Outlook Rajasthan ((top)) -

Rajasthan has excellent engineering colleges (Kota remains the coaching capital of the IIT-JEE exam), but it lacks a diversified industrial job base outside Gurugram’s commuter belt. Consequently, the state is a net exporter of talent. The young Rajput or Jat boy from a village near Jodhpur is as likely to be working in a fintech firm in Bengaluru or a restaurant in London as he is to be farming his ancestral land.

The outlook for Rajasthan is one of cautious ambition. It knows its past is its greatest asset, but it refuses to be fossilized by it. It is building skyscrapers in Jaipur’s Jawahar Nagar while preserving johads (traditional water tanks) in the villages. It is flying drones over the desert for mineral mapping while listening to the melancholic notes of the morchang (jaw harp). outlook rajasthan

But the economic outlook has shifted seismically. Walk through the industrial corridors of Bhiwadi, Neemrana, or the Delhi-Mumbai Industrial Corridor (DMIC) passing through Alwar, and you see a different Rajasthan. The state is now the cement capital of India. It is the third-largest producer of solar energy, having turned its curse of endless sunshine into a renewable goldmine. The outlook for Rajasthan is one of cautious ambition

This is the new Rajasthan. And yet, it remains forever old. For decades, the prism through which India viewed Rajasthan was purely touristic. And why not? The state accounts for nearly 60% of India’s heritage hotel inventory. The havelis of Shekhawati, the lakes of Udaipur, and the tiger reserves of Ranthambore have long been the crown jewels of Indian hospitality. It is flying drones over the desert for

Rajasthan has excellent engineering colleges (Kota remains the coaching capital of the IIT-JEE exam), but it lacks a diversified industrial job base outside Gurugram’s commuter belt. Consequently, the state is a net exporter of talent. The young Rajput or Jat boy from a village near Jodhpur is as likely to be working in a fintech firm in Bengaluru or a restaurant in London as he is to be farming his ancestral land.

The outlook for Rajasthan is one of cautious ambition. It knows its past is its greatest asset, but it refuses to be fossilized by it. It is building skyscrapers in Jaipur’s Jawahar Nagar while preserving johads (traditional water tanks) in the villages. It is flying drones over the desert for mineral mapping while listening to the melancholic notes of the morchang (jaw harp).

But the economic outlook has shifted seismically. Walk through the industrial corridors of Bhiwadi, Neemrana, or the Delhi-Mumbai Industrial Corridor (DMIC) passing through Alwar, and you see a different Rajasthan. The state is now the cement capital of India. It is the third-largest producer of solar energy, having turned its curse of endless sunshine into a renewable goldmine.

This is the new Rajasthan. And yet, it remains forever old. For decades, the prism through which India viewed Rajasthan was purely touristic. And why not? The state accounts for nearly 60% of India’s heritage hotel inventory. The havelis of Shekhawati, the lakes of Udaipur, and the tiger reserves of Ranthambore have long been the crown jewels of Indian hospitality.