Saturday, May 16, 2026

Self educated

The Smartest People Are Self-Taught (Even If They Went to School)

By Digvijay Mourya

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There's a uncomfortable truth that most of us don't want to admit.

You can sit in the front row of every class. You can take meticulous notes. You can graduate with honors from the finest institutions. And still understand absolutely nothing.

Not in the way that matters.

I've watched people from "mediocre" schools build empires. I've watched Ivy League graduates struggle to think for themselves. The difference wasn't the education they received. It was the education they took.

The Illusion of Being Taught

Let me be blunt: School cannot teach you to think. It can only show you what others have thought.

There's a massive gap between knowing information and understanding it. Between memorizing for an exam and internalizing for a life. Between parroting back answers and actually questioning the questions.

Every brilliant person I've ever met—engineers, artists, entrepreneurs, philosophers—shares one trait. Not a high IQ. Not a prestigious degree. Not photographic memory.

They taught themselves.

Even when they were sitting in a classroom, they weren't being taught. They were learning. Those are not the same thing. One is passive reception. The other is active pursuit.

The One Person Who Cannot Learn for You

Here's where most people get stuck.

They wait for the perfect teacher. The perfect course. The perfect curriculum. The perfect conditions.

And they wait. And they wait. And nothing changes.

Because no one—not the most brilliant professor, not the most expensive tutor, not the most sophisticated AI—can climb inside your head and do the work for you.

Learning is not a transfer of knowledge. It's a transformation within yourself. And that transformation only happens when you decide to be curious. When you decide to question. When you decide to struggle through the confusion instead of waiting for someone to rescue you.

You can have the best resources in the world. If you don't push yourself, they're worthless.

You can have terrible resources but burning curiosity. You'll find a way.

What Self-Taught Actually Looks Like

People romanticize the "self-taught genius." The lone wolf who reads obscure books in candlelight and emerges fully formed.

That's not it.

Self-taught means taking responsibility. It means finishing the class and then going deeper because you want to, not because you have to. It means reading the textbook and the books it cited. It means trying something, failing, figuring out why, and trying again without anyone giving you a grade.

It means building your own mindset instead of borrowing someone else's.

The self-taught person doesn't reject teachers or schools. They use them. They extract what's useful and then go beyond. They understand that a classroom can be a starting line, but it will never be the entire race.

The Curiosity Muscle

Here's what I've learned: Curiosity is a muscle. And like any muscle, it atrophies when you don't use it.

School often trains it out of us. We learn that questions have single correct answers. That there's a syllabus to follow. That thinking outside the lines is a risk. That failure is punished instead of examined.

But real intelligence is messy. It follows tangents. It chases "useless" questions. It fails constantly and calls that data.

The smartest people never lost what every child is born with: the relentless why.

They just learned to aim it.

A Challenge to You

Stop waiting.

Stop thinking the next course will fix you. Stop believing that someone else's credentials can substitute for your own effort. Stop treating learning as something that happens to you rather than something you do.

Read something hard today. Not because you have to. Because you're curious.

Question something everyone accepts. Not to be difficult. To understand.

Try something you'll probably fail at. Not for a grade. For the growth that lives in the struggle.

Teach yourself.

Because at the end of the day, no diploma, no job title, no external validation will ever matter as much as your ability to learn when no one is watching.

That's not just how you get smarter.

That's how you build a mind that belongs to you.

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Stay curious. Stay relentless. And never stop teaching yourself.

— Digvijay Mourya

Friday, May 15, 2026

The honor

Title: Honor or Compensation? The Uncomfortable Question We Refuse to Ask
Author: Digvijay Mourya

We are a species that builds monuments. From the granite pillars of war memorials to the solemn rows of white crosses at Arlington, from the haunting silence of the Unknown Soldier’s tomb to the metallic gleam of medals pinned on funeral pillows—we excel at the architecture of remembrance.

We call it honor.

