rhytha wrote:I am unable to figure out your point of view that "since there are no industries" there are no "engineering colleges". Take the example of KTK right now, the present CM is not very business friendly, why do industries still invest in KTK, so political leadership is not the be-all and end-all.
I think you misunderstood me, I am not saying that at all.
What I am saying is when supply of engineers outstrips the demand by 4 fold leading to up to 80% and higher level of unemployment then you do not need more engineering colleges in these areas, and unfortunately that seems to be case pretty much in most part of the nation including the developed states. That's all I am saying!
Lets assume that Bihar had a good leadership and very friendly industrial policy, good infrastructure etc, my opinion is still it would not attract many industries since you need human resources, good law and order(i did see the stats you had posted, and accept it, but people/industries have voted with their feet, so thats the reality). People from other states will still not be ready to move to Bihar for work for various reasons.
You are making wrong assumptions, as per stat. (2012) the problem certainly not seem to be that of law & order, Bihar in fact appears to be one of the most peaceful state compared to rest of India! Also not that of human resources, for most jobs you will be able to find sufficient to surplus workforce. When you have a population of 100+ million, even if say only 5% people had the necessary skill to take up jobs, that is still a pool of 5 million people! In reality the numbers will be several times more.
Certainly lack of infrastructure is a big problem, I would say the single most important factor inhibiting growth. This is the result of lopsided growth strategy of the past where all industrial activities took place in south and north was meant for agriculture. In a sense north and south complemented each other nicely. Now south (Jharkhand) is no longer part of it, so it has been left with virtually nonexistent industrial infrastructure.
Corruption is another and so is poor leadership. Stereotyping of Biharis ( like the type you are indulging in) is also a problem.
Also putting all the blame on the leadership of state is also not good, there was lot of years before jungle raj when people could have chosen a leader who was development orientated.
Before the jungle raj South Bihar (now Jharkhand) used to the MOST industrialized region in the entire nation YES entire nation, and I am pretty sure it still must be in top 5 most industrialized region in the nation. There was no reason to partition the state, Laloo agreed it to to consolidate his hold on power (since he did not have any vote bank in south Bihar).
Anyway my last post on this topic since people are starting to complain.