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In new Bhutan, tradition & progress march in step

Hindustan Times Rajasthan

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November 19, 2025

Against the backdrop of high youth migration, Thimphu seeks to reinvent while keeping its traditional core intact

rime Minister (PM) Narendra Modi’s visit to Bhutan —his fourth in Il years — unfolded against the backdrop of the extraordinary Global Peace Prayer Festival, the largest gathering of its kind in the kingdom.

The presence of the sacred Piprahwa relics from India lent the occasion a deep spiritual resonance. The visit was equally substantive: Three new memorandums of understanding (MoUs) were concluded, a fifth hydropower project inaugurated, and a 240-billion line of credit announced to advance Bhutan’s energy ambitions. The proposed rail links between the two countries signal an integration that aims to carry the partnership confidently into the future. But beneath, lies another unfolding story — a new, aspirational Bhutan led by a dynamic, tech-savvy king, quietly but steadily transforming the nation while keeping its traditional core intact.

At the heart of this transformation are Bhutan’s youth. A World Bank report notes a sharp increase in emigration after borders reopened in 2022, with departures via Paro airport rising from less than 500 per month pre-Covid to more than 5,000 per month in early 2023, heavily skewed towards young, educated Bhutanese headed mainly to Australia. This is a staggering figure for a nation of just around 700,000 people. This has turned youth emigration into an existential challenge that affects not only the country’s economy, but also its cultural continuity, social fabric, and future leadership pipeline.

Much of the ongoing transformation is being driven as a foil to this demographic drift. Initiatives such as the Gelephu Mindfulness City (GMC), education reform, and entrepreneurial upskilling are also national acts of hope and confidence in the youth. So what are the various initiatives shaping the Bhutan of today?

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