to replace humans.

ALSO READ: ‘Govt Misplaced Priority Is Bullet Train, Not Passenger Safety’

The past four years exemplify how significant it is to have a robust and extensive healthcare infrastructure. Technological advancements enable timely detection of a number of maladies, albeit the possible effects of the same are still unprecedented. This emphasizes the need for competent doctors, medical staff, and sufficiently equipped hospitals. The government by all means needs to exercise prudence and vigilance to ensure that people from all walks of life have access to adequate and affordable healthcare facilities. This will enable the public to get the right treatment in time and reduce susceptibility to unfortunate consequences.

While it would not be empirical for the government to swerve from the education system, which has been in place for a long time, amendments to the current approach are necessary. The education system plays a pivotal role in shaping how we think, act and react customarily. To cite an example, the government had introduced the National Education Policy in the Year 2020 to bring about reforms in the educational sector. The said Policy highlights the changes required to be made to the school curriculum by adopting a holistic approach to education and includes the conglomeration of Technology and Learning. This shift reflects a positive step towards growth and progression.

In addition to the proposed changes, incorporating real life skills at both school and college level can prove to be immensely helpful. A lot of people struggle with managing money, dealing with stress, doing daily chores and one of the plausible reasons could be the lack of appropriate know-how. If children and young adults are made familiar with these skills at an early age, they would be able to function more independently and effectively.

As told to Deepa Gupta

Modi 3.0 Must Focus on Jobs

Modi 3.0 Must Focus on Jobs and Rising Inequality

In the run-up to this year’s Lok Sabha elections, Narendra Modi is estimated to have given around 80 television interviews, all of them to TV hosts who appeared so servile and obsequious that every time I watched one of those interviews I felt deeply, vicariously embarrassed. Germans have a word for it, Fremdschämen, which means to cringe because of something that others do.

Yet, pathetic as they might have shown themselves to be, those anchors, hosts and interviewers are inconsequential. What Modi said in those interviews is not. Actually, more consequential than what he said is what he didn’t say or wasn’t asked.

To be sure, sometimes he was asked. In one interview, an anchor asked him about the problem of inequality in India’s economy. It was an important question and probably the most important of all the questions he was asked in that interview. India’s economy is marked by significant inequality, which has been a persistent challenge for the country.

The Gini coefficient, a measure of income inequality where 0 represents perfect equality and 100 represents perfect inequality, was around 35.7 for India in 2019, according to the World Bank. This indicates a relatively high level of income inequality. According to an Oxfam report in 2022, the richest 1% of India’s population holds more than four times the wealth held by the bottom 70% (953 million people). This wealth concentration has been increasing over time. According to another measure by the Credit Suisse Global Wealth Report, the top 10% of Indians own 77.4% of the country’s total wealth. This is one of the highest wealth concentrations globally. Likewise, the World Inequality Lab Report 2022, led by economists including Thomas Piketty, found that the top 10% in India capture 57% of the total national income, while the bottom 50% get only 13%. In terms of wealth, it corroborates that the top 10% own around 77% of total wealth.

So what did Modi say when he was asked about the problem of inequality? His first response, and I paraphrase, was to counter the question with a question: “So should everyone be poor? There should be more rich people.” He then went on to explain how it was a process in which by and by different strata of people would get richer–an explanation whose economics is difficult to fathom. Then he went on to say how the number of startups in India had gone up from a few thousand to 1.25 lakh startups now.

Exactly how startups can alleviate inequality is something Modi left unsaid. “Progress is happening,” he said. Then he pointed to how because so many more people were travelling by air now that 1,000 new aircraft had been ordered. He said more people were flying to places of pilgrimage and more Indians were going abroad for their weddings. “If there were only five rich Indians, how could there be so many weddings of Indians abroad?”

The conversation then moved on to Modi’s “Wed in India” slogan exhorting people to hold weddings in the country and not abroad. The interviewer then cracked a silly joke; Modi laughed; and the problem of inequality was forgotten.

In case you think I am making all this up, here is a short clip (posted by the interviewer himself on X) that you can watch for yourself here.

Many, including those who make their living analysing politics and elections, believe that the BJP’s poor showing in the elections where it failed to get a majority number of seats (it got only 240 of the 543 seats) was because its focus on Hindutva, aggressive anti-Muslim speeches (some of them delivered by the party’s star campaigner, Modi), and his promises (“Modi Ka Guarantee”) of making India the third largest economy in the world and a developed nation by 2047 didn’t resonate with the average Indian voter. Instead, after 10 years of the Modi regime, many felt that their lives had not improved significantly.

The Vexing Problem of Unemployed Youth

The biggest reason for inequality and voters’ disillusionment with the Modi regime is because of the huge problem of unemployment in India. Getting accurate and reliable data on unemployment in India can be challenging due to the large informal sector and varying definitions of employment. 

