Write in brief your vision of the future of India
83 1pahe
Answers
HERE IS UR ANSWER BUDDY
MARK AS BRAINLEIST ANSWER AND FOLLOW ME
Our vision of India's future should be both comprehensive and harmonious. It must encompass all the myriad aspects that constitute the life of the country and its people. It must balance and synthesize all the divergent views and forces that combine, compete and unite in their pursuit of self-fulfillment. It must be based on an objective assessment of facts and a realistic appraisal of possibilities, yet it must rise beyond the limitation of past trends, immediate preoccupations and pressing challenges to perceive the emerging opportunities and discover the concealed potentials. Our vision should serve as a signpost alerting us to unresolved and impending problems that demand our attention as well as to the range of options and critical choices we have to make in order to maximize our future accomplishments.
Most of all, the vision of India's future should serve to awaken in all of us a greater awareness of the essential cultural and spiritual strengths which are the bedrock of our past achievements and the foundations of our future accomplishments. The forms of tradition must change, but knowledge of its essence is our greatest endowment. The vision should awaken in us an unswerving confidence in ourselves, a stanch reliance on our own capacities as a nation and an unshakeable determination to realize our full potential. A true vision cannot be a static written statement. It must be born and emerge as a living and dynamic reality in the minds and hearts of the people and their leaders -- ever constant and persistent, yet ever adaptive and responsive to rapidly changing conditions.
This vision statement of India 2020 does not purport to fulfill these stringent criteria, but it can serve as a useful starting point and foundation for pondering our future possibilities and greater destiny as a nation. It is the product of several years of thought, discussion and debate among a wide range of thinkers and experts representing different viewpoints and fields of experience. It seeks to identify both the unaddressed problems and the unrealized potentials and indicate the broad lines of policy and strategy by which India can emerge as a far stronger, more prosperous and more equitable nation in the coming years. This document is a concise summary of issues, ideas and proposals contained in more than thirty background papers presented to the Committee over the last two years. The vast scope and complexity of the issues prevents us from doing full justice to them in a summary document.
The issues dealt with are complex and highly interrelated. This interconnectedness has discouraged us from trying to create separate chapters for each important topic, such as the exciting potentials of Information Technology or the serious challenges posed by regional inequalities. Readers will find these and many other important topics addressed at multiple points in the text where they relate to the broader headings discussed under different chapters. IT, for example, is discussed in the sections on Knowledge Resources, Employment, Education, Vocational Training, Science & Technology, and Governance. Rural development is addressed under multiple sections including employment, education, health, infrastructure, and energy.
This vision statement is neither a prediction of what will actually occur, nor simply a wish list of desirable but unattainable ends. Rather it is a statement of what we believe is possible for our nation to achieve, provided we are able to fully mobilise all the available resources-human, organizational, technological and financial-generate the requisite will and make the required effort.
An essential requirement for envisioning India's future is to recognize that the equations which determine national development have changed in recent years, opening up greater possibilities than ever before. A powerful current of catalytic forces is hastening the speed of social change throughout the world. These trends include a rapid rise in levels of education, accelerating rates of technological innovation and application, ever faster and cheaper communication that dissolves physical and social barriers both within countries and internationally, greater availability and easier access to information, and the further opening up of global markets. These trends are representative of a relative shift in the engines that drive development from manufacturing to service industries and from capital resources to human and knowledge resources. Technology, organization, information, education and productive skills will play a critically decisive role in governing the future course of