English, asked by ramful, 1 year ago

what changes we see in india in 2030 write a paragraph on it

Answers

Answered by yashasves
1
India will have tall buildings and their will be many new facility every village will have a taxi stop every person will live happily India will mechanical their may be 100of robots a large number of great scientist every child will study India will be clean and beautiful

ramful: please join me on what's app on 8930994096
ramful: please
yashasves: i don't use WhatsApp
ramful: please start what's app
yashasves: my mom don't allow me
ramful: ok by
ramful: can we make friends
yashasves: no
ramful: ok
yashasves: ok
Answered by Bajwa302
1
I first thought of writing an answer that takes a few parameters, researching into the trends over the last 30 years and then extrapolating for the next 13. Then I realised that it would be ludicrous to do that. Things are changing so fast that the past is no longer any reliable guide for the future, except in the very very short term.

In the last 13 years, in India so much has changed and so rapidly; some for the better (infrastructure, economy, political landscape etc) and some for the worse (pollution, intolerance, inequality etc). Forecasting what is going to happen, with any degree of certainty that the word ‘will’ indicates, would be fraught with peril.

I am therefore answering the question “What might India be like in 2030?”

Short answer. Different. Very very different.

Long answer and even here I am covering a few areas only.

On the positive side I expect that

India would be still one country.
The economy would have grown. Still not a super power I am afraid but then the days of super powers are gone.
Health indicators would have improved.
A vast majority would comprise people in the working age - 18 to 60 years. A potential demographic dividend.
Indians would be doing well in sporting events at international level. We would not be over celebrating Olympic medals because they would become more common.
At least a few Indian students would choose to move away from STEM and enter into the Humanities side of academics.
I expect that India will have harnessed technology to deal with some of the problems like food sufficiency, leakages in social security schemes, tax evasion etc.
On the negative side I expect that

The fractures in society would be starker than now because of continued polarisation of the people. We would continue to be a single State but not necessarily a harmonious one.
inequality would have grown further and that the divide between the rich and poor would be very wide.
aging population would be a problem in terms of infrastructure for the care for the elderly, never mind if they are rich or middle class or poor.
jobs would be at a premium. i expect a large number of people in the working age to be either unemployed or underemployed. That s because I do not see any signs that our education system is changing to better skill up our youth. Yes yes I know all about Skill India but like Make in India it is only a slogan for now.
Indians would be doing well in individual sports where individual talent is critical. In team events, in anything but may be cricket, we would still be pathetic simply because there is no sign of any concerted effort being made. Like today, our athletes would be winning medals in spite of the system rather than because of.
STEM education would continue to be the main draw for large numbers, as a ticket to a better life. No matter how poor the quality of the education was.
A serious resource crunch. Especially natural resources like water for both drinking and agriculture as population and urbanisation increases water need. I also expect reduction in forest cover to clear land for agriculture and human settlement.
On the whole, standard of living would have improved for a vast majority of Indians but not necessarily the quality of life.

Nirad Chadharis statement “Exceptions in India run into millions” would be worth remembering. It would be even more stark in 13 years.

I expect little change in

Levels of corruption.
Quality of media and press freedom.
Political debate which will continue to be as ridiculous as it is now.
The Kashmir issue.
Similar questions