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India’s Biggest Problems: Jobs And Rising Prices 

The lack of employment opportunities and rising prices are India’s most pressing challenges.

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More than 70 percent of Indians surveyed during May-July 2018 which was the beginning of the last year of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government said the lack of employment opportunities and rising prices are India’s most pressing challenges, as per a new Pew Research Centre survey released on 26 March 2019.

The unemployment rate is currently estimated to be at a 45-year high, reaching 7.8 percent in urban areas and 5.3 percent in rural ones, according to a leaked National Sample Survey Office report for 2017-18.

This may go some way to explain why the proportion of people who are happy with the way things are going in the country has also fallen by 15 percentage points since the previous year (from 70 percent in 2017 to 55 percent in 2018).

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A return to 2015 satisfaction levels is marked after the first full year of Narendra Modi’s government, but levels are still significantly higher than in the last two years of Manmohan Singh’s government, the report based on a survey of 2,591 people said.

Corrupt officials, terrorism and crime are the next major problems identified, with over 60 percent of people saying they are a ‘very big problem’. The findings mark no change from last year when employment opportunities also topped the list as the biggest problem facing the country.

On key issues such as employment, corruption and inflation, the majority of the respondents said there had been little improvement over the past five years, the period encompassing the Bharatiya Janata Party led National Democratic Alliance’s term, the survey found.

No more than 21 percent of respondents said the employment situation had improved over the past five years, while 67 percent said it had deteriorated. With India’s shrinking employment opportunities viewed as a key concern for three quarters of the population, 64 percent of respondents said emigration in search of jobs was also another major problem affecting the country.

Attitudes towards stemming corruption were similar, with 65 percent saying the situation had become worse and 21 percent saying it had improved. The rising prices of goods and services were another major concern, as 65 percent said inflation had exacerbated since five years ago.

On the wealth gap, communal relations and air pollution, at least a quarter of those surveyed said the situation had improved. Proportionally, more people said there had been improvement on these issues than on jobs, inflation and corruption. Nevertheless, the majority said things had gotten worse.

Just over half (54 percent ) said the gap between the rich and the poor in India had widened over the past five years, and 27 percent said it had narrowed.

The wealth held by the richest 1 percent of Indians reportedly saw a 15-percentage-point rise in just over a year, from 58 percent in 2018 to 73 percent 2019, according to a 2019 Oxfam report on inequality, as IndiaSpend reported on 24 January 2019.

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Nearly 51 percent of respondents said air quality had declined since 2014, while 27 percent said air pollution had improved.

As many as 15 out of the top 20 most polluted cities are now found in India, as IndiaSpend reported 5 March 2019.

Just under half (45 percent ) of the respondents said they believed communal relations had worsened since 2014, while 28 percent said the situation had improved.

The number of communal riots increased by 24 percent from 703 in 2015 to 869 in 2016, according to data from the National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB). With the annual Crime in India reports for 2017 and 2018 yet to be released, trends for the last two years are unclear.

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Amid concerns over India’s economic health, security and air quality, there was mixed response towards India’s democratic performance.

Indians voice strong frustrations about elections and elected officials, the report said, with up to 64 percent of respondents saying they believed most politicians are corrupt and 58 percent saying they believed nothing changes much after elections.

No more than 33 percent said they believed elected officials actually care what ordinary people think. A further 54 percent said they believed most people live in areas where it is too dangerous to walk around at night, indicating concerns around safety and the rule of law among more than half the population.

These attitudes may explain why no more than 54 percent said they were ‘very satisfied ’ with democracy, down from 79 percent a year ago which saw a decline of 25 percentage points.

Nevertheless, 58 percent said free speech is protected and 59 percent said they believe most people have ‘a good chance’ to improve their standard of living.

Just under half, however, said they believed the court system treats everyone fairly (47 percent), with a sizeable proportion (37 percent), saying they did not believe that is not the case.

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Partisan attitudes are similarly found on issues regarding wealth inequality, corruption, terrorism and communal relations.

There is a decidedly partisan take on the direction of the country and the challenges facing India, with significantly differing views found on either side of the political spectrum, the report said.

For instance, supporters of the opposition Indian National Congress (Congress) party are 21 percentage points more likely to believe job opportunities have worsened over the past five years, than those backing the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).

As many as 15 out of the top 20 most polluted cities are now found in India, as IndiaSpend reported 5 March 2019.

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However, since the survey was conducted nine months before the Pulwama terror attack in Kashmir that killed more than 40 CRPF officers, these figures do not account for any change in perceptions following the attack and India’s subsequent military response, the report noted.

Even ahead of the Pulwama attack, 53 percent of respondents said the situation in Kashmir had deteriorated over the last five years, with just 18 percent believing it had improved. Further, 58 percent of respondents said the government should step up its military action against Pakistan.

More than 75 percent of respondents viewed Pakistan as a serious threat, and only 7 percent said Pakistan is no danger to national security.
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Partisan attitudes are evident on this issue, too, with those expressing ‘confidence in Narendra Modi ’ 70 percent more likely to see Pakistan as a threat than those with less confidence in the Prime Minister, the report said. Among those with less favourable attitudes to Modi, a slim majority (51 percent) viewed Pakistan as a threat.

International perceptions of India throughout Prime Minister Modi’s term in office have remained largely stable, the report added. Several countries including Australia, South Korea and Japan recorded improved attitudes towards India between 2014 and 2018, the highest being a 13 percentage point rise in the Philippines. The US and Japan both posted a negligible five-percentage-point decline.

There is some mismatch in how Indians view their country’s position on the world stage, and how India is received by a wider audience. While 56 percent of Indian respondents said their country is now playing a greater role in global affairs, an average of no more than 28 percent of people among 26 surveyed countries agreed.

However, sizeable groups in several wealthy countries said India’s role was growing, namely France (49 percent), Japan (48 percent), South Korea (48 percent), Sweden (47 percent) and the UK (46 percent).

Most people across the countries surveyed (34 percent) said India’s role had stayed the same for the past decade. In this category are Brazil and South Africa, two fellow BRICS nations, where larger groups (32 percent and 37 percent , respectively) saw India as having a less important role in the world today compared to 10 years ago.

(Published in an arrangement with IndiaSpend.)

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