It
is a simpler, faster, and considerably inexpensive way to achieve our national
objectives of a balanced, ecologically sustainable, and accelerated economic
growth with significant favourable implications for India’s international
stature. It would also help in
addressing the highly complex challenges of climate change, atmospheric
pollution, and, lately, national efforts towards fighting pandemics. The Prime
Minister has given a high prominence to infrastructure in the government
strategy for accelerated socio-economic growth for the country.
The cities having become the dynamos of
India’s growth today, the migration of the population from the villages across
the length and breadth over long distances defines the country’s social and
economic life. The successful reversal
of these migration flows can launch India on an accelerated growth path in
addition to helping in better governance of the cities which are presently
becoming... This phenomenon of uncontrolled urban migration is also reflective
of poor agricultural growth and limited rural employment and skills’
development opportunities. Hosting nearly 63% of the population, an uneconomic
and unsustainable agrarian sector--16% of national Gross Domestic Product (GDP)
requires massive financial subventions. In the United Kingdom, by way of
illustration, 17% of the population (mostly elderly) is rural with agriculture
sector constituting 0.61% of its GDP.This
lopsided economic growth is manifest in huge numbers of
migrant labour in urban centres,
The current policy of building
high-profile expressways over long and short distances has generated its own
kinds of problems. First of all, these
projects require huge capital costs with considerable time-overruns and their
return is often not realistically calculated for such capital expenditure.
Then, there is also the fear in the rural population that their meagre
landholdings will be taken away for construction of expressways connecting
major cities and bringing little economic growth to the surrounding
countryside. This is combined with pressure from the builders who create
townships along these expressways and, thus, further putting pressure on the
limited – adjoining – fertile agricultural land...Within metropolitan cities with metro services, inner-city bus services
should be discontinued due to their gross underutilisation even at peak
time adding further to the traffic mayhem; instead, 15-20 seater, comfortable
buses can be introduced on a radius of half distance between two metro stations
to pick up and drop passengers to the nearby metro station...It can be
suggested, by way of a general approach to our road construction programme,
that this can be done by converting into expressways the existing highways
radiating out of the major cities. Today, most of these highways are, at least,
double lanes in both directions. By adding a shoulder to these carriageways for
emergency vehicle movement for police or ambulances or for breakdowns,
enclosing it by sturdy railing, and by construction of exit-ways at suitable
distances for this fast-moving vehicle traffic to get out of the expressway
onto the country road or vice versa, these highways can be converted into
expressways. These expressways would, basically, comprise one lane for slower
traffic and another one for faster/overtaking vehicles.At the same time, since expressways have a legally enforceable minimum
speed limit below which vehicles cannot be driven, a complementary, connecting
network of country roads for the slow-moving traffic is required...
Substituting the policy of highways for such clusters by development of a
network of expressways with complementary country roads would lead to better
economic integration of regional towns with the surrounding agrarian countryside.
These integrated regional clusters are scalable to the national level through
this process.
The outcomes would be the same as those
seen in other countries, especially the developed ones, which have created a
network of expressways and country roads. Yet,
the accelerated and relatively inexpensive creation of such infrastructure
would immediately improve the quality of governance in the cities and, due to
easier and extensive access to the outlying areas, of the surrounding towns and
villages.