Make our roads viksit & pothole-free
India's roads are failing as heavier cars become common. Pothole deaths have surged, highlighting a systemic issue. While car buyers upgrade, infrastructure lags behind. This mismatch stresses roads and safety features. India needs to consider wei...

Potholes are an indictment of poor civic maintenance and product of corruption. There's also a deeper structural shift. Buyers are upgrading from hatchbacks to compact and mid-size SUVs. Automakers are prioritising heavier, features-laden cars, changing India's vehicle fleet: more mass per axle, more stress per km. And our public infra is still largely thinking 'Maruti' and 'Bajaj'. In 2010, the average hatchback weighed under 1 t. Today's compact SUVs are 300-400 kg heavier. So, crash barriers built for low-impact sedans splinter under heavier vehicles. Dividers and guard rails fail at forces not earlier anticipated. Five-star car ratings may protect occupants. But safety cannot be outsourced to automakers alone. It is a system's obligation - roads, footpaths, barriers, walkways, drainage, enforcement and pedestrian norms must evolve together.
When private consumption decisions create public costs, policy must recalibrate incentives. The West is now debating weight-based taxation, differentiated registration fees, or annual levies tied to vehicle weight that better align user cost with infrastructure wear. India can also start discussing these changes. Simultaneously, engineering standards must be upgraded to reflect the new vehicle reality. Development cannot be measured by SUVs sold or expressways launched, but by whether citizens reach home safely, and comfortably.
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