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Rediff.com  » News » Hurdles that India must overcome soon

Hurdles that India must overcome soon

By H S Rao in London
December 15, 2006 10:21 IST
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India should take up the challenge of improving the standard of higher education and give greater attention to research Institutions to make them truly global level, Lord Bhikhu Parekh, non-resident Indian professor of Political Philosophy at the University of Westminster, has said.

"While Beijing University has emerged as one of the top 20 universities in the world, there are no Indian universities among the top 100," Lord Parekh said in London on Thursday night.

Lord Parekh was participating in a panel discussion on 'India's Sustainability Challenge' jointly organised by the Institute for Public Policy Research, a leading progressive think tank and United Kingdom's Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs at the Commonwealth Club.

He said India's IIT and IIMs came 5th and 7th or so in the category of technical institutions but they were not research institutions.

"IITs are training institutions and IIMs are teaching institutions. How can you sustain knowledge based economy without top research universities," he asked.

The coalition politics in India has also led to intrusion of caste politics, he said, adding: "There are these great dangers and if we are not aware of them, we can sleep walk into a nightmare."

He said while a small section of the society had become richer following the economic reforms, a large section still remained poor.

Speaking on the occasion, Indian High Commissioner Kamalesh Sharma said despite hurdles faced by it, Indian manufacturing sector was picking up dramatically and recorded a growth of 10 per cent per annum.

Similarly, there was satisfactory growth in trade and services sectors too, Sharma said.

David Miliband, UK's secretary of state, DEFRA, who is visiting India in the third week of next month, said industrialised countries have to take the first step in tackling the issue of global warming.

Ritu Kumar, director, the Energy and Resources Institute, London, said India had to develop micro-insurance scheme to help its farmers. Water will be one of the main problems that India will face in the future and not enough attention has been given to it so far, she said.

In a paper presented at the conference, the IPPR described India as one of the most modern and ancient nations on earth. "Its essence and thrall are captured in that duality of identity. Today, it hums with a modernity that draws culture, vitality and wisdom from its long civilisation. Its economy is growing at a rate of over eight per cent a year, propelling its massive population up the global league tables of economic might and geopolitical clout."

It said India's democracy is a proud source of comparative economic advantage as well as a unifying ideal. "But corruption is rife in Indian politics and public administration."

Concerns over corruption have been dampened in recent years because of the flourishing economy, with some concluding that corruption is an 'unfortunate tax,' it said. But Rob Jenkins of the Institute cautioned it would be a mistake.

"Corruption is a key reason why India's infrastructure is in such a poor state. If this is not tackled, it could threaten the viability of future growth," he said.

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H S Rao in London
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