Skip to main content

Bad roads make people poorer

India is said to be the fastest developing countries today only after China. Although India is doing excellently well in fields like education, industrialization, infrastructure, health, agriculture and fashion, there are still certain areas where the country is lagging behind. India's road network is gigantic and said to be only after the United States of America. But one of the striking underlying facts is the condition of the roads, around 30 percent of the country’s population lacked access to all-weath
July 17, 2019 Read time: 5 mins
Photo 1: A view of improved road and adequate accessibility to farmers (Distt. Bundi, Rajasthan, India)
India is said to be the fastest developing countries today only after China. Although India is doing excellently well in fields like education, industrialization, infrastructure, health, agriculture and fashion, there are still certain areas where the country is lagging behind. India's road network is gigantic and said to be only after the United States of America. But one of the striking underlying facts is the condition of the roads, around 30 percent of the country’s population lacked access to all-weather roads. Since roads indirectly contribute to the economic growth of the country. Given India’s vast diversity, each state has varying terrain, populations and implementation capacity, making for a unique set of challenges. The difficult terrain in the smaller upland states is compounded by the weak capacity of the construction industry, leading to lower quality of works and higher costs. Moreover, the remoteness of habitations and dense forest lands in the hill states of Himachal Pradesh, Meghalaya, Mizoam, Manipur, Uttarakhand and Jammu & Kashmir give rise to special challenges for road development.  


India is a developing nation there is a constant demand for good quality infrastructure, transportation and services. But since India is a huge country with quite a sizable population, this problem still has not been addressed in totality. India has a total of about 2 million kilometers of roads out of which 960,000 kilometers are surfaced roads and about 1 million kilometers of roads in India are the poorly constructed ones. Although the figures look pretty impressive but the underlying fact is that 25 percent of villages in India still have poor road links.

The other problems faced by the roads are; bad riding quality, poor geometrics and insufficient pavement thickness. Having a poor road system makes it more difficult for children to go to school and more expensive for farmers to bring their produce to the market. Bad roads adversely affect people in countless other ways and thus it makes people poorer. Building and repairing roads make a powerful impact on people's lives in the rural areas. Many small towns are poor, and young people are being driven to go to large cities to find jobs.

Additionally, roads development bring social, cultural and economic changes in the lives of the people in terms of providing connectivity between people and places and thus help in reducing the poverty as long as direct market access to the rural producers.  It is a fact that if roads in an area are well-developed and properly maintained, travel time is reduced and access to local markets, work places, educational institutions and medical and health services are increased. A few snapshots of improved road connectivity are exhibited in Photos 1, 2, 3 & 4.


Benefits from improved road connectivity are delineated point wise in the following:

• Safe, paved roads that can be used in all-weather conditions mean that people who once suffered at home, or died in transit, can now reach modern medical care;

• Women would have better access to pre-natal and post-natal health care.  Also, other facilities like access to education would enhance the social status of women;

• More and more pregnant women prefer to visit the hospital for the delivery of babies;

• Health workers will also be able to achieve a 100% immunization rate in many villages that they can be reached by modern roads;

• Lives will be saved, as the ambulances can reach the villages where there was no road in the past;

• The improved road enabled people, particularly women, to find jobs, commute to work and schools, and go to clinics and hospitals more quickly and safely;

• It also encourage farmers to grow higher-value crops, and enabled them to transport their produce faster, keeping it fresh and in good condition;

• Farmers in the area usually make more visits to the market after the new roads;

• The number of visits usually make by government agricultural extension workers to farming communities are increased and bringing much needed expertise and other help to farmers;

• An improvement in the employment situation in terms of more job opportunities, avenues for self-employment and so on will be generated;

• On farm employment opportunities will also be increased due to shift from grains to cash crops and also multiple cropping;

• More people will be going to nearby towns and villages for odd jobs like selling woods, vegetables, dairy products and locally made items like pickles, papad and so on, which in turn will generate employment opportunities;

• Also the cottage industries, handicrafts and agro-industry will flourish from improved road connectivity;

• Good road connectivity will result in increased school enrolment and school attendance, especially, in the number of girls/boys going to schools. Parents will be more confident about sending their daughters to schools unescorted;

• Road connectivity will improve in the quality of life as cooking gas become available in villages, access to cultural and religious places will also be improved;

• People will have wider options in buying and selling their commodities;

• Small and petty village traders may tap the bigger markets, transport the agriculture produces/crops fast and get more profit margins instead of depending solely on local markets and the middleman;

• Good road connectivity not only links the village communities to better markets, but also opens up wider work opportunities in distant places;

• Improved road connectivity will give an impetus to the growth of tourism;

• Better road connectivity will increase sources of income and increased income will help in reducing debts and would increase the buying power of the people, thus would improve over all standards of living;


• Good road connectivity will get a boost of better livelihood options in terms of hiked in land price, increase in business opportunities, change in people’s life style, shifting of occupation from farming to business, increase in mobility, good transport and travel facilities, good accessibility, reduction in poverty, illiteracy and ignorance.

Finally, it is concluded that the effectiveness and impact of the road building projects that connect poor, vulnerable and isolated communities to schools, services and markets is key to socioeconomic development. Also, road building and repairing roads make a powerful impact on people's lives in the rural areas. It is imperative to understand that infrastructure such as better roads carry a profound role towards reducing poverty.

Related Content

  • The drive for US road funding: will corporate America get a seat?
    September 13, 2017
    Trumponomics aims to use public money for pump-priming an even greater amount of cash from the private sector to improve America’s crumbling roads. But is political will matching corporate America’s enthusiasm for more private investment, asks David Arminas If there were ever a test case for comparing public-private partnerships and design-build contracts, the recently completed Ohio River Bridges Project is it (see previous article).
  • PPRS: come together for International Road Maintenance Day
    March 27, 2018
    The world’s leading highway associations have launched International Road Maintenance Day to focus people everywhere on the protection of their local road networks. International Road Maintenance Day will take place on the first Thursday of every April, speakers said on day two of the Pavement Preservation and Recycling Summit (PPRS Nice 2018). The first event will take place on April 5, 2018. “It will be one day per year to talk about the maintenance of our roads,” said Juan Jose Potti, the president of
  • New strategies will help boost road safety worldwide
    November 4, 2013
    *Martin Heath, the Chair of the IRF Group of Experts working group on Engineering Measures for Infrastructure Safety, examines the expected impacts of the new ISO 39001 The excitement and enthusiasm generated by the 2011 launch of the Decade of Action for Road Safety is gradually receding amidst the gloom of an interminably slow global economic recovery. However, a fresh and challenging impetus is about to be given to international road safety management following the publication of a new quality management
  • Decarbonising construction for the future
    August 29, 2023
    Decarbonising construction can deliver the sustainability needed for the future.