logo
X User Says "Indians Are The Most Overworked People On Earth", Sparks Discussion

X User Says "Indians Are The Most Overworked People On Earth", Sparks Discussion

NDTV15 hours ago

Akshat Shrivastava, a finance advisor and a content creator, has sparked a debate online after saying that Indians are the most overworked people on earth, not by choice, but because of systemic pressures ingrained from a young age. Taking to X, Mr Shrivastava cited the example of children studying 10-12 hours a day to prepare for competitive exams. This ability to "slog", he argued, carries over into adulthood. "Many hardworking Indians migrate abroad. While their European colleagues have downtime, Indians sacrifice their sleep, family and health to serve their company," he wrote.
The content creator attributed this pattern to a survival mindset that begins from a young age. "What's the root cause of all this? Well, it comes down to building survival instincts from a young age," he said, adding: "Many hardworking kids have no choice but to slog."
"Build merit - build a better life. That's their only option. They work silently, putting in hours. Right from the time they are 12-13-year-old kids. Why? because working hard is 100x better than entitled begging," he wrote.
[1] Indians are the most overworked people on earth.
Not by choice. But, by system.
Example: kids studying for IITs would easily study 10-12 hours/day. This ability to "slog" continues at work.
[2] This habit to "slog" continues in adult life. Example: many hardworking… https://t.co/TkQ5YF4djQ
— Akshat Shrivastava (@Akshat_World) June 19, 2025
Mr Shrivastava's post has triggered mixed reactions on social media. While several users agreed with him, others shared their critical perspective.
"Indians are often trapped in a cycle of relentless hard work, chasing middle-class stability without questioning the true return on investment for their efforts. The grind for IIT or NIT can open doors, but why does the pressure to top the class start so early, robbing teens of their youth?" questioned one user.
"Indians don't hustle out of ambition. They hustle because the system taught them there's no safety net, only grind or fall," expressed another.
"It's not hustle culture, it's survival culture. For many Indians, hard work isn't ambition-it's the only way out," commented a third user.
"India's work ethic is rooted in survival, not passion. From competitive exams to corporate cubicles, the system teaches us that hard work is the only escape from poverty and mediocrity. This mindset-while admirable-often rewards burnout, not brilliance. Children sacrifice play for tests, adults sacrifice health for targets," said another.
However, one user wrote, "Hard work is not the problem. Mindset is. Indians need to know: hard work is not the key to success - leverage is."
"If you are born among 1.5 billion people in a 3rd world country, Hard work and Struggle are inevitable," expressed another.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Model schools give wings to dreams of TN government school students
Model schools give wings to dreams of TN government school students

New Indian Express

timean hour ago

  • New Indian Express

Model schools give wings to dreams of TN government school students

THENI: The state government established residential schools across Tamil Nadu in 2022 to prepare students for competitive exams including NEET, JEE and CLAT. A bunch of students from the first batch of the model school in Theni have secured admission in engineering and law courses in central government educational institutions. According to sources, the school gave coaching to 102 students, of which 40 each appeared for NEET and JEE respectively, and 22 sat for CLAT. Of these, seven scored between 200 and 300 marks in NEET. The rest of the students just managed pass mark. R Naveenkumar, the school topper, secured 464 out of 720 marks. Among the 40 who appeared for JEE, three have got admission in IIT- Bhubaneshwar. Four students bagged admission in Footwear Design and Development Institute (FDDI). After clearing CLAT, three students have got admission in Dr Ambedkar Law University while another students got admission in Damodaram Sanjivayya National Law University, Visakhapatnam. Speaking to TNIE, the HM of Theni model school C Mutharasppan said unlike the other schools which admitted Class XI and XII students, his school took in students who were in Class IX. " The teachers made students revise the lessons thoroughly several times and it has produced good results. Naveenkumar, who topped the school in NEET, will not get the 7.5% quota reserved for government school students as had studied in an aided school", he said.

From coal country to IIT classrooms: How ‘CCL Ke Lal-Laadli' is giving wings to forgotten dreams in Jharkhand's command areas
From coal country to IIT classrooms: How ‘CCL Ke Lal-Laadli' is giving wings to forgotten dreams in Jharkhand's command areas

Time of India

time3 hours ago

  • Time of India

From coal country to IIT classrooms: How ‘CCL Ke Lal-Laadli' is giving wings to forgotten dreams in Jharkhand's command areas