And yet, as I sit with the weight of this question, a chill runs through me. Because honor, for all its poetry, has never once resurrected a single human heartbeat.

Let me say that again: No folded flag, no presidential speech, no twenty-one-gun salute has ever returned a child to a parent. No memorial garden has ever restored the three decades of birthdays, weddings, and quiet mornings erased by a single bullet or bomb.

So I ask you—genuinely, painfully—what exactly are we doing?

The Ceremony of Avoidance

Governments are rational machines. They speak of wartime deaths as “tragic but necessary sacrifices” for the greater goods: peace, security, national survival. And they are not wrong that some battles, historically, have prevented genocides or ended tyrannies.

But here is the tension that keeps me awake: honor is almost always offered after the sacrifice has already been extracted.

Notice the sequence. First, a young person—barely more than a child, in most wars—is trained, equipped, and deployed. Then, they die. Then, the machinery of honor whirs to life: the medals, the speeches, the scholarships named in their memory, the annual parade where parents are asked to stand and applaud while holding photographs.

The fallen soldier becomes sacred in death. But the political and economic systems that sent them to die? They continue operating exactly as before. The same policymakers, the same defense contractors, the same strategic calculations—unchanged, unexamined, uninterrupted.

That is not honor. That is emotional absorption.

Honor as Anesthetic

Consider what honor does for a society. It transforms an intolerable loss into a tolerable narrative. Instead of saying, “We failed to prevent this unnecessary death,” we say, “They died for freedom.” Instead of asking, “Was this war even justifiable?” we ask, “How bravely did they fall?”

Do you see the sleight of hand?

Honor allows the living to process war without evaluating war. It gives us a dignified exit from the room where hard questions live. We get to cry, salute, and move on—while the generals and diplomats who orchestrated the tragedy return to their routines, untouched by accountability.

The dead, of course, are no longer present to ask the one question that matters: Was my sacrifice necessary at all?

The Great Asymmetry

This is the cruelty I cannot escape. The soldier gives everything—every future moment, every possibility of love and laughter and ordinary human joy. In return, society gives a speech.

We call that balance “honor.” But if a corporation took everything you owned and handed you a plaque in return, you would call it theft.

Why do we accept it from the state?

I am not arguing that all wars are unjust. I am not a pacifist in every circumstance. But I am arguing that our ritualization of honor has become a substitute for reckoning—a way to pay emotional debts with symbolic currency while the real debt (blood, time, potential) remains unpaid and unexamined.

The Question We Refuse to Ask

Here, then, is the core argument I want to leave with you, dear reader:

If a society can publicly glorify sacrifice after death, how should it evaluate the decisions that created the sacrifice beforehand?

Because right now, the two processes are completely disconnected. We have elaborate systems for memorializing the fallen. We have almost no systems for auditing the decision-makers who sent them. We have parades for privates but not referendums for presidents. We have monuments for the dead but no meaningful legal or political consequences for the living who chose the war.

Imagine the reverse: What if every declaration of war required that the children of every legislator who votes “yes” must serve on the front lines? What if every military intervention triggered a mandatory public inquiry five years later, with sworn testimony and criminal liability for false pretenses?

We do not do those things. Instead, we build statues. Because statues are easier than accountability.

A Modest Proposal for Honest Honor

Let me be clear: I do not believe we should stop honoring the fallen. That would be cruel and inhumane. The soldier who dies in combat, whatever one thinks of the war, has paid a price most of us will never understand. They deserve remembrance. They deserve gratitude. They deserve tears.

But genuine honor must do more than comfort the living. Genuine honor must also hold the powerful to account.

A true war memorial would have two sides. On one side, the names of the dead. On the other side, the names of every politician, diplomat, and CEO who profited from or authorized the conflict—alongside a simple question: Was this necessary?

Until we are willing to ask that question before the next war, and enforce consequences after it, our monuments are not honor. They are graves with good public relations.

