INDIAS ACHIEVEMENTS
.The best tribute to Indian software was recently paid by
Thomas L. Friedman, writing in The New York Times. He wrote: "Thanks to the Internet
and satellites, India has been able to connect its millions of educated, English-speaking, low-wage, tech-savvy
young people to the world's largest corporations. They live in India, but they design and
run the software and systems that now support
the world's biggest companies, earning India an unprecedented $ 60 billion in foreign
reserves - which doubled in just three years. But this has made the world more dependent
on India and India on the world than ever before. If you lose your luggage on British
Airways, the techies who track it down are in India. If your Dell Computer has a problem,
the techie who walks you through it is in Bangalore, India's Silicon Valley. Ernst &
Young may be doing your company's tax returns here in India with Indian accountants.
Indian software giants like Wipro, Infosys and MindTree now manage back-room operations -
accounting, inventory management, billing, payrolls for global firms like Nortel Networks,
Reebok, Sony, American Express, HSBC and GE Capital. GE's highest research centre outside
the US is in Banglaore, with 1,700 Indian engineers and scientists. The brain chip for
every Nokia cellphone is designed in Bangalore..."
What bigger
tribute to Indian science and scientists can one get? India's professional standing army
of 1.1 million is the second largest in the world after China's - and it is completely
apolitical. India is on the top of the world in missilery and nuclear development. Our
Indian Institutes of Managements (IIMs) are some of the best in the world. IIM, Ahmedabad
is the toughest Management School in the world to get into, ahead even of Harvard Business
School, Columbia University, Spain's Instituto de Empressa and France's Insead.
It may sound un-related, but the dabbawalas in Bombay deliver
nearly 1.5 lakh lunch boxes (dabbas) to Mumbai's citizens and it is said that their
Efficiency Rating is 99.999999 or one error in six million transactions as rated by the
American Business Weekly, Forbes Global. And think of this: The Rural Water Supply
Programme in India has used more than 30 lakh Mark II pumps made in India and presently
exported to Africa and Latin America. There are over 30,000 Indian doctors in the United
States - indeed Indian doctors practically run the American medical field!
In the realm of milk production India has the world's largest
milk production at over 78 million tonnes a year ensuring the livelihood of almost 11
million farmers in 96,000 village level societies across the country. Nowhere in the world
has there been a man of the calibre of V. Kurien. These things would have been considered
impossible in 1947 when India, burdened with an enormous inferiority complex, looked to
the West for everything, whether in science, technology or engineering. Does anyone truly realise that
Indian railways are about the biggest in the world? They run over one lakh (1,00,000) kms.
and are serviced by 7,000 stations and over
11,000 freight and passenger trains a day carrying over a million passengers every 24
hours? Then again, India with its 13 million bicycle production a year is second only to
China. And to think that around 1947 India had to import bicycles and, for that matter,
even safety pins? Sure, in cities the roads are dirty; everywhere one sees discarded
plastic bags strewn at road corners. But, according to one estimate India recycles 60 per
cent of its plastic waste. The figure for
Japan is 12 per cent for China, 10.
According to India Today the Indian postal system is the
largest in the world and works with fabulous efficiency, despite the multiplicity of
languages and low literacy. Mail your letter addressed to someone in a Himachal Pradesh
village at the street corner letter box in Mumbai but be assured that the letter would be
unerringly delivered to the right address in a week's time. Who says Indians are
inefficient? In 1947 India was known abroad for its poverty, snake charmers, fakirs lying
on beds of iron nails, cows wandering in city streets etc. etc. India was considered an
exotic land and nothing more. There were hardly any
Indians living in the
United States or, for that matter, in the United Kingdom, Canada or Australia. Today
Indians constitute the highest income ethnic group in the United States. Indian
businessmen are noted for their acumen, especially in the software field. Indian Americans
constitute almost a third of the NASA workforce. Indian teachers are valued in American
universities, colleges and schools. Indian doctors have established a veritable name for
themselves. And it is difficult to believe that a 29-year old Indian has been appointed
Assistant Secretary in the Department of Health and Human Services. Only two years ago he
had been appointed President of the University of Louisiana System, one of the largest
public university systems in the United States with nearly 100,000 students and a $ 450
million annual budget
At the age of 26
he was Executive Director of a bi-partisan presidential commission charged with reforming
Medicare, America's largest insurance system for nearly 40 million people.
India has come a long
way since 1947 though it may be argued that it still has a long way to go in practically
all fields of endeavour right in India itself. Millions still live below the poverty line,
literacy is still low by western standards, hundreds of villages hardly have any drinking
water and health care is less than minimum. But that should not detract us from the successes which are stupendous.
.
Courtesy: Samachar