"Viksit Bharat 2047: From Reform to National Transformation."
"GOVERNMENT IS IN A REFORM EXPRESS PHASE AND REFORM IS NOT JUST REVENUE CENTRIC BUT CITIZEN CENTRIC. REFORMS SHOULD BE BROUGHT IN ALL ASPECTS OF SOCIETY BAND NOT JUST IN THE ECONOMY. LAWS TO BE FOR CITIZENS CONVENIENCE, NOT TO HARASS. EASE OF LIFE AND EASE OF DOING BUSINESS ARE TOP PRIORITIES OF THE GOVERNMENT.
PRIME MINISTER NARENDRA MODI.
The vision of Viksit Bharat 2047 represents far more than economic progress. It offers an opportunity to build a nation founded on ethical governance, responsible citizenship and inclusive prosperity. When combined with India's timeless philosophy of Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam—the whole world as one family—it provides a comprehensive framework for human welfare.
The most effective means of achieving these objectives are meaningful governance and a disciplined society. These are the foundations of welfare for all.To realise this vision, India must consider to have a National Agenda encompassing:• Combating corruption, black money and inflation
• Leveraging Artificial Intelligence for transparent governance
• Institutionalising independent social audits
• Strengthening administrative accountability
• Establishing a regulatory framework for healthcare and home healthcare
I• Promoting civic discipline and citizen responsibility
• Developing reliable data on employment, income , wealth creation and wealth distribution across both formal and informal sectors
• Building a practical roadmap towards welfare for all.
The most effective means of achieving these objectives are meaningful Ideas → Institutions → Incentives → Culture. Every lasting transformation begins with an idea. Ideas must evolve into institutions, institutions must create appropriate incentives, and over time these incentives shape culture.
The vision of Viksit Bharat 2047 represents far more than economic progress. It offers an opportunity to build a nation founded on ethical governance, responsible citizenship and inclusive prosperity. When combined with India's timeless philosophy of Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam—the whole world as one family—it provides a comprehensive framework for human welfare.
• Combating corruption, black money and inflation
• Leveraging Artificial Intelligence for transparent governance
• Institutionalising independent social audits
• Strengthening administrative accountability
• Establishing a regulatory framework for healthcare and home healthcare
I• Promoting civic discipline and citizen responsibility
• Developing reliable data on employment, income , wealth creation and wealth distribution across both formal and informal sectors
• Building a practical roadmap towards welfare for all.
The most effective means of achieving these objectives are meaningful Ideas → Institutions → Incentives → Culture. Every lasting transformation begins with an idea. Ideas must evolve into institutions, institutions must create appropriate incentives, and over time these incentives shape culture.
Transformation is not an event but a continuous process requiring careful planning, public participation, education, monitoring, evaluation, and sustained political commitment. Around the world, societies have demonstrated that desirable behaviour can be cultivated when the right systems are established.
India's own experience offers encouraging examples.
Open defecation was once considered an unavoidable reality. Through sustained campaigns, infrastructure development and public awareness, behaviour changed across large parts of the country.
Digital payments were once rare. Today, they are part of everyday life because they are convenient, accessible and trusted.
The use of helmets and seat belts, though still not universal, has increased significantly over the past few decades.
Public awareness regarding cleanliness has improved considerably, even though civic infrastructure and enforcement still require strengthening.
Tax compliance has improved, wealth creation has expanded, employment opportunities have grown, and financial inclusion has widened. Yet considerable work remains to accurately capture employment, incomes and wealth in the informal economy, reduce tax evasion, prevent corruption, and curb the generation and circulation of black money.
These examples demonstrate that people are willing to change when the environment consistently encourages and rewards responsible behaviour.
The transformation of India therefore requires a national movement, not isolated reforms. It must be non-partisan, continuous and sustained over generations. Its purpose should extend beyond economic growth to building a culture of responsibility, integrity and accountability.
