This paper is published in Volume-4, Issue-2, 2018
Area
Management
Author
Leena Bhatia
Org/Univ
K. L Mehta Dayanand College for Women, Faridabad, Haryana, India
Pub. Date
29 March, 2018
Paper ID
V4I2-1471
Publisher
Keywords
Skill, Scale, Speed

Citationsacebook

IEEE
Leena Bhatia. A Study about Skill, Scale and Speed in India, International Journal of Advance Research, Ideas and Innovations in Technology, www.IJARIIT.com.

APA
Leena Bhatia (2018). A Study about Skill, Scale and Speed in India. International Journal of Advance Research, Ideas and Innovations in Technology, 4(2) www.IJARIIT.com.

MLA
Leena Bhatia. "A Study about Skill, Scale and Speed in India." International Journal of Advance Research, Ideas and Innovations in Technology 4.2 (2018). www.IJARIIT.com.

Abstract

With the combination of these three words skill, scale and speed a lot of development can be achieved. A developing country can attain developed position. As in present scenario India is also heading toward attaining this objective. For any country like India where we are looking for development the first thing we need is "skill" and education and human capital would be the only way for India to really benefit from the fact that “65% of the population is under the age of 35”. The demographic dividend depended on skill development. India today is struggling to educate its people even though it had historically been an exporter of teachers to the rest of the world. Then comes "scale" by scale, we mean the need for India to “think big” and end its tendency to “think very small”. We like to think express trains rather than bullet trains. When most people spoke of “infrastructure”, they tended to think of physical infrastructure, but it also had to be about handling data. Recently Mr. Modi said developing both “highways and I-ways”. To take India on the path of developed nation "make in India" is a great initiative by Mr. Modi but still there are challenges that needs to be resolved. To become a manufacturing nation, India has to quickly move beyond rhetoric to create a clear strategy and favorable policy environment for manufacturing to take off. A close dialogue and partnership between government and the private sector is critical. And to overcome these challenges India would need to work on “skill, scale and speed” if it hoped to compete with its northern neighbor.