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Outlook Rajasthan ((better)) [ CERTIFIED • Series ]

The state’s crafts— blue pottery , meenakari (enamel work), kundan jewelry, and bandhani (tie-dye)—have found a new lease on life via e-commerce platforms. Yet, the artisans struggle against the tyranny of middlemen. The famous puppeteers (kathputli walas) of Jaipur now make more money selling their puppets as decorative items to souvenir shops than performing the legendary tales of Amar Singh Rathore.

Rajasthan, once infamous for its skewed sex ratio (the Beti Bachao, Beti Padhao campaign originated here), is seeing a surge in female entrepreneurship. The Kudumb Sahayata Sangh (family assistance groups) have turned rural women into lakhpatis (hundred-thousandaires) through pashmina weaving and lac bangle production. outlook rajasthan

The state’s new outlook depends on reversing this. With the expansion of the Jaipur Metro, the coming of the bullet train (linking Ahmedabad to Jaipur via Ajmer), and the development of defense corridors, the government hopes to create a "reverse migration." Whether the bureaucracy can move as fast as the private sector remains the great unknown. On a sultry evening in Amer Fort, a German tourist films the Sunder Mandir on her iPhone while a local folk singer belts out a Maand song about a king who died in battle three centuries ago. Simultaneously, in a high-rise in Vaishali Nagar, a teenager is livestreaming herself playing Call of Duty to an audience of 10,000. The state’s crafts— blue pottery , meenakari (enamel

In the village of Bhadla, you will find one of the world’s largest solar parks. Spread across 45 square kilometres of shifting sand, millions of photovoltaic panels now generate electricity that powers Delhi’s metro. The "Outlook" here is green, even if the landscape is brown. The government’s recent push towards green hydrogen and wind hybrids suggests that Rajasthan is no longer just a place to visit; it is becoming the powerhouse of India’s energy transition. No discussion of Rajasthan’s future is complete without addressing its oldest enemy: water. The kunds (covered tanks) and baolis (stepwells) of the past were architectural marvels of rainwater harvesting, but rapid urbanization and groundwater depletion in districts like Jodhpur and Barmer brought the state to a crisis point a decade ago. Rajasthan, once infamous for its skewed sex ratio