HomeNationalIndia may have to forgo as much as $1.97 trillion in gross...

India may have to forgo as much as $1.97 trillion in gross domestic product (GDP) growth promised by investment in intelligent technologies over the next decade if the country fails to bridge the skills gap, a new report from Accenture said on Monday. Advanced technologies such as Artificial Intelligence (AI), augmented/virtual reality (AR/VR) and Blockchain can enable rapid reskilling and upskilling at scale, said the report titled “Fueling India’s Skill Revolution”. These technologies can help people learn new skills quickly, efficiently and cost effectively, Accenture said. “We must offer more experiential on-the-job training and help people adopt life-long learning as their jobs are transformed. Digital tools and applications — like Artificial Intelligence, analytics and Blockchain — will be essential in delivering these new learning approaches,” said Rekha M Menon, Chairman and Senior Managing Director at Accenture in India. The report notes that skills such as complex reasoning, creativity, and socio-emotional and sensory perception cannot be taught through traditional teaching and learning. “Intelligent technologies increasingly require people to hone more exclusively human skills such as creativity, empathy and ethical judgment. These skills cannot be acquired in the classroom,” Menon said. The report includes a framework that combines a suite of innovative learning methods grounded in neuroscience research to make skills development more effective. The framework suggests that an individual’s learning journey can be augmented by a combination of digital technologies. For example, AI can help with content curation and dissemination to ensure that students are aware of the skills they need. AI-based adaptive programmme can build specific pathways to tailor learning to individual needs, said the report. Similarly, AR/VR technologies can enable immersive training to make people job-ready and Blockchain-based micro-credentials can help individuals stay on the path to lifelong learning and build deeper expertise, the report said. The report recommends that stakeholders in India — including government departments, industry bodies, academia, non-profit organizations and corporates — need to create, among other things, a comprehensive skills-based learning path in schools and colleges and adapt curriculum in institutions of higher learning to cater to the broader needs of the digital economy.

Kolkata, Jan 7: When the Left was in power, the Opposition led by Mamata Banerjee had lashed out at the rulers of the day over the deaths in Amlashole in West Midnapore district because of starvation in 2004. It was exactly five years ago on this day (January 7) in 2014 that Banerjee, now the chief minister of West Bengal, paid a visit to Amlashole to assure that not a single life would be lost during the rule of her Trinamool Congress.

However, it was recently that seven people from a tribal community reportedly died of food scarcity in Lalgarh in Jhargram district of the state and this time, the government of Banerjee was in the firing line. The government denied that the deaths were caused by starvation but a survey has found the prevalence of “food scarcity in varying degrees” in about 31 per cent of tribal households in the state.

Bengal BJP livid after state chief Dilip Ghosh finds ‘PM material’ in Mamata Banerjee

According to The Hindu , the study titled ‘An Inquiry into the world of the Adivasis of West Bengal’ and conducted by Nobel laureate Professor Amartya Sen’s Pratichi Institute and Asiatic Society, which was to be released on Monday, January 7, said communities were “far behind” in terms of human development. The survey covered 1,000 tribal households to understand their living conditions, education and health.

Bengal has over five million tribal people accounting for six per cent of the country’s tribal population. However, in several areas, the tribals are “far behind” in terms of human development. One area of concern is the scarcity of food and that “nearly one third [31%] of the surveyed households” reportedly faced “food scarcity in varying degrees” in the past one year.

“…While some households faced acute hunger only in some months (August-October), in many cases, people had half-meals only twice a day. Also, in some cases, adult members reportedly ate only once a day. Also, in some cases, adult members [of households] reportedly ate only once a day,” the report said. Most of the families that were surveyed could hardly afford animal protein or pulses, said the report.

Delhi starvation deaths: 3 girls given unknown medicines by father

“Poverty-born vices like alcoholism [and] the fragility of the public health system…seemed to have resulted in a much lower life chances among the Adivasis than their more privileged co-citizens,” the report added. Degradation of forest was cited as a major reason behind “reduced availability of natural nutrients” resulting in premature deaths.

The report added that the surveyed households in the year preceding the survey was 52 out of which, 48 died premature deaths while only four died because of old age.

RELATED ARTICLES

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Most Popular

Recent Comments