Monthly Archives: April 2011

India: Overwhelmingly young.

When I think of youth, the words that pop in my mind are energy, vitality, potential and future.  In India, when I look around, I see a predominance of youth.  I see many more young people and children than I do the middle-aged or older folks.  I see them in the city and in normal day-to-day places that I visit. Whether it is the office, the supermarket, the mall, the cinema or yes, on the streets of Mumbai (or any other city in India).

It seems strange to describe one of the most ancient cultures in the world as young.   But, that’s just what India is today.  Most of the people of today’s India are young.  It’s a great competitive advantage for the country.  And it speaks volumes for the potential of the country and its future, as you can imagine.

Now for some dry stats.  According to the latest demographic profile of India, the median age is 26 years and over 29% of the country is below the age of 14 years.  Incredibly, 50% of the country is under the age of 25 and 65% under the age of 35 – this has to be the youngest country in the world!  In sheer numbers if not in percentages, it has to be.  By 2020, it is expected that the average age in India will be 29, compared to 37 for China and 48 for Japan.   Here’s more – the median age in the United States today is already 36.5.   For such a young country, it’s definitely an older nation!

Doing a quick calculation and using the rounded population of 1.2 billion, the number of people under 25 in India is approaching 600 million people. That’s not only a staggering number, it’s TWICE the population of the United States!

And so much has changed in the years that I have been away!  When I was growing up in India, I was definitely living in a different world.  The third world.  I knew it and I felt it, and so did everyone around me.  The grass not only looked greener on the other side, it was.

Random Street Scene - Do you see any older folks?

But the youth in India today appear to have a different perspective.  There is not this sense of being disadvantaged.   Instead, there appears to be a reflection of hope and progress and growth.  A feeling that whatever economic level they find themselves in, they believe that they can persevere, and that with hard work or with sheer smarts they can move to that next level and then the next after that.  In addition, they seem to feel that in order to do that, they don’t need to ship themselves out of the country to some foreign land of opportunity.   That’s because, their perspective is that the land of opportunity is right here.

I am generalizing a bit, but even so, that is the overall feeling that I get when I see and listen to these young people.  Many feel that this is the happening place, that this is the land of opportunity, and that they are young and hopeful enough to get a piece of it for themselves.

So, that’s the rosy side of the equation.  There is this tough veneer of progress and growth.

What I am unable to find or identify is the leadership that is ensuring that this critical and strategic advantage of India is being harnessed, positioned and developed like it should.  Whether in education or sports or arts or science or business, are all the young people being given that platform from which they can launch themselves to create a better tomorrow for themselves and the country?  Or are they simply, selectively offered opportunities based on the accident of their birth family and situation?

You may say, why, that’s what the government is doing.   But, you’ve got to do better than that to make me a believer!  Name an individual or two – who are excited and concerned, and are proactively working to have a 5, 10, 15 year plan that is focused on harnessing the power of youth.   A vision, a bit like the Green Revolution of old times, that resonates, and that citizens recognize and work towards…

Okay, I’ll stop now.  Today is the day to to simply reflect on and celebrate the preponderance of youth in India today, and what this could mean for the country.

Reflecting on what realistically could happen to them and their potential is a rant for another day.

Photo: vishalphotography.com

Pilgrimage to Bandra

I don’t quite remember which Mumbai friend first introduced me to Pani Puri at Elco Market in Bandra.  Whoever you are, I am eternally grateful.  Over the past couple of years, as I visited Bombay on my bi-monthly business trips, I would always somehow make time for my pilgrimage to Bandra and Elco Market.  Now that I live here, I am trying to limit my pilgrimages to one weekly trip.

I didn’t even know how much I liked pani puri until I tried this dish here.   It’s technically street food.  Here at Elco, you have a sense of cleanliness (real or imagined).   The guy who’s actually dishing out the pani puri wears a clean ,disposable glove – at least on the one hand that dips the puri into the spicy and sweet water to make it whole and complete.   And, I heard (but never verified) that they use bottled or filtered water to make the pani.  That can be pretty important.  But nothing is quite as important as sheer taste!

For the uninformed and uninitiated, Pani Puri consists of taking tiny, crisp puris and dipping each in an equal amount of sweet/tart and spicy water, then handing it quickly over to the customer.  Included in the puri will be a small amount of boiled lentil.  Said customer then puts the entire water-filled puri in his or her mouth and gulps it down.  At Elco, they don’t serve you a plate where you make your own.  You stand around the pani puri counter where the pani puri guy makes each masterpiece himself – with just the right amount of sweet and spicy water – for you to wait your turn and just gobble down.

Seshram Serving Up Delicious Pani Puri at Elco Market; Photo by vishalphotography.com

One “plate” of pani puris at Elco consists of six servings or puris.  Most people settle for one plate and then branch out to some of the other goodies that are being freshly prepared.   Some graduate to maybe two plates and you can sometimes see on their faces that that was more than they had bargained for.

But not moi.  If I don’t have three full plates at each visit, then there’s something truly wrong with me.   Each tiny puri is power-packed with taste and flavor.  It is crisp yet succulent.  It is spicy yet sweet.  It is minimal yet full.  It is simply, food ecstacy.   Of course, this is just my humble opinion.  You would think I am describing something else altogether!  But, I insist that I’m not.

On your next visit to this city, see if you can find some time to make your own pilgrimage to Elco Market at Bandra.  It will be worth it.  This review shows what other goodies you can find there.  And, here at this photo blog is another great picture of the pani puri at Elco (scroll down and you can’t miss it!), in addition to some wonderful and colorful pictures of Mumbai.   Enjoy!