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Chalta Hai India: When ‘It’s Ok!’ is Not Ok
- Chalta Hai India: When ‘It’s Ok!’ is Not Ok
By:  Alpesh Patel   In:  Social Science
Reader Rating:
Pages:
283
Publisher:
Price:
499
Website:
Available Copies:
1
Total Copies:
1
Front Cover
Back Cover

India once commanded a massive 30 per cent share of the global GDP and led the world in most fields, but today the country sadly is a developing nation. People often attribute India's sluggish progress to the malaise called the Chalta Hai ('It's okay', 'Let it be') attitude, but not everyone agrees with that presupposition. Debates on the subject are often inconclusive and discomfiting questions remain unanswered. Are we really a Chalta Hai nation? Is Chalta Hai ingrained in our DNA or is it just a bad habit which can be easily exterminated? Will this attitude stop India from becoming a global power? Alpesh Patel delves into this quirky Indian approach and answers these questions by examining the country's pace of progress in fields such as education, infrastructure, films and sports since Independence. The book revisits our cultural, ideological and political history over three millennia to trace the roots of the Chalta Hai attitude of Indians. Interesting facts and unsettling inferences force the reader to introspect and awaken him to the need for an urgent action. Finally, the book charts out methods and suggestions on how to get rid of the Chalta Hai attitude and take India closer to the dream of becoming a developed nation.

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Ganesh Patil

While CH attitude is like a termite to earlier India's culture, book sounded more like a norm how Indians live even today. As per me, rather than objectively finding how we can improve, book focused more on how CH attitude is evenrywhere and at some places it was more of exageration. Like this across world, in all countries (ncluding developed) there are inefficiencies (eg drunked people on roads of US main cities, if they are not CH , then many things India is not because of CH attitude , but because of system ineeficiency. Over all nice topic which is touched , but I would have recomonded this to all my network if more focus was given on how we improve and fairly finding such behaviours in other countries too and how they imrpoved.