The Unfinished Sentence

The article I wrote this from ends with a provocation, and I will echo it as my closing:

Honor can recognize loss meaningfully. But it can also shape how societies emotionally process war itself—often by short-circuiting the very grief that might lead to genuine change.

So the next time you see a memorial, a medal ceremony, or a folded flag, do not look away. Honor it sincerely. But then, quietly, ask yourself: Who decided this sacrifice was required? Are they still deciding? And what have we given them, in return for their decisions, that is anything like the price the soldier paid?

Because until those questions have honest answers, we do not have honor.

We have a ceremony of avoidance.

And the dead deserve better than our avoidance.

— Digvijay Mourya

Democracy

Title: Democracy or Illusion? You Can Change the Pilot, But Not the Airplane

By Digvijay Mourya

Every few years, democracy gives us its most sacred ritual. We stand in line, ink on our fingers, and we choose. The television anchors call it the "festival of democracy." The politicians call it the moment when "the real king"—the citizen—speaks.

But once the cheering stops and the new cabinet takes its oath, a quiet question lingers in the air—one that most of us are too afraid to ask out loud.

If we are truly free to choose our leaders peacefully, how much power do we actually possess afterward?

Let me be clear. I am not arguing against democracy. I am arguing against the comfortable illusion that voting alone is synonymous with meaningful power.

The Promise vs. The Machinery

Democracy, in its purest definition, promises three things: participation, representation, and voice. It tells us that ordinary people can shape the direction of a nation. And on election day, that promise feels real. We see our reflection in the ballot box. We feel, for a moment, like co-pilots of history.

But watch closely what happens the morning after.

The new leader enters the same office. They sit behind the same desk. They inherit the same economic structures, the same corporate dependencies, the same bureaucratic machinery, and the same unspoken rules that constrained their predecessor.

We changed the face. But the body remained identical.

The Great Spectacle of Choice

Parties fight ferociously—over culture, over identity, over slogans, over who loves the nation more. And these fights matter. They are not meaningless. But notice what rarely gets debated: the fundamental architecture of power itself.

Can you vote to dismantle a system that quietly dictates policy behind closed doors? Can you vote to remove the influence of capital that no election ever seems to touch? Can you vote to change the gravitational pull of entrenched wealth?

Not easily. Not directly. And that is by design.

Because a system that allows you to choose between Team Blue and Team Red, between Person A and Person B, while keeping the underlying engine exactly the same—that system has not given you power. It has given you a feeling of power. And feelings, as we know, are not the same as facts.

The Tension We Refuse to See

Here is the tension that democracy asks us to ignore: Elections can be genuine instruments of change on the surface, while being carefully managed rituals of stability underneath.

Think about it. What if the real function of elections is not to enable transformation, but to absorb discontent? To channel public anger into a cycle that resets every five years, releases pressure, and then continues business as usual?

When you are angry about rising inequality, you vote. When you are frustrated about unaccountable institutions, you vote. When you feel helpless about a system that serves the few, you are told: "Go vote. That is your power."

But what if the boundaries of your choice were drawn precisely so that you never touch the machinery beneath?

The Comfort of Believing

This is the most uncomfortable truth of all: Power survives most easily when people believe completely that symbolic participation is the same as real control.

Because if you believe that voting is enough, you stop asking harder questions. You stop demanding structural change. You stop noticing that your representatives, regardless of party, attend the same fundraisers, consult the same economic advisors, and eventually retire to the same corporate boards.

The illusion protects itself. You feel free. You feel powerful. And because you feel that way, you never tear down the walls that quietly define your cage.

How Free Is the Choice?

So let me return to the original question, sharper now:

If the system allows you to choose the shape of authority—whether it wears a blue shirt or a red shirt, whether it speaks with a rough accent or a polished one, whether it promises faster roads or better schools—but never allows you to question the existence of that authority in its current form… how free is your choice?