According to the Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy (CMIE), which conducts monthly surveys, the unemployment rate in India hovered around 7-8% in 2022 and early 2023. However, these figures are often debated due to methodological differences with government surveys.

The situation is more concerning for the youth. A report by the International Labour Organization (ILO) in 2022 estimated that youth unemployment (ages 15-24) in India was around 20-25%. This is significantly higher than the overall unemployment rate. Some economists estimated the figure to be even higher than 25%.

The problem is particularly acute among educated youth. A study by Azim Premji University in 2019 found that unemployment rates were higher for those with higher education levels. For instance, graduates faced an unemployment rate of around 15-20%, while postgraduates faced around 20-25%.

COVID-19 may have made things worse. The pandemic exacerbated unemployment, especially in the informal sector and among youth. The recovery has been gradual, and many young people have faced job losses or reduced working hours.

Will Modi 3.0 Focus on Jobs?

In the interview that I referred to earlier, Modi’s response to the question on inequality seemed utterly callous. To make things worse, there was no follow up question on it from the interviewer. Instead, the discourse segued into how rich Indians go abroad for weddings. Obfuscation has been the main tactic in the BJP’s campaign during this year’s elections. 

Modi, who was the main campaigner for the BJP, addressed countless public rallies. While his impassioned speeches included diatribes and ridicule against his rivals (particularly the Congress, which won only 99 seats eventually but still remains Modi’s bête noire); thinly veiled allegations against minorities; and lofty promises for a futuristic 1000-year plan for India, there was hardly any mention of what his government would be doing to ensure employment generation. 

It is true that during his two terms as the Prime Minister, on the economic front, his government has made some significant achievements. It implemented the Goods and Services Tax (GST) in 2017, which unified various indirect taxes into a single tax, simplifying the tax structure and potentially boosting economic efficiency. During his regime, India’s rank in World Bank’s Ease of Doing Business Index jumped from 142 in 2014 to 63 in 2020, attracting more foreign investment.

The government also launched financial inclusion initiatives like Jan Dhan Yojana, providing millions of previously unbanked Indians with access to bank accounts, insurance, and credit.

Moreover, there was significant investment in infrastructure development, including roads, railways, and ports, which can stimulate economic growth and improve logistical efficiency. In addition, digital initiatives like Aadhaar (biometric ID) and UPI (Unified Payments Interface), were rolled out, boosting digital transactions and financial transparency.

Prominently absent, however, was a sustained and robust focus on job creation. In states such as Uttar Pradesh, where the BJP lost massively; and in Maharashtra, which was once a top Indian state and magnet for migrant workers, among other factors, rising unemployment and disillusionment may have caused voters not to vote against the BJP. 

Modi in his third term will be at the helm of a coalition government, his party depending on allies for a majority in Lok Sabha–notably N. Chandrababu Naidu’s Telugu Desam Party, which won 16 seats, and Nitish Kumar’s Janata Dal (United), which won 12 seats. It  remains to be seens how he manages a coalition, a form of government that he has not really had to run because in his last two terms as Prime Minister, as well as his long stint as chief minister of Gujarat before that, his party has won a majority in elections.

Other unknown factors relate to how his coalition partners, especially Kumar, behave in the coming months. Kumar, for instance, is known for his frequent flip flops. He has joined and left the BJP’s alliance, the NDA, several times, and his political manoeuvring is unpredictable. We should not forget that it was Nitish Kumar who convened the INDIA, the alliance of opposition parties that was the BJP’s main challenger in the electionst winning 232 seats.

Yet, a top priority of Modi’s third term should be jobs and inequality. These are issues that have already hit his party and resulted in its poor showing at the polls. And both concern India’s huge population of youth. The average age of an Indian is 29, more than 50% of India’s population is below the age of 25, and more than 65% is below the age of 35. Making employment a top priority should be a no-brainer.

Yet, last weekend when Elon Musk, Tesla’s boss tweeted: “Congratulations @narendramodi on your victory in the world’s largest democratic elections! Looking forward to my companies doing exciting work in India”, Modi tweeted back: “Appreciate your greetings @elonmusk. The talented Indian youth, our demography, predictable policies and stable democratic polity will continue to provide the business environment for all our partners.” He may well have added: “As long as I can ensure jobs for the talented Indian youth.”

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Expect in Five More Years of Modi

What You Could Expect in Five More Years of Modi

What You Could Expect in Five More Years of Modi

In mid-March, at this year’s annual conclave organised by the India Today group, in his introductory speech before inviting Prime Minister Narendra Modi to speak, the group’s chairman Aroon Purie remarked that Modi was not just campaigning for the soon to begin 2024 parliamentary elections but he also seemed to have his sights on the next one to be held in 2029. When Modi rose to speak, he was quick to grab that as a cue. Playfully rebuking Purie, he said, “You stopped with 2029? I am aiming for 2047!”