Ranchi: In Jharkhand's coal belt, where the rhythm of life follows the hum of dumpers and drills, childhoods often end early. For thousands of children in command areas of Central Coalfields Limited (CCL), school was a luxury, coaching a fantasy, and IIT — an impossible dream. Until one day, the mine gates opened, not for coal — but for Suganti Kumari, daughter of a fruit vendor in Kuju area, Ramgarh. Her father Mahesh Saw pushes a cart every morning to feed his family. Her mother, Saroj Devi, cooks and prays for a better life for her daughter. That prayer found an answer when Suganti cracked the entrance exam for 'CCL Ki Laadli' — CCL's flagship CSR programme that handpicks bright students from underprivileged families and grooms them for India's toughest engineering exams. 'I never thought someone like me could even dream of IIT. But now, I want to be the first engineer in my entire basti,' says Suganti, her eyes gleaming with determination. Launched in 2012 with just 11 boys as 'CCL Ke Lal', and expanded in 2016 to include girls under 'CCL Ki Laadli', the programme now selects 40 students every year (20 boys, 20 girls) from CCL's command areas — including Kuju, Barkakana, Rajrappa, North Karanpura and others. These are children of small farmers, fruit sellers, security guards, and daily wage labourers -- others. What binds them together is their potential — and their poverty. Sagar Rajak, son of Suresh Rajak, a small-time shopkeeper in Kuju, also cracked the entrance exam last year. 'My parents have sacrificed everything for my education. This is my chance to change their lives,' says Sagar, who now lives and studies at the CCL Ke Lal hostel in Ranchi. Once selected, students are brought to Ranchi and given everything — free IIT coaching , school education at DAV Gandhinagar, fully equipped hostels, nutritious meals, books, transport, sports, medical care, and most importantly, mentorship by CCL's own officers who are alumni of IITs and NITs. From Jitendra Kumar (IIT Kharagpur) to Naman Srivastava (IIT-BHU), these officers finish their desk jobs by afternoon and pick up the chalk in the evening — turning into teachers and torchbearers. 'We come from the same soil as these kids. We know their struggles. When I teach them, I see my younger self in them,' says Akhilesh Kumar, an IIT-BHU alumnus and one of the teaching officers, who was himself once a Super-30 student. Since its inception, 269 students have completed the programme. Many are now in IITs, NITs, IIITs, BIT Mesra, and other top engineering colleges. Some have bagged placements in Google, Microsoft, Amazon, Oracle, while others serve the country through CPSEs like HAL, or have cracked JPSC, like Laxman Yadav, now a District Education Officer in Sahebganj. The impact is visible — and personal. "My dream is to take my mother to a big city in a flight someday," says Suganti, clutching her physics book. "One day, I will open a coaching centre in Kuju so other kids like me don't have to stop dreaming," promises Sagar. Even homes that once resisted sending children away now pray for selection into the scheme. To ease the transition, CCL has created a home-like environment in Ranchi: 24x7 secure hostels, separate facilities for boys and girls, festivals like Diwali and Holi celebrated together, picnics, sports days, parent-teacher meetings, and motivational sessions to keep spirits high. The scheme has also introduced reservations since 2021 — with 26% seats for STs, 10% for SCs, 14% for OBC, and the rest unreserved — ensuring fair access across communities in these underserved regions. "This is more than a coaching programme. It's a social movement. These children are becoming the first engineers, civil servants, and role models of their communities," says Naman Srivastava, Deputy Manager at CCL and a key teaching faculty. From the mining outposts of Kuju, Ramgarh, Piparwar and Hazaribagh, to the campuses of IIT Delhi, IIT BHU, IIIT Allahabad — this journey isn't just about education. It's about rewriting destiny. And as twilight falls over Ranchi's Gandhinagar colony, and the laughter of young minds fills the hostel corridors, it becomes clear — in the very land that powers India's industries, a quiet revolution is now fuelling its future.

231 plane crash victims identified through DNA tests, 210 bodies returned to family
231 plane crash victims identified through DNA tests, 210 bodies returned to family

India Today

time9 hours ago

  • India Today

231 plane crash victims identified through DNA tests, 210 bodies returned to family

More than a week after the devastating Air India plane crash in Ahmedabad, authorities have identified 231 victims through DNA testing. Of these, 210 bodies have been handed over to their families so far.'Till Friday evening, 231 DNA samples have been matched and relatives have been contacted. So far, the mortal remains of 210 victims have been handed over to families,' Rakesh Joshi, Medical Superintendent of Ahmedabad Civil Hospital, was quoted as saying by news agency those returned to their families are 199 passengers—155 Indians, 36 British nationals, 7 Portuguese nationals, and 1 Canadian. The remaining 11 were local residents who were killed when the aircraft slammed into buildings near the crash site. At present, 21 identified bodies are still at the Ahmedabad Civil Hospital. While DNA matches have been confirmed for all of them, the formalities are still pending. Ten families are expected to collect the remains by Saturday morning. Another three will be handed over after necessary air clearance. The remaining eight are linked to pending DNA confirmations of other of the deceased were earlier handed over without DNA testing as their identities were clearly established. Additionally, three local residents succumbed to injuries during treatment, bringing the total number of ground fatalities to crash, which occurred on June 12, claimed over 270 lives making it one of the deadliest air disasters in India's recent history. Of the 242 passengers and crew members onboard the doomed flight, 241 died in the crash. The lone survivor was Vishwas Kumar, a 28-year-old tech consultant seated near the emergency exit on seat London-bound Air India flight AI-171 had barely taken off from Ahmedabad's Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel International Airport when it plunged into a medical college complex in the Meghaninagar area. The impact was so severe that many bodies were charred or mangled beyond recognition, prompting the need for extensive DNA Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau (AAIB) has recovered the black box of the Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner, which will be key to understanding what caused the aircraft to go down