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The Quality of Life Crisis in India

yash vishwakarmaREQ / 19442
Pune, Maharashtra

India is one of the fastest-growing economies in the world, yet for millions of citizens, quality of life remains a daily struggle. Economic growth means little when basic necessities such as clean air, safe roads, reliable public infrastructure, quality healthcare, and accessible education continue to be inadequate for a large portion of the population.

Our cities are overcrowded, traffic congestion wastes countless productive hours, pollution affects public health, and civic planning often fails to keep pace with population growth. Many citizens pay significant taxes but still face poor public services, forcing them to spend additional money on private healthcare, education, security, and transportation.

The gap between economic progress and everyday living standards is becoming increasingly difficult to ignore. While infrastructure projects and development announcements receive attention, issues such as urban planning, waste management, water quality, pedestrian safety, public transportation, and environmental sustainability often remain unresolved.

A nation's success should not be measured solely by GDP growth, stock market performance, or the number of billionaires it creates. It should be measured by how safely, comfortably, and dignified its average citizen can live.

India has immense potential, talent, and resources. What is needed now is a stronger focus on improving the daily lives of ordinary people through accountable governance, long-term planning, and investments in public welfare. Economic growth must translate into cleaner cities, better public services, safer communities, and a higher quality of life for all citizens—not just a privileged few.

The time has come to shift the conversation from merely becoming a global economic power to becoming a nation where people genuinely enjoy a high standard of living.

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