You are choosing between pilots. But the airplane, its destination, its ownership, its altimeter, and its rules of navigation—none of that appeared on your ballot.

What This Does Not Mean

Let me pause before the misunderstanding arrives. I am not saying democracy is worthless. I am not saying you should stop voting. I am not advocating for apathy or cynicism.

What I am saying is this: We have confused a necessary condition with a sufficient one.

Voting is necessary. But it is not sufficient. Real democracy does not end at the ballot box. Real democracy asks deeper questions: Who owns the media that shapes your choices? Who funds the campaigns that present your options? What economic structures remain untouched regardless of who wins?

If we cannot answer those questions, we are not living in a democracy. We are living in an electoral oligarchy with a democratic smile.

The Way Forward

The first step out of an illusion is to name it. Call it what it is: partial democracy. A system that gives you voice but not veto. A system that lets you choose your manager but not question the company.

The second step is to expand our definition of political action. Real power is not just voting. Real power is organizing. Real power is demanding structural transparency. Real power is building alternative institutions—cooperatives, community funds, participatory budgeting—that do not wait for permission from the very machinery they seek to change.

And the third step is to stop romanticizing elections. Love them for what they are: a fragile, imperfect tool. But never mistake the tool for the goal.

Final Question

The next time you stand in that voting line, ask yourself not just who you are choosing, but what you are allowed to choose.

Because if the architecture of power never appears on your ballot, then my friend, you have not been governing yourself.

You have been given a very beautiful, very democratic-looking cage.

And the saddest part? You volunteered to walk inside.

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— Digvijay Mourya
Author | Questioning the stories we call normal

Thursday, May 14, 2026

betrayal


Title: The Great Indian Middle Class Betrayal: How We Were Fooled for 12 Years

By Author Digvijay Mourya

For over a decade, we have been told a story. A story of economic revival, of "achhe din," and of a government that feels your pain. But if you are a middle-class Indian—filling fuel in your bike, paying EMIs, or buying groceries—you know the truth. You know that the headline "India is the fastest-growing economy" has a footnote: The Indian middle class will pay for it.

Let’s stop mincing words. The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) didn't just raise taxes on the common man; they engineered a systemic loot, disguised as fiscal policy. And the evidence is overwhelming.

Here is the blueprint of how they fooled us.

1. The Oil Bonds Lie (₹33 vs ₹9)

Remember the excuse? When petrol and diesel prices began their insane climb, the government pointed to a ghost: ₹1.25 lakh crore in "oil bonds." They claimed that previous governments had left a bill, so they had to raise excise duty to pay it off.

But look at the math. Within a couple of years, they hiked the excise duty from a manageable ₹9 to a crushing ₹33 per liter.

If the goal was to pay off ₹1.25 lakh crore, why did they end up extracting nearly ₹42 lakh crores from the public? That isn't repayment; that is extortion. They used the oil bonds as a smokescreen to build a massive tax engine, and the middle class became the fuel.

2. The Crude Oil Crash: When Greed Exposed the Plan

The real test of a government’s honesty came when global crude oil prices crashed to $30–$40 per barrel. In any rational country, this would mean immediate relief at the pump. Petrol should have cost under ₹50.

What did Modi government do? Nothing.

They froze the prices. They didn't pass on a single rupee of benefit. Why? Because they had become addicted to the revenue. When you are collecting ₹33 in tax on a product that costs ₹30 to make, you don't want to stop. They chose revenue over relief.

3. The Russian Oil Scam: ₹45,000 Crore for One Man

Then came the Ukraine war. The world shunned Russian oil. Russia offered it to India at a massive discount. What did the government do? Did they use this opportunity to calm inflation? To subsidize your LPG cylinder? No.

They allowed a single rich businessman—with the right connections—to import that cheap Russian oil. That businessman didn't sell it to you at a discount. He refined it and sold it to richer nations (Europe, US) at global market rates.

