Fire in the Hole - By Jason Miklian and Scott Carney | Foreign Policy
"But plenty of Indians have missed out. Economic liberalization has not  even nudged the lives of the country's bottom 200 million people. India  is now one of the most economically stratified societies on the planet;  its judicial system remains byzantine, its political institutions  corrupt, its public education and health-care infrastructure anemic. The  percentage of people going hungry in India hasn't budged in 20 years,  according to this year's U.N. Millennium Development Goals report. New  Delhi, Mumbai, and Bangalore now boast gleaming glass-and-steel IT  centers and huge engineering projects. But India's vast hinterland  remains dirt poor -- nowhere more so than the mining region of India's  eastern interior, the part of the country that produces the iron for the  buildings and cars, the coal that keeps the lights on in faraway  metropolises, and the exotic minerals that go into everything from wind  turbines to electric cars to iPads..."  

 
 
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