That repartee may have been in jest. In 2047, Modi, if he is still around, will be 97–an age at which it is not usual to still be active in politics. Yet, 2047, in Modi’s scheme of things, is a significant year. It will be the 100th anniversary of India’s Independence. It is also 

the year for which Modi has envisioned Viksit Bharat @2047, a plan that is all about making India an advanced and developed country by that year. 

Most observers, political analysts, and journalists, including the dwindling few among that third group in India who could still be considered detractors, are quite clear that it is almost a certainty that Modi will get a third term as Prime Minister, and that his Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and its allies will again win an overwhelming majority of the 543 seats for which the elections will be held in seven phases, beginning April 19. Modi himself is confident that his alliance, the National Democratic Alliance, will get more than 400 seats, beating its 2019 tally of 353. 

The support and popularity that Modi enjoys is quite unprecedented in Indian politics and, as a consequence, his party and its allies are tipped as the clear winners in this year’s elections. Yet when it comes to the number of seats, the math may not be simple. Modi and his party are not very popular in the southern Indian states, which have largely been a bastion of regional parties and the opposition Congress Party. The south (four states and one union territory) has 130 of the 543 parliamentary seats, and in the 2019 elections, while it swept the northern states, the NDA won only 30 of them. How Modi and his alliance fares in the south this time would determine whether their final tally touches or crosses 400.

The Impact of Modi 3.0

That is a minor math conundrum. The larger issue is what a third term for Modi would mean for India and its people. At the India Today Conclave mentioned earlier, Modi ended his speech with his own predictions. In the next five years, he said, India’s infrastructure would reach new heights with significant advancements. For example, he said, Indian Railways would bring transformative changes to transportation. India, which is now the world’s biggest importer of defence equipment, would emerge as an exporter with a much stronger presence in the global defence market. And, in the space sector, after already having launched a successful moon mission, India would set new records in space endeavours.

Economic Growth. On the economic front, Modi has already set some tangible targets to achieve in his third term. Such as becoming the third largest economy in the world after the US and China. India with a GDP estimated at $3.7 trillion is growing the fastest among the world’s big economies and in size it is now the fifth largest economy in the world. To become the third, it would have to overtake Germany (at number 4) and Japan (number 3). With its fast-paced growth that would not seem difficult to achieve.

Reducing Poverty. According to the National Multidimensional Poverty Index (MPI), India has  already made big strides. The MPI captures overlapping deprivations in health, education, and living standards by complementing income-based poverty measurements by directly measuring and comparing deprivations. In the period, 2019-21, 14.96% of India’s population was multi-dimensionally poor, compared to 24.85% in 2015-16. This means that 135 million individuals have escaped multidimensional poverty during the 5-year period. The several schemes implemented by the Modi regime (such as direct transfers of welfare and subsidies; credit assurance to vendors; and support for tribal groups and artisans) will likely lead to further reduction in poverty during a third Modi term.

Other areas where progress could continue includes women’s empowerment. Although violence against women, closing gender gaps, and promoting economic opportunities are ongoing priorities, women have benefited from schemes to increase financial inclusion, subsidies on items such as cooking gas, emphasis on girl child education, and women’s involvement in local government. Gender equality can be expected to be an important objective in Modi’s third term.

An increased emphasis on national security and strengthening India’s security infrastructure, both internal as well as external, will also be a top priority area for the government. ‘

The Worrisome Issues

A third term would also pose other challenges for the Modi regime. One topic of discussion has been the potential downgrading of democracy ratings in India and the independence and autonomy of its institutions such as the judiciary. In 2021, international indices such as the US-based non-profit, Freedom House, downgraded India’s status from a free democracy to a “partially free democracy”. Sweden’s V-Dem Institute, which publishes datasets that describe qualities of different governments, classified India as an “electoral autocracy”. The Economist Intelligence Unit described India as a “flawed democracy” pointing to enacted laws such as the Citizenship Amendment Act, the National Registration of Citizens, and the revocation of Kashmir’s special status.

The past 10 years has seen a rise in majoritarianism in Indian society and increased communal tension, particularly between Muslims who account for 14.2% of the population and Hindus who make up 80%. How minorities will be treated in a third term of the BJP-led government could be an area of concern.

Also, despite the optimism about the Indian economy and its high growth rate, issues like inflation, unemployment, and rural inequality remain pressing challenges that need to be addressed. Youth unemployment because of mismatch of education with employment opportunities are areas that the new government or a Modi 3.0 regime will have to focus on in the next five years. India is still a young country–more than 50% of its population is below the age of 25 and more than 65% below the age of 35. While this is often referred to as a demographic dividend, in the absence of opportunities for India’s young, it could backfire horribly.

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