Facebook Pixel DURING MODI 3.0, SWARNIM BHARAT IS THE TARGET | The Sunday Guardian - newspaper - Read this story on Magzter.com
Go Unlimited with Magzter GOLD

Go Unlimited with Magzter GOLD

Get unlimited access to 10,000+ magazines, newspapers and Premium stories for just

$149.99
 
$74.99/Year

Try GOLD - Free

DURING MODI 3.0, SWARNIM BHARAT IS THE TARGET

The Sunday Guardian

|

June 09, 2024

It will be a stable NDA government headed by a Prime Minister who has a passionate commitment to making India the third largest economy in the world by 2029.

DURING MODI 3.0, SWARNIM BHARAT IS THE TARGET

2024 is not a good year for ruling parties to face a national election. In the United States, President Joe Biden trails Donald Trump in several polls, while UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak appears headed for disastrous losses by the Conservative Party at the hands of the Labour Party. There has been much commentary about how the BJP lost more than 60 Lok Sabha seats during the 2024 elections. However, the NDA has returned to power, and Prime Minister Narendra Modi is set to begin a third term in office within hours, a repeat performance unlikely to be replicated by Sunak or possibly Biden. Given the reformist credentials of key allies such as Chandrababu Naidu, the odds favour a vigorous push towards the reforms needed for double digit growth during Modi 3.0. Double digit growth is a better vote catcher than any other. Unless India maintains a double digit growth path throughout Modi 3.0, youth unemployment will rise and so will the risk of unrest instigated by outside elements, a fact that Prime Minister Modi has begun working to address.

The entire term of Modi 2.0 was marked by turbulence caused mainly by external crises. 2019 onwards, the world entered a period of extreme turbulence. That was when Covid-19 first struck in Wuhan, although the information was suppressed by the Chinese government until it had become too obvious to ignore by January 2020 that a new virus was spreading. Unlike the 2003 SARS outbreak, which was swiftly made public by President Hu Jintao and had minimal casualties, the 2019 SARS-Cov-2 outbreak was mishandled disastrously by CCP General Secretary Xi Jinping, who was the originator of the Total Lockdown policy, that was first imposed in and around Wuhan. Soon, lockdowns were enforced across the world. Vaccine research and production were fasttracked, with India emerging as the biggest supplier of vaccines to the Global South.

MORE STORIES FROM The Sunday Guardian

The Sunday Guardian

SUVENDU ADHIKARI SIGNALS END OF BENGAL'S ERA OF IMPUNITY

The walls of Nabanna, West Bengal's state secretariat on the banks of the Hooghly, have witnessed much political theatre over the years.

time to read

5 mins

May 17, 2026

The Sunday Guardian

THE THUCYDIDES TRAP: HOW TRUMP FELL FOR XI'S BLUFF

The body language of US delegation members was evidence of their unease at the patronizing manner that Xi had while speaking to the US President. Each meeting was laden with the symbolism of the superiority of Chinese Communist culture over its US counterpart.

time to read

5 mins

May 17, 2026

The Sunday Guardian

EXAMINATION SYSTEM FACES CREDIBILITY CRISIS AFTER NEET-UG CANCELLATION

India’s central examination system is facing its deepest credibility crisis in years after the nationwide cancellation of the National Eligibility cum Entrance Test Undergraduate (NEET-UG) 2026, despite sweeping reforms, arrests, agency probes and a stringent anti-paper leak law introduced after the controversies of 2024.

time to read

8 mins

May 17, 2026

The Sunday Guardian

Measles epidemic sweeping through Bangladesh, India at risk

Hundreds of children are believed to have died after the erstwhile Yunus government ended the practice of procuring vaccines through UNICEF.

time to read

5 mins

May 17, 2026

The Sunday Guardian

Congress had a tough time choosing Satheesan over Venugopal as Keralam CM

Even as Congress named V.D. Satheesan as Keralam Chief Minister, knocking out from the race contenders such as K.C. Venugopal and Ramesh Chennithala, party insiders said that it was not an easy decision to make.

time to read

2 mins

May 17, 2026

The Sunday Guardian

The Sunday Guardian

A chastened Trump returns from Beijing

Jury is still out on what the US gained from the summit and whether it was at all needed.

time to read

6 mins

May 17, 2026

The Sunday Guardian

DMK, AIADMK RETHINK STRATEGY AS TVK RISES

Vijay’s TVK disrupts Tamil Nadu’s traditional two-party Dravidian equilibrium.

time to read

3 mins

May 17, 2026

The Sunday Guardian

The Sunday Guardian

India's Bangladesh Conundrum: demographic pressures and geopolitical risks

India’s ‘Bangladesh Conundrum’ is surely a border management problem, but now it intersects with regime change in Dhaka, political shift in West Bengal and Pakistan’s constant attempts to exploit the situation for asymmetric leverage against India.

time to read

5 mins

May 17, 2026

The Sunday Guardian

The Sunday Guardian

Taiwan is the permanent fault line in US-China relations

Xi’s phrase ‘extremely dangerous situation’ is not mere rhetoric. Missteps could trigger escalation.

time to read

2 mins

May 17, 2026

The Sunday Guardian

The Sunday Guardian

XI-TRUMP AND THE BALANCE OF POWER

CHINESE DOMINANCE

time to read

4 mins

May 17, 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size