INDIA MUST BECOME ‘SELF DEPENDENT’ IF IT DOESN’T WANT TO BOW BEFORE CHINA: RSS CHIEF

Rashtriya Swayamsewak Sangh (RSS) chief Mohan Bhagwat on Sunday said that India should be self-dependent, adding that if dependence on China increases, the country will have to bow before it.

Speaking after hoisting the national flag at a Mumbai school on the 75th Independence Day, the RSS chief also said that “swadeshi” means doing business on India’s terms. “We use the Internet and technology a lot. Our country does not have the original technology. It comes from outside,” Bhagwat said.

“No matter how much we shout as a society about China and boycott Chinese items, but from where does everything that is in your mobiles come from? If the dependence on China increases, then (we) will have to bow before China,” Bhagwat said.

The standard of living should not be decided by how much we earn, but by how much we give back, Bhagwat said after flag-hoisting event. “A free country has to be self-dependent, the more self-dependent we are, the more secure we will be. All other aspects depend on economic security,” the RSS chief said.

He also said that decentralised production will help India’s economy to generate employment and self-employment opportunities.

“Economic security is important, he said, adding the adaptation of technology should be based on our terms. “We have to be swa-nirbhar”, he said.

“Swadeshi does not mean ignoring everything else. International trade will remain, but on our terms,” he said. We have to be self-reliant for that, he added. “What we can manufacture at home should not be brought from the market,” he said.

He said the economic vision should be to produce more and competition should be for the best quality of produce. “We are not against international trade and commerce but our production must be in villages. It should not be mass production but production by masses,” he said.

Industries should get encouragement from the government, Bhagwat said. The government should act as a regulator and not do business itself, he added. “The government will appeal and urge industries to manufacture what is important for the development of the country and formulate policies to encourage industries,” he said.

“We don’t believe in complete nationalisation but it is also not true that the nation has nothing to do with industries. All these should function together as a family unit,” he said.

Small industries should complement bigger industries, he said, adding the focus should be people-centric and not profit-centric. The focus should be on research and development, MSMEs and cooperation sectors, he added.

“Considering the economic unit as a family will help the economy to be an employment generator,” he said. The government’s job has to be to support and encourage industries.  The government should give directions to produce what is important for the development of the country, he said.

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