Social Sciences, asked by yeasin8920, 1 year ago

Impact of digitalization in rural india article

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Answered by tajgraphics001
0

Almost every farmer in India’s massive rural swathes is tethered, in one way or another, to the sahukar, the Indian variety of the moneylender, the ubiquitous, ravenous loan shark.

For centuries, moneylenders have monopolized rural Indian credit markets. Families have lost land, farmers have been asked to prostitute their wives to pay off debts, and, when all else has failed, they have tied the noose to end their misery.

An inescapable cycle of debt continues to grip rural India, particularly its farming class. Yet the public image of menacing debt collectors does not reflect the actual plight of India’s three million farmers. Moneylenders have been around for generations, but their business has boomed ever since India’s economic priorities shifted, with globalization, from agriculture to industry. The arrival of high-cost seeds and pesticides and the attraction of bumper harvests have added to the debts. In farm belts moneylenders operate under the guise of farm input sellers.

Answered by Anonymous
1

Answer:

                   DIGITAL INDIA

Digital India has inaugurated in presence of top industrialists such as RIL chairman and managing director Mukesh Ambani, Wipro chairman Azim Premji, Tata Group chairman Cyrus Mistry, and so forth at the Indira Gandhi Indoor Stadium Delhi. A meeting conducted to share ideas about digitization and uprising of the internet.

                    OBJECTIVE

ᐅA protected, firm digital infrastructure linking to each region of the country.

ᐅEasy access to digitally delivering government services which is e-Governance.

ᐅDigital literacy of the crowds

                    IMPACT

Digital India has a profound impact on people from every aspect of society. The campaign has had a positive impact on the life of the individual as a whole and has contributed to the progress of the society as a whole.

The project can be considered to be successful in general terms but still remains a failure in the broader sense. Of course, campaigns like these take years if not decades and Digital India is still in its early stages.

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