I did a whirlwind trip of Europe on work, screwup by Lufthansa meant I spent time in Paris, Munich, Brussels & Frankfurt instead of heading straight to Brussels, a place i have spent time in the past and have come to love. Brussels to me is the bangalore equivalent of Europe ( or should it be vice versa?) multi cultural, close to larger cities but with a distinct lovable personality of its own....
Its been 6 long years since I spent my last stint in Europe, so some changes I noticed...
1. There are beggars on the streets : I stomped around Europe last time and none of the main cities seemed to have them, some in Paris, but that was also very rare. This time, it was in your face, people at corners, reminded me of what a foreigner might face in India, women with kids, kids chasing you and youngsters with no apparent reason to be begging....what changed? Was astonished and my local contacts, they blame it on the new nations in EU, the slowdown and illegal migration but yes they too seem to notice the change
2. Understanding the demographic dividend - a lot of research reports talk of the youth and the push that will give India as a nation. Any public place in India will have screaming kids and across age groups, then you see youngsters on the verge of marriage and you know this engine is going strong for a few decades atleast....I roamed around in the streets of Brussels and the large other airports and only place I saw kids was Terminal C of Frankfurt and you guessed it right , thats where planes to India were departing from. Else, the concern of a greying economy, the strong social safety system and its future working, its impact on business, the world view that will emanate from Europe will be very interesting to watch
3. Investment in infrastructure : a constant thing you will hear from foreigners is the construction which seemed to be going on in China and India.... but what surprised me was the amount of construction I saw in Brussels, ofcourse, neighbourhoods looked vacant, the airport terminal too big for the number of passengers but the constant spending on upgradation, not general maintenance mind you, is so huge, I came back even more convinced we India need to do more. Our public planning systems are letting us down and our politicians doing us a disservice in planning public spending. The private sector is also not too behind, take the Bangalore Metro as a example, I have lost count of when they shut down half of MG road in Bangalore and Navayuga is taking all the time in world to even build the basic pillars....the full fledged metro is far away....no accountability is killing all of us....
4. Spoilt by Taj : I have in the past spent a lot of time at Taj palace, Mansingh road, Delhi and trust me they have spoilt me. I stayed at the Airport Sheraton in Brussels and while I have no complaints, the small touches by Taj, the personal warmth simply make every stay that much more comfortable. I am sure if they can get it right, the hospitality industry from India can rule the world.
5. The growing irritation about Muslims : The one thing I thought very highly of Europe was the sense of fairplay and their ability to recognise another culture and work with it. To a level, I think Europe is ahead in terms of such refinement but this time, the number of people who spoke to me of growing disenchantment with the local muslim populace was surprising...as one person said, I am ready to accept their practices, but are they ready to accept me? I used to think the ghettoisation of muslim communities was a very India specific phenomena due to our peculiar vote bank politics, but seems its a larger issue... I am not sure of the causality, but the clash of civilizations seems a larger issue and on the ground far widespread...
6. Queue control : a minor issue, I was standing in the queue at Brussels and when someone tried to barge in the lady manning the counter just stood up and asked the person to join the queue....that simple act increased the sanctity of the queue, in India the person at the counter somehow doesnt think its his job to manage this part of the equation and leads to situations. We Indians due to our scarcity mentality have a disrepute for being able to stand in a queue but I think the other part of the equation is also required.
Bottomline, I had my doubts about India slowing down and all the fear mongering in the media about our economic prospects, but I came back more convinced that India, if we help ourselves, politicians willing, bureaucracy moving its wide bum (I would be happy if the last 2 dont add anything as long as they dont screw up) we will move forward....
Sunday, November 2, 2008
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