The result? He pocketed an estimated ₹45,000 crore in profit. The common Indian got nothing but inflation. So let me get this straight: My taxes pay for subsidies, but the geopolitical windfall goes to a billionaire? That is not capitalism. That is cronyism.

4. The Ethanol Poison

Just when we thought it couldn't get worse, a minister introduced "ethanol blending." We were told it was green energy. We were told it would save foreign exchange.

But here is the secret they don't want you to discuss: Ethanol is made from sugarcane. A minister's children allegedly own massive distilleries. While your mileage dropped (ethanol has lower energy density than petrol) and your engine injectors started corroding, their families made billions.

You paid more at the pump, got less mileage, damaged your vehicle, and made a politician's kid richer. This is the ultimate betrayal of the consumer.

5. The Current Crisis: Begging Instead of Governing

Now, crude prices are volatile again. A crisis is looming. And what is the government doing? Are they making excise duty zero, as they did briefly in 2022 before quietly raising it again?

No. They are begging.

They are blaming "international markets." They are appealing to you to "bear with them." They have the audacity to say, "Other countries also have high fuel prices."

Let’s dismantle that argument right now.

Yes, other countries have high prices. But in Germany, France, or Japan:

· Minimum wages are 5x to 10x higher than India.
· They have world-class public healthcare—you don't go bankrupt for a surgery.
· Their children get free, high-quality education.
· Their trains and buses run on time and are affordable.

What do we have in India?
We have crumbling roads, government hospitals without doctors, schools without teachers, and a tax system that takes from the poor to give to the rich.

Conclusion: The Bill Comes Due

For 12 years, the middle class has paid the heavy price for this government's failures. We paid when oil was high. We paid when oil was low. We paid through ethanol. We paid through taxes. We paid so that a few businessmen and political families could fly private jets.

Now, with elections looming, they are scared. They know the public may not spare them. So they are appealing, begging, and blaming the world.

My message to the middle class is simple: Stop falling for the gaslighting. Read the numbers. ₹42 lakh crores. ₹45,000 crore to one businessman. Zero relief when crude was $30.

We didn't pay for development. We paid for their loot. And it is time we demand every single rupee back.

Jai Hind. And stop the loot.

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Digvijay Mourya is an author and political commentator. His works focus on economic justice and public policy.

Wednesday, May 13, 2026

So called glory


Title: Uniform or Survival? The Oldest Lie the Empire Tells the Poor

By Digvijay Mourya

There is a photograph that has haunted me for years. It isn’t of a battlefield, nor of a politician in a gilded office. It is of a young man—barely twenty—standing in a crumbling village, holding a rifle that weighs more than his dignity. He is wearing a uniform that fits his body but not his circumstance. And in his eyes, you don’t see glory. You see the math of a hungry man.

We call them heroes. We drape them in flags and recite odes about sacrifice. But before we reach for the poetry of patriotism, let us sit with an uncomfortable arithmetic:

A soldier is often just a poor man who was handed a rifle and a uniform instead of the dignity of a decent wage.

Let me say it louder for those in the halls of power: Hunger has always been the greatest recruiting officer in history.

The Myth of the Abstract Cause

The empire—whether it calls itself a democracy, a kingdom, or a corporation—loves abstract nouns. Honor. Duty. Patriotism. These are the gilded cages in which the poor are taught to live and die. The powerful have perfected the art of making young men feel ashamed of their empty stomachs, convincing them that the only way to earn a meal is to earn a medal.

But ask yourself: When was the last time you saw a billionaire’s son digging a trench? When was the last time a politician’s heir stood on a frozen border for forty days without heat?

The powerful rarely stand in the trenches. They are too busy defining the trenches. They design the maps, write the speeches, and award the contracts for the very bullets that the poor will fire at other poor people. It is a closed loop of exploitation disguised as nationalism.