Income is income irrespective of its source, though policy implementation may appropriately recognise the unique characteristics of sectors such as agriculture. Public policy must remain fair, transparent and equitable while ensuring that no privilege undermines the larger national interest or imposes an unfair burden on honest citizens.
Institutions that Shape National Character
Five institutions have the greatest influence in building such a culture.
The family, where honesty, discipline and respect for others are first learned.
Schools and universities, where civic responsibility should receive equal importance alongside academic excellence.
Government, public institutions, public sector enterprises, corporate organisations and private institutions, which must lead by example through transparency, accountability and ethical leadership.
Business and industry, which should regard ethical conduct as a long-term competitive advantage rather than a compliance burden.
Civil society and the media, which should celebrate integrity as vigorously as they expose wrongdoing.
An equally important pillar should be Independent Social Audit, which can objectively evaluate the contribution of public institutions, private organisations and civil society to national welfare and social development.Independent Social Audit should function as a constructive mechanism for continuous performance evaluation, measuring not merely expenditure but outcomes, citizen satisfaction and long-term social impact.
Good governance costs very little compared with the enormous social and economic benefits it creates. The real obstacle is seldom a lack of financial resources; it is the absence of sustained commitment.India has successfully launched national missions for literacy, sanitation, digital inclusion, financial inclusion and renewable energy.
Why should it not now launch a National Mission for Ethical Governance and Civic Responsibility? Such a mission could integrate:
- Artificial Intelligence for transparent governance. Artificial Intelligence should not merely automate administration; it should improve transparency, reduce discretion, detect fraud, support evidence-based policymaking and enhance citizen services while safeguarding privacy and accountability.
- Administrative reforms
- Independent social audits should be institutionalised to ensure that the governance system delivers the outcomes expected of public institutions. Such audits should objectively assess whether the actions and inactions of both institutions and individuals contribute to efficient, transparent, and accountable governance. Their primary purpose should be to ensure that public policies and services generate the maximum possible benefit for society while preventing avoidable hardship, inconvenience, or suffering to the people. By focusing on measurable outcomes, accountability, and continuous improvement, independent social audits can become a powerful instrument for strengthening public trust, enhancing governance standards, and promoting the welfare of all.
- Ethical education
- Citizen participation
- Performance evaluation based on measurable social outcomes
The objective would not be instant success but gradual transformation over an entire generation.
A Cultural Transformation
What the nation ultimately needs is a cultural transformation founded upon noble thoughts, noble words and noble deeds, leading to excellence in action, happiness, welfare for all, and a peaceful, harmonious and prosperous society.
Such a philosophy can become the strongest foundation for Viksit Bharat 2047 and eventually for Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam. History teaches us that societies do change. The real question is not how transformation occurs, but who begins it and who persists long enough for it to become part of a nation's character. Every great transformation begins when someone refuses to accept that the present condition is permanent. New ideas are often dismissed at first, but persistent ideas have a remarkable ability to become public policy. In many ways, the history of civilisation is the history of ideas whose time eventually arrived.
The nation possesses abundant talent and resources. The task before us is to strengthen the values, institutions and civic culture that enable these strengths to flourish. If Viksit Bharat 2047 is to become more than an economic milestone, it must evolve into a national movement founded on ethical governance, responsible citizenship and institutional excellence. Economic reforms create prosperity; cultural and ethical reforms ensure that prosperity benefits every citizen. Together, they can enable India to emerge not only as a developed nation but also as a global example of peace, justice and human welfare. The only objective on National Transformation is all our ideas , strengths and actions should bring out well performing institutions ensuring welfare for all in letter and spirit.
Ultimately, the presence of the Divine should get reflected wherever there is purity of thought, integrity in action, cleanliness, compassion, justice and harmony with nature. A society founded on these values becomes not only prosperous but also peaceful, secure and worthy of being called one family.
Samastha Loka Sukhino Bhavanthu.
TVG Krishnan
(personal Views)