Human Factors of XR: Using Human Factors to Design XR Systems
Solutions and strategy to overcome challenges of india
1. Have common problems of an emerging nation.
India as a world Power: competes with other developed
countries.
Indian politics and people expectation in a young
country with many old problems.
Growth and development.
Welfare reform in Indian country take place in a unique
legal, historical, and cultural context
2. Human development index of India and other
Asian countries.
Economic and political sustainability.
Lessons from other nations like south Korea and
Brazil.
Participation of people in growth results in
development.
3. A large amount of people are excluded from the
benefit of the growth story.
Behind of many Asian nations in human index.
Healthy and wealthy people build healthy and
wealthy nation.
Inclusive growth by eradicating problems to
engage everyone for development.
5. Education can eradicate poverty.
Poor elementary education is ulcer.
Social development is possible through
achieving Women Empowerment.
An increased expenditure on health from 1.3
percent to 2.0 percent of GDP.
6. 60% of the Indian population is dependent on
farming.
Improved agricultural productivity impact
vast majority.
Better infrastructure in the countryside
Private public partnership along with NGO
participations
Rural electrification
Investment in irrigation.
Connectivity of farmers with market
7. Developmental approach separately at the micro and
macro level.
Government creating an environment for macro level
and NGO and other private sector organization in micro
level.
Creating New who, No why and New how by
Segmentation of people as per the need.
Defining why it is needed in such format.
Ways of promoting, producing, delivering.
8. Economic development must go with social
equality:
Woman empowerment
Caste system and existing reservations.
Imbalance between states and regions.
Political process and regionalism.
Industrialization of backward states.
Welcoming and motivating organizations to
works on social issues.
9. Infrastructure improvement n national
development.
Concretization of Private-sector involvement into
national vision .
Eradicating institutional issues:
◦ Arrangements for freeing up land and reallocating people are still
holding up infrastructure projects
Political will to encourage investment in
electricity and water.
10. Cannot replicate but can learn from earlier experiences
of growth-mediated development elsewhere in the
world.
Constitutional guarantee of free and universal
healthcare
Ireland and New Zeland are among developed Nations
even Agriculture is primary focus.
Lessons from successful East Asian economies such as
Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, and China.
Though all participation is needed choices are of the
government and its institutions.
11. Continuous good news from Service sector and
capital market since 1990.
Achievement of 119th rank among 170 countries
on Human Development index.
Development of strong political consciousness in
last two decade.
Poor Improvement of public services and records of
corruption in recent time.
Editor's Notes
As highlighted recently by Nobel laureate AmartyaSen and fellow economist Jean Dreze, Bangladesh andNepal have made more rapid progress on life expectancy, infant and child mortality, immunisation, years ofschooling, female literacy, and malnutrition. Bangladesh scored worse than India on all of these indicators in1990 but better on all of them in 2010, despite the fact that GDP growth was much faster in India in this period.The widening gap between GDP growth and human development in India is probably not sustainable,economically or politically.
India has the potential of becoming a leading economy and has the unique opportunity to make that growth inclusive, provided there is willingness on the part of all sections of society to put in hard and disciplined work, together with serious, sustained and purposeful planning