Quite shocking to see that these so called experts completely ignored the need of irrigation, check dams to trap excesse rainwater wasting during monsoon. River linking to help 60% population who would have got benifit from more areas for cultivation . India is going to face river flooding in future. Prepare to evacuate maximum flood water through pipe line and storage it for use.
Train accidents are the talk of the town. So, hold that thought about rainwater, for now. Btw, biggest waster of water is agriculture. If our farmers reduce growing of rice and sugarcane, then that would help a lot. But you know farmers are stubborn.
This is what happens when fools dont even watch the video before commenting. He clearly mentions water infrastructure twice in the video. Also river linking will be a wasted and time consuming project. But agree strongly on rain water harvesting and effective water storage solutions
We need roads and trains to quickly bring agricultural produce to the consumers. It is not brought through air. All the veggies cant be stored long enough in warehouses. Logistics has been a long pending issue.
1. Railways over road 2. Water supply 3. Green energy (transmission infrastructure and storage (BESS PSS) 4. Creative PPP initiatives 5. Lower GST in cement
Good points relevant to stay focused and accelerate growth. Cement attracting do much GST absolutely makes no sense and it only acts negatively to positive growth mind.needs attention.
90% of India's population is living just below the poverty line. The past decade has seen a significant increase in social and economic inequality in India. Despite boasting a democratic system, the government seems to be merely providing the bare minimum for its citizens to survive, rather than thrive. This is a travesty of the very principles of democracy.
sorry my friend - when you start a statement with "90% of India's population is living just below the poverty line" -no one will take you seriously. I agree though that at least 33% of population earn below 60 thousand per year and that means they have a very tough life which the government should look at
@@caesar_cipher Your figure is not correct. Rs 60k/yr is Rs 164/day or US$2/day which is the absolute poverty line. according to IMF figures, India's absolute poverty rate at $1.90/day is less than 1%. at $2.15/day or about Rs 65k is about 2%.