Good question. Some actions that can speed up development:
1. Reduce population
2. Eliminate corruption
3. Cleaner environment
4. Seriously create quality products (minimizes wastage, encourages recycling, provides satisfaction)
5. Better education system--1. Education for all. 2. Education to fit the requirements of job/knowledge/growth (not worrying about local/regional languages)
6. Uniform communication model--preferably one language, both spoken and written
7. Concentrate on improving life in villages
8. Concentrate on improving agriculture--mass agriculture is important rather than small lands being taken care of by separate family members
9. Increase gainful employment--there is a huge scope in the country for this (environment/recycling itself could employ a 10th of the population)
10. Better political system--selection based on knowledge/education
2007-02-02 22:22:02
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answer #1
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answered by Cowboy 6
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I always think that education is the best way to develop a person and by extension a nation. Education is great.
2007-02-02 21:57:42
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answer #2
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answered by Anthony F 6
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By Asking and telling How can you Devolop India???It can never devolop India ......Its a huge task and if you need to make india a devoloped counrty first and the most important is the ppl need to be united...Otherwise neither i or the next generation can see a devoloped india
2007-02-02 21:59:11
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answer #3
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answered by Serah 3
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develop ur self u develop india
2007-02-02 22:15:36
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answer #4
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answered by love me 2
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i think it is a huge task to develop india but basically should be start with give thier people education.
2007-02-02 22:07:07
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answer #5
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answered by maruko 1
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first of develop yourself i all fields &then study hard to be a strong people & make money a lot & devlop your village/area then u can .further infor mation cont-suorcm_8606@yahoo.co.in&9338579717.
2007-02-02 23:39:58
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answer #6
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answered by manoranjan s 1
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India is on its way to achieving the Millennium Development Goal on water, having made progress in enabling access to water to its rural and urban population. Access to sanitation is lagging and there is need to accelerate progress. This is stated in the Human Development Report (HDR) 2006. The United Nations Development Programme (UNDP)-commissioned Report was released by the UNDP Resident Representative and UN Resident Coordinator in India, Dr. Maxine Olson, in the presence of the Union Minister for Water Resources, Prof. Saifuddin Soz, here today. The release coincides with the Global Launch of the Report in Cape Town, South Africa, by the UNDP Administrator, Mr. Kemal Dervis)..
Introducing the main messages of the Report, Dr. Olson said the Report traced the roots of crisis in the global water situation to poverty, inequality and unequal power relationships, as well as water management policies that exacerbate scarcity. “All these fall in the domain of human action and point to the key areas where countries including India need to focus their attention. Water has been treated as a limitless resource”, Dr. Olson said.
The UNDP Chief in India said the Report had powerfully resonated what experts know for some time now -- in parts of India groundwater tables are falling by more than 1 metre a year, jeopardizing future agricultural production. “While water availability as delivered by nature is critical, equally important are policies, institutions and infrastructure through which people secure access to predictable flows of water”, she pointed out.
Delivering the Keynote Address on the occasion, the Union Minister for Water Resources, Prof. Saifuddin Soz said by bringing out the HDR on the theme of water this year, UNDP had brought the issue to the centrestage and this would definitely help in drawing the attention of governments, policy makers, development practitioners and media around the world to the emerging water crisis.
India receives a mention in several sections of the Report in terms of how community action in water management has revived local economies. This has happened as a result of several grassroots leaders who have shown the way and led communities to manage resources, however scarce. Drawing on these initiatives, the Government of India has framed policies that enable and promote community management of water. There is scope for giving greater impetus to this movement and the Indian government is committed to this. Citing experiences from Andhra Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh and Maharashtra, the Report says that equitable distribution of water and sanitation services is greatly enhanced when access and management rights are transferred to communities themselves.
Emphasizing the importance of community-government partnerships in clocking rapid progress in sanitation, the Report takes note of the work of the slum dwellers associations in South Asia – the National Slum Dwellers Federation in India and the Orangi Pilot Project in Pakistan to bring sanitation to millions of people, using the power of communities to mobilize resources. The Total Sanitation Campaign in Bangladesh has been scaled up from a community-based project to a national programme that is achieving rapid increases in access to sanitation. India is among the countries that have adopted the Bangladesh model, the Report observes and cites the success of Midnapur district in West Bengal in scaling up sanitation from 5 per cent to near total coverage as a result of this campaign.
The Report says that conflicts over water have been an exception and not the rule. It refers to the fact that more than 200 water treaties have been negotiated. Some of these treaties—such as the Indus Basin Treaty between India and Pakistan—have remained in operation even during armed conflict.
India has made some progress on the Human Development Index (HDI) value that has gone up from .602 in last year's Report to .611 in HDR 2006. On HDI ranking, India is ranked at 126 this year against a total of 177, going up one rank as compared to last year. India's rank on the Human Poverty Index (HPI-1) is 55 in a universe of 102 developing countries.
2007-02-03 06:35:02
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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develop your neighborhood first
2007-02-02 22:33:31
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answer #8
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answered by jay 2
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A nation is not made of its land.
A nation is made of its people.
Hope you will now know the answer.
2007-02-05 05:05:04
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answer #9
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answered by Known 2
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by removing mass reservation & implementing economy base reservation
2007-02-02 22:14:31
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answer #10
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answered by Sushanta D 1
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