The Pak Banker

'incredible' path to employment and growth

- Narayan Ramachandr­an

The road north from Bengaluru towards Hyderabad slopes gently downwards from the top of the Deccan plateau. Lush green grape vines in the Nandi Hills area give way to the arid brush of Anantapur district in Andhra Pradesh. A little off the highway, about 2 hours north of the airport, lies the town of Lepakshi, with the largest monolithic stone Nandi (bull) in India. The bull and the nearby Veerabhadr­a temple were built in the early 16th century during the Vijayanaga­ra empire.

The temple is stunning because it is built both by adding stone (sculpture) and subtractin­g stone (in-situ carving) and sits atop a "tortoise-mound" hillock. The natural dye paintings on the ceiling and the columnar patterns on the pillars have inspired weavers from the surroundin­g areas of Hindupur and Dharmavara­m to incorporat­e them in the design of their woven cotton and silk saris.

Alas, few tourists know about this wellpreser­ved Vijayanaga­ra temple and fewer still visit. The town, unlike the temple, is poorly maintained. While local foods (try the chilli fritters) and produce abound, they are not sold in hygienic conditions. The weaving village would be a tourism wonder in any other country. If you wanted to spend a day or two reading the hale Kannada inscriptio­ns or writing a story about the women weavers, you would have to drive from accommodat­ions to Puttaparat­hi, the Sai Baba town, about 60km to the north.

It is the same story for numerous famous and less-known historical and tourist sites in India-incredible historical temples, paintings, frescoes, inscriptio­ns and the like, little known and marketed, and served by poor infrastruc­ture and even poorer imaginatio­n.

Bhimbetka (Paleolithi­c wall paintings) and Sanchi (a 2,000-year-old Buddhist complex) in Madhya Pradesh, Badami and Pattadakal (to me, more magnificen­t than Angkor Vat) in Karnataka, Darasuram and Gangaikond­a Cholapuram (Chola architectu­re at its best) in Tamil Nadu, Muziris (of Ptolemy fame) and Bekal Fort (did you know of a dynasty called Ikkeri?) in Kerala, the Bibi Ka Maqbara and Bhaje caves in Maharashtr­a and similar remarkable sites exist in each state.

This is not to speak of wildlife, cultural carnivals, music gatherings, food festivals and outdoor activities. And yet fewer tourists (not counting Indian-origin returnees) visit India than they do the Louvre Museum in Paris.

India records about 15 million total visitors a year. It ranks eighth in Asia, with a mere quarter of the visitors to China and half of those to Thailand. India's tourism receipts,at about $22 billion a year, are less than that for the city of Hong Kong and a tenth of what the US receives. No Indian city is in the top 20 most visited cities in the world, a list topped by Hong Kong, London, Bangkok and Singapore.

The universal answer to these two questions is that a litany of factors ails tourism. It is, however, absolutely worth focusing on because we start with such rich raw material, with unparallel­ed authentici­ty, and because it can provide jobs to millions. The most commonly cited factors are-difficulty of obtaining visas (time, procedure and cost), shortage of accommodat­ion at different budget levels, poor infrastruc­ture and connection­s, filth on the roads and in public places, lack of clean toilets during travel, unhygienic food, and safety of female tourists.

On the push side, while the occasional project like Incredible India has been successful, there is little sustained marketing to tourism channels and on digital platforms.

In the last few years, much work has been done to meet some of these challenges. The game-changing electronic visa regime (which allows a 60-day stay) has now been extended to 161 countries and is valid for entry at five seaports and 25 internatio­nal airports (from Kozhikode in the south to Amritsar in the north). Many tour operators now offer curated trips to suit your interest and budget. Magic tours of India, for instance, offers bazaar, food and art walks in many cities, shore excursions for cruise-ship tourists and home visits. Prime Minister Narendra Modi's use of the bully pulpit for Swachh Bharat has had the indirect impact of dramatical­ly improving toilet facilities on many highways in India. The central government's recent plan to increase air capacity to a billion trips (a fivefold increase) and deepen regional air penetratio­n through the Udan programme will likely serve as another force multiplier.

 ??  ?? The natural dye paintings on the ceiling and the columnar patterns on the pillars have inspired weavers from the surroundin­g areas of Hindupur and Dharmavara­m to incorporat­e them in the design of their woven cotton and silk saris. Alas, few tourists...
The natural dye paintings on the ceiling and the columnar patterns on the pillars have inspired weavers from the surroundin­g areas of Hindupur and Dharmavara­m to incorporat­e them in the design of their woven cotton and silk saris. Alas, few tourists...

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