[The razzmatazz of a bullet train might help him politically but can
Prime Minister Narendra Modi justify reducing the Mumbai-Ahmedabad
commute by two hours as a more important public goal than rail safety,
ending open defecation, schooling, building highways across the
country or public health?]

http://scroll.in/article/775333/one-chart-that-shows-just-how-absurdly-wasteful-modis-mumbai-ahmedabad-bullet-train-line-is

OFF THE RAILS
One chart that shows just how absurdly wasteful Modi’s
Mumbai-Ahmedabad bullet train line is

Incredibly, the government of India will spend more on this one line
than it does on rail safety, Swachh Bharat, schools, highways or
health.
Shoaib Daniyal  · Yesterday · 05:30 pm

In every which way, Narendra Modi’s 2014 campaign was spectacular.
>From communication to ground management, the Bharatiya Janata Party
electoral machine, it is widely acknowledged, got it right. However, a
year and a half after Modi took office, one aspect of his campaign
seems to have been a bit too spectacular altogether. As part of its
manifesto, the BJP promised what it called a diamond quadrilateral: a
network of bullet trains crisscrossing the country. The first step in
that plan has gone through. India just signed a deal with Japan to
build a Mumbai-Ahmedabad bullet train link.

Politicians overpromising things while campaigning is a fine Indian
tradition but the enormous cost of just this one line should serve as
a shock: the estimated project expenditure has come to Rs 98,000
crore.

To put that in perspective, here’s a chart of how this figure compares
to other expenditure by the government of India on absolutely vital
sectors such as rail safety, health, roads and schools.

[The Chart:

All figures in Rs '000 crore
                                                      Amount
Mumbai-Ahmedabad bullet train:                98
Centre spend on highways, 2015-16:          43
Centre spend on schools, 2015-16:            42
Centre spend on railways, 2015-16:           42
Centre spend on health, 2015-16:              30
Safety investment in railways, 2015-16:     25
Centre spend on Swachh Bharat, 2014-15: 2.4

Narendra Modi has made cleanliness a key part of his government’s
message. And indeed, India desperately needs it being one of the
countries with the worst rates of open defecation on the planet. 44%
of Indians do not use what is probably the most basic marker of
modernity: a toilet. Even Nepal, Pakistan and Bangladesh beat big
brother India with corresponding figures of 32%, 13% and 1%,
respectively.

India should be on a toilet overdrive, yet the government of India is
going to spend 41X of its Swachh Bharat Mission outlay for 2014-'15 on
building a somewhat fast train line between two cities already
superbly connected by road, rail and air.

Bullet train > health, safety or schools

There’s more: the Mumbai-Ahmedabad bullet train cost is almost 4X the
amount the Centre is going to invest in rail safety in 2015-16. Just a
week ago, India saw two train accidents claim 14 lives and the Indian
rail system is one of the most unsafe in the world. Yet, precious
money is being diverted from safety to needless luxuries like a bullet
train. In fact, shockingly, the bullet train budget is 2.4X the entire
amount the government of India is going to spend on the Indian
Railways in 2015-'16.

The Mumbai-Ahmedabad bullet train budget is also 2.3X the entire spend
of the Centre on schools. The corresponding figure for health and
highways is 3.3 and 2.3, respectively.

There is an interesting contrast here with healthcare. Like bullet
trains, the BJP manifesto had also promised a plan for universal
healthcare. This is much needed. India’s healthcare system is
shambolic and according to a World Health Organisation study, ranks
112th in the world (for context, eastern neighbour Bangladesh ranks in
at 88, a good 24 places ahead). Yet, in March 2015, the Modi
government decided to scrap plans for a universal healthcare scheme
due to a “constraint on India's financial resources”. This plan, which
could have changed India dramatically, had a budget which was just 25%
more than the Mumbai-Ahmedabad bullet train link.

***The razzmatazz of a bullet train might help him politically but can
Prime Minister Narendra Modi justify reducing the Mumbai-Ahmedabad
commute by two hours as a more important public goal than rail safety,
ending open defecation, schooling, building highways across the
country or public health?*** [Emphasis added.]

-- 
Peace Is Doable

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send an email to [email protected].
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to