NEW DELHI: The next big wave of reforms must come from the states if India wants to become a developed nation by 2047, as most of the heavy lifting at the Centre has been done, Niti Aayog CEO BVR Subrahmanyam said Saturday.“Most of the action in India is now at the state level. The government of India did probably 90% of what it had to do,” Subrahmanyam said at an event organised by the All India Management Association.“Land is state, labour is state, electricity is state, water supply is state, roads are state,” he said.“Differences in state-level governance now determine growth outcomes. States that push reforms move ahead, while others risk falling behind,” added Subrahmanyam.He said India’s demographic profile gives it a significant opportunity. “India is in for good times… demography is behind us, our capabilities are behind us and there is wind in our sails,” however, he said becoming a developed nation will require sustained high growth.At the event, Vianai Systems founder Vishal Sikka said India must build its own AI stack and not become dependent on systems it does not understand or control.
Trending
- America has a ‘big AI problem’ and it starts with ‘angry’ Gen Z; shows Stanford survey
- Sanju Samson: Sanju Samson’s redemption arc! World Cup hero wins ICC Player of the Month | Cricket News
- Did Ranveer Singh take a dig at Dhruv Rathee in new ad with father-in-law Prakash Padukone? Fans call it ‘peak detailing’ |
- UP hikes minimum wages across categories amid Noida protest: What workers will now earn
- Aruna Irani: ‘Despite pain, she behaved like happiest person,’ Aruna Irani breaks down recalling late Asha Bhosle- Exclusive |
- Sanju Samson named ICC men’s Player of the Month for March
- West Bengal Assembly Election 2026: Not seen ‘dirty party’ like BJP, says Mamata Banerjee; flags ‘logical discrepancy’ in SIR process | India News
- Petrol, diesel losses: What oil firms are losing amid Hormuz supply squeeze