Obedience Born of Desperation

Let us not romanticize the psychology of the barracks. A man who cannot feed his child does not think about the geopolitical chessboard. He thinks about rice. He thinks about rent. He thinks about the look of disappointment in his mother’s eyes when he brings home nothing.

This is the dirty secret of every standing army on this planet: Desperation makes obedience feel practical.

When you are starving, the structure of the military feels like salvation. Three meals. A roof. A uniform that tells the world you belong somewhere. You don’t question the flag you are fighting for because you are too busy surviving. Survival, as I have written before, is negotiable. You trade your autonomy for security. You trade your skepticism for a salute. You trade your tomorrows for a promise written by men who have never missed a meal in their lives.

The Negotiable Nature of Survival

Here is the argument that the recruitment posters will never print:

A starving worker becomes a perfect soldier because he has already learned to accept suffering as normal. He has already internalized that his life is worth less than the systems that exploit him. Give him a uniform, and suddenly his poverty is rebranded as sacrifice. His lack of options is rebranded as choice. His forced obedience is rebranded as discipline.

This is the most sophisticated form of violence the empire commits. It does not just take your labor. It takes your identity and returns it to you as a weapon.

The young man who could have been a farmer, a teacher, or a mechanic is instead turned into a precision instrument of someone else’s foreign policy. And he is taught to thank the empire for the privilege.

The Great Mistake

We have been trained to mistake sacrifice for glory. Glory is what the victors write in their memoirs. Sacrifice is what the mothers feel when the folded flag arrives at the door. They are not the same thing.

The true act of rebellion is not dying for a flag. The true act of rebellion is demanding a world where no one is so poor that they must sell their body to a battlefield. The true act of courage is refusing to confuse uniform with dignity.

I am not anti-soldier. I am anti-predation. I weep for every young man who had to choose between feeding his family and protecting an empire that would replace him by Monday if he fell on a Sunday. The problem is not the soldier. The problem is the system that requires poverty to fill its ranks.

The Final Argument

So the next time you hear a politician thumping their chest about "honorable sacrifice," ask them one question: How many of your children are standing in the mud?

The answer, as always, will be silence.

Because empires are not built on the backs of the powerful. They are built on the hunger of the poor. And until we recognize that a decent wage, a full stomach, and a roof over one’s head are the real foundations of peace, we will continue to dress up poverty as patriotism.

Let us stop calling it duty. Let us start calling it what it is: a transaction between a desperate man and an indifferent system.

And let us never mistake the uniform for the man inside it.

— Digvijay Mourya

Tuesday, May 12, 2026

Indian storm

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Title: The Coming Storm: Why India Must Prepare for Economic Shocks, Rethink CSR, and Learn from China
By: Digvijay Mourya

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There’s a certain silence before every crisis. Right now, that silence is deafening.

We watch the Middle East burn—escalating conflict, supply routes disrupted, oil prices creeping upward—yet our petrol bills haven’t truly bitten. Not yet. But as someone who has tracked economic fault lines for years, let me tell you: the shock is coming. And when it arrives, it won’t knock politely. It will break the door down for those already living paycheck to paycheck.

In a recent discussion, I found myself nodding at a hard truth: consumers aren’t feeling the full weight of rising fuel costs today, but the lag effect is cruel. Middle-income and lower-income households will bear the brunt. Why? Because energy isn’t a luxury. It’s the thread holding together food prices, transport, manufacturing, and even the cost of your next online order. When that thread snaps, the entire fabric tears.

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The Inequality Trap We Ignore

India’s growth story is real—but it’s also uneven. We celebrate billionaires and unicorns while street vendors calculate if tomorrow’s khari biscuit is worth the investment. The private sector loves to talk about disruption. But where is the conversation about purchasing power?

Here’s my argument: market forces alone will not save a family from fuel inflation.

That’s where India’s unique Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) mandate—Section 135 of the Companies Act—becomes more than a compliance checkbox. The fact that Indian companies are legally required to spend 2% of average net profits on social initiatives is, on paper, revolutionary. No other major economy has done this.

