If you have given a chance to govern the state of Maharashtra as a Chief Minister for one day, what all measures will you take to improve the state?How will you stop corruption?
How will you stop all the bad acts which are against the peoples benefit?
Is it possible to do all the needful things for the state benefit in just one day?
keep it in mind, you have only one day!!!
[Related to :- Nayak:-The Real Hero]
Quality and satisfactory answer needed☺️
Answer in your own words
Answer only if you know
All the best!!!
[ asking same question third time :( ]
________________________
nahi mi nahi visarlo tula akshu☺️
Answers
Answer:
These are not economic mumbo-jumbo, nor management jargon, but something that whoever is entrusted with the job of running the nation must bear in mind. Some of it we have read, but there is a lot else that we know, but it gets lost in the general push for what the economists alone think is the panacea for this nation’s ailments. So, here are my 10 suggestions for the new Prime Minister and his government to follow. The list can be a hundred long, but this can be a good start, I feel.
INFRASTRUCTURE PUSH: There needs to be a huge infrastructure push. Yes, we have seen growth in telecom and roads have improved, but are we anywhere close to what a world-class network should be? No! And about electricity, the less said the better. Isn’t it funny that on July 31, 2012, dubbed as the largest power outage in world’s history that affected ”620 million Indian people”, except for people outside India, it didn’t really make a difference.Let me put it differently, most of those who should have been affected, did not even notice there is no power. Why? Because they barely got power anyway. And in the richie-rich condominiums, they have power back-up, so they didn’t feel it either.
SHUN CRONY CAPITALISM, THROW OUT ‘PERMANENT FIXTURES’ FROM TOP LEVEL COMMITTEES: When you talk of infrastructure, a lot of inputs on what and how come from the powerful committees that work under the Prime Minister’s Office. These could be committees on investment, on enterprises, manufacturing, skills development and what have you. The governments may change but these committees don’t. In some of the most important committees, the same set of industrialists have ruled the roost. These individuals also take control of various industry associations and lobby, disadvantaging the vast majority who are not in their cozy clubs. Everyone talks about how the same set of people influence policies and decision making in sectors that affect them, sup with the decision-makers and don’t let anyone enter to hurt their almost monopolistic control over the sector.Their control is sometimes so complete, that they force governments to take decisions that are not even in national interest and have actually hurt our oil and defence preparedness.
The new government would do well to throw out all those who have lasted dynasties and regimes.
TACKLE CORRUPTION: It may sound clichéd, even sloganeering, but this is something that this nation now needs to tackle almost as a mission. It is not going to be easy, but where there’s a will, there’s a way.One of the most memorable interviews I have had in my career was with the former Prime Minister of Thailand, Thaksin Shinawatra. When I asked him about comparing working in India with Thailand, he said: In my country, there is honest corruption, but in your country, there is dishonest corruption. I remember laughing, but he explained. When I pay money in my country, work gets done, here, it doesn’t.Do I need to elaborate more?
IMPROVE HUMAN DEVELOPMENT INDEX: We may tom-tom our nuclear prowess and huge skilled manpower and young population, but on some of the basic HDI, we are an embarrassment. This needs to be top priority. More so, since it does not single out a particular community, but benefits all.
HEALTH AND EDUCATION: Both these points can never be overemphasised. They are critical for any nation. We may have a ‘great and vibrant’ democracy, but those on ground know better. It is often as if the politicians themselves do not want the masses to be educated, lest they develop the ability to see through their lip-service, their games.As for healthcare, it is an area that the government seems to have almost abdicated its responsibility. And in this, there should be a marked push towards preventive healthcare. We are good at creating AIIMS like institutions, but have done precious little for preventing those who have to use the overcrowded facilities run by the government. The rich have already found their solutions. Mosquito repellent devices keeps them safe from malaria and RO plants ensure they are safe from cholera and diarrhoea. But the poor? Preventive healthcare would ensure hygiene and clean drinking water. Surely, a nation that aspires to be a superpower cannot not have this as a priority.
BUILD A SCIENTIFIC TEMPER: There was a time when this nation could be counted among those what gave top class thinkers in every field, including science. But now? And if truth be told, the tag of us being an IT Superpower is phoney, to say the least. We