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New India, Digital India, Vikshit Bharat slogans appear hollow

New India, Digital India, Vikshit Bharat slogans appear hollow 

New India, Digital India, Vikshit Bharat slogans appear hollow 

-Bruhaspati Samal-

In the dusk-tinted twilight of expectation, a nation that once promised “Incredible India” now stands before a mirror that reflects not splendour, but contradiction. The shining slogans of New India, Digital India, and Viksit Bharat flutter across billboards and television screens, painting a picture of unstoppable progress. Yet beneath this radiant surface lies a quieter, unsettling truth—one that whispers of unfulfilled promises, growing disparities, and a fading moral compass. The story of today’s India is not merely about what glitters, but about what that glitter conceals.


The Transparency International Corruption Perceptions Index 2024 ranks India at 96th among 180 countries, with a score of 38—one point lower than the previous year. For a nation aspiring to global leadership, this slip reveals how corruption continues to corrode governance and public trust. Neighbouring Bhutan, with its modest economy but steadfast ethics, ranks far higher, and even China, under an authoritarian model, fares better. India’s democratic foundation, once its proudest asset, now groans under the weight of bureaucratic opacity and political patronage. The cancer of corruption seeps through the veins of public institutions, eroding the trust that once bound citizens to their state.


Equally disquieting is India’s position in the World Happiness Report 2025—118th among 147 nations. Despite rapid GDP growth, technological leaps, and global aspirations, happiness remains a distant dream. The paradox is glaring: a booming economy coexists with emotional impoverishment. In smaller neighbours like Bhutan and Nepal, where material resources are fewer but community bonds stronger, happiness thrives. In India, rising inequalities, urban loneliness, and institutional alienation have hollowed the human experience. What use is economic growth if it cannot translate into contentment or compassion?


Yet amid these shadows, there are rays of light. In the Global Innovation Index 2025, India ranks 38th among 139 nations — a steady climb from 48th just a few years ago. This ascent signals the vibrancy of its start-up ecosystem, digital ambition, and youth-led creativity. However, the glow dims when examined closely. India invests less than 1% of its GDP in research and development, far below global leaders. The bridges between laboratories, industries, and rural innovation remain weak. Innovation, though promising, risks becoming a metropolitan privilege rather than a national strength.


The Mercer CFA Institute Global Pension Index 2025 delivers a more alarming verdict. India, with a score of 43.8 and a “D” grade, stands among the world’s weakest pension systems. This decline from last year’s 44 exposes the fragility of India’s social security framework. While Singapore, Hong Kong, and Malaysia secure their elderly with robust systems, India’s ageing citizens continue to live uncertain lives after decades of labour. The veil of development hides this painful truth: millions of elderly Indians are destined for insecurity in their twilight years, victims of policy neglect and economic indifference.


The Global Hunger Index 2025 adds yet another layer to the country’s discomforting portrait. Ranked 102nd out of 123 countries, India remains in the “serious” category, with a score of 25.8. Child wasting—an indicator of acute malnutrition—stands at 18.7%, one of the highest globally. Beneath the glittering towers of economic ambition, children continue to waste away in silence. The myth of trickle-down prosperity collapses when one in five children goes to bed hungry. The hunger index is not merely a number—it is a moral indictment of a system that measures progress in megabytes but ignores empty stomachs.


Equally distressing is the decline in press freedom and civic space. The World Press Freedom Index 2025 by Reporters Without Borders places India at 151st among 180 nations, an improvement from 159th last year, yet still in the “very serious” category. The report highlights growing threats to journalists, state pressure on independent media, and digital censorship. The promise of Digital India rings hollow when the same digital realm becomes a space of surveillance and suppression. A democracy without a free press is like a body without breath—it can exist, but not live.


In environmental and safety indices too, the sheen fades quickly. India’s air quality remains among the world’s worst, with Delhi, Ghaziabad, and Noida repeatedly featuring in the top 10 polluted cities globally. Road fatalities surpass 1.5 lakh annually, and India’s position in the Global Peace Index hovers around 116th. The Ease of Doing Business reforms once touted as transformative have stagnated in their replacement framework, and the much-promised “better life” still eludes millions. Growth without governance, modernity without morality—this is the paradox of progress beneath the shining veil.


Where, then, does India truly stand? It stands tall in ambition but fragile in execution. It leads the world in youth strength, digital penetration, and market potential, but stumbles in happiness, hunger, gender equality, and governance. The contradictions are too sharp to ignore. India’s story is one of remarkable possibilities marred by policy paralysis and moral fatigue. Its skyscrapers rise while its social indices sink. Its slogans soar while its institutions stumble.


The root of this dissonance lies in the nation’s structural failings. Corruptions, centralisation of power, and bureaucratic inertia have crippled accountability. Over 85% of India’s workforce remains informal, excluded from social safety nets. Stark regional disparities persist., where the prosperity of Gujarat and Karnataka coexists with the deprivation of Bihar and Odisha. Social hierarchies and gender inequities continue to stifle inclusion. Even more worrying is the shrinking space for dissent—when criticism is branded as anti-national, democracy begins to hollow from within.


India’s tragedy is not its failure but its complacency. A country that once prided itself on moral leadership and collective conscience now measures greatness in hashtags and grand events. The obsession with image-building has replaced introspection. Yet true progress cannot be photoshopped; it must be lived and shared. Campaigns like Viksit Bharat will mean little if they do not ensure that every citizen, from the street vendor to the retired worker, feels secure, respected, and heard. A great civilization listens, learns, and reforms. India must rediscover that humility. The government must invest as much in integrity as it does in infrastructure, protect freedoms as fiercely as it builds expressways, and measure success not in GDP alone but in the dignity of every life it touches.


To the people of India, the responsibility is even greater. Patriotism is not blind adoration but active engagement. Democracy survives only when its citizens demand accountability, not applause. India’s renaissance will not come from slogans but from sincerity—from the courage to ask hard questions and the will to seek truthful answers. Beneath the shining veil lies both the splendour of possibility and the shadow of neglect. Whether the world’s largest democracy reclaims its moral and developmental leadership or continues to hide its flaws under the glitter of progress depends on how bravely it lifts that veil. The time has come to look not at the light reflected, but at the truth revealed.

(The writer is a Service Union Representative and a Columnist.)

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