But in practice? Most treat it as charity, not strategy.

We need to flip the script. CSR shouldn’t mean building a school in a village and walking away. It should mean directly addressing income inequality and purchasing power erosion. Subsidized essential goods? Wage-linked community programs? Fuel-buffer funds for low-income workers? These are not socialist fantasies. They are private-sector-led stabilizers for a volatile world.

The Middle East crisis is a test. Will corporate India treat its 2% as a shield for the vulnerable—or as good optics for the annual report?

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The Elephant in the Room: State-Owned Enterprises

Now let’s talk about something that makes market purists uncomfortable: China.

Say what you will about Beijing’s model, but their state-owned enterprises (SOEs) don’t just exist—they compete. They pour billions into R&D. They capture global markets. They innovate because efficiency is mandated, not optional.

We compare ourselves to China on GDP, on manufacturing, on infrastructure. But rarely on SOE competitiveness.

Indian public sector units (PSUs) have historically been seen as slow elephants—heavy on employment, light on agility. But the truth is, we cannot build a $10 trillion economy without fixing them. Railways, defense, energy, banking: these are not sectors we can fully outsource to private players, nor should we.

What we need is a national debate—not ideological, but pragmatic.

· Why can’t our energy PSUs hedge better against Middle East shocks?
· Why is R&D spending in central public enterprises still a fraction of their Chinese counterparts?
· Why does “public sector” still taste like a synonym for “inefficiency” in many minds?

The answer is not privatization or nationalization. It’s performance-driven governance. If China can turn SOEs into global competitors, so can India. But only if we stop treating them as political parking lots and start treating them as economic engines.

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Optimism Is Not Blind Faith

Here’s where some call me naive. I still believe in India’s capacity to rise. Not because of slogans. Not because of chest-thumping nationalism. But because of data, demographics, and the quiet resilience I’ve seen from Kanpur to Kanyakumari.

The phrase “God is Indian”—often said with a grin—actually carries a deeper truth. It acknowledges that despite poor planning, fragile supply chains, and global turbulence, India keeps finding a way. Not by magic. By adaptation.

But adaptation requires preparation.

So let me be blunt to policymakers, to corporate boards, to every reader who will scroll past this:

· Prepare for the fuel shock now. Not next quarter. Subsidize where needed. Cap cascading price effects.
· Redefine CSR as economic defense. Two percent is power. Use it to protect purchasing power, not polish brand image.
· Reopen the SOE debate with data, not dogma. Let’s ask hard questions: Which PSUs are assets? Which are anchors? And how do we make the first list longer?

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Final Word

We are living through a fragile moment. The Middle East burns. Energy markets tremble. Inequality whispers in every inflation statistic. But India has faced worse—the 1991 crisis, the 2008 crash, COVID’s economic ice age. Each time, we staggered, then sprinted.

This time, let’s not wait for the shock to teach us. Let’s prepare while the silence lasts. And yes, let’s keep a little faith: not that God is Indian, but that Indians are, against all odds, endlessly resourceful.

That’s not just optimism. That’s our competitive advantage.

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Digvijay Mourya writes on economics, public policy, and the messy business of nation-building. The views here are personal, provocative, and intended to start a conversation—preferably before the next crisis arrives.

CII 2026

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From Complacency to Command: Why Uday Kotak’s CII 2026 Warning Is India’s Wake-Up Call
By Digvijay Mourya

There’s a certain stillness that creeps into successful nations—a quiet, dangerous belief that yesterday’s victories guarantee tomorrow’s safety. At the CII Business Summit 2026, Uday Kotak didn’t just challenge that stillness; he shattered it. And every Indian—whether sitting in a corner office or scrolling on a smartphone—should feel the tremor.

For too long, India has celebrated its macro-stability as if it were the finish line, not a starting block. Kotak, with the precision of a veteran banker and the urgency of a night watchman, reframed the debate: Are we managing our present, or mortgaging our future?

Let’s dissect his arguments—because this isn’t about one speech. It’s about a mindset reset.

1. The Balance Sheet of a Nation: Why the Current Account Deficit Is a Mirror, Not a Metric

Kotak did something unusual: he spoke of India’s economy not as an abstract machine, but as a household. Our current account deficit (CAD) is, in his words, the nation’s profit-and-loss account. And historically, India has been spending more abroad than we earn—a habit we’ve normalized as unavoidable.

The hard truth? A negative CAD isn’t just a statistic; it’s a leak in our economic sovereignty. Every time we import more than we export, we’re effectively borrowing from the world to fund our consumption. Kotak isn’t preaching autarky. He’s asking a simpler question: If we were a company, would any investor trust a management team that never fixes a structural deficit?

We’ve seen recent improvements, yes. But as he warns, past successes are poor life jackets in a storm. Global uncertainty—trade wars, capital flow reversals, supply chain realignments—isn’t a possibility. It’s the new weather.

2. The Complacency Trap: Why “Growing Anyway” Isn’t Good Enough

Here’s where Kotak’s message stings most. India has fallen in love with its own narrative: the fastest-growing large economy, the digital payments miracle, the demographic dividend. But growth without strategic depth is just a number.

He points to two sectors—energy and defense—where our posture has been reactive, not proactive. On renewables and EVs, China isn’t just ahead; it’s lapping us. Kotak’s warning is clear: Catching up is a losing strategy if the leader accelerates while you admire the view.

On defense, he sees not just a security imperative but an economic one. Why are we still among the world’s largest arms importers? Why can’t Indian innovation produce the drones, electronics, and platforms that we buy from others? These aren’t just questions for generals; they’re questions for CEOs.

3. Capital Outflows and the Funding Cliff: Businesses, Stop Pretending

If there’s one line every entrepreneur should tattoo on their forearm, it’s this: Cheap money is dead. The global interest rate cycle has turned. Liquidity is tightening. And Kotak is ringing the bell early.

His concern: Indian businesses have grown comfortable with easy funding—domestic and foreign. But when capital outflows accelerate (and they will, as the US and others offer safer returns), who will be caught without an umbrella? The time to prepare for a funding deficit is before the drought, not during it.

His advice is unglamorous but brutal: clean up balance sheets, reduce dependence on short-term foreign borrowings, and build resilience into your cash flows. In a world of uncertainty, survival belongs to the over-prepared.

4. Collective Responsibility: This Isn’t Just About Policy

Kotak refused to let the government off the hook, but he also refused to let businesses and consumers hide behind it. His core thesis is democratic in the truest sense: national economic health is not outsourced to ministers and RBI governors. It is built—or broken—by each of us.

When we import luxury goods we could produce at home, we widen the CAD. When we cheer stock market rallies but ignore defense indigenization, we trade short-term euphoria for long-term vulnerability. When our energy transition remains a PowerPoint slide rather than a pipeline, we cede the future to those who build faster.

This is what “proactive mindset” really means: moving from what can the system do for me? to what can I do for the system?

Final Words: The 2026 Question

Uday Kotak didn’t give a speech. He issued an X-ray. The image shows a nation with strong bones but weakening muscles—fine in a calm room, fragile in a storm.

India doesn’t lack capability. It lacks collective discipline. We have brilliant minds, thriving startups, a democracy that works (more often than it doesn’t), and a global reputation that is deservedly rising. But none of that immunizes us against entropy.

The next five years will separate the nations that steer from those that drift. Kotak has handed us the wheel. The only question left is: Are we brave enough to turn it?

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Digvijay Mourya writes on economics, strategy, and the quiet architectures of national resilience. He believes the best time to fix a roof was yesterday; the second-best time is when someone like Kotak reminds you it’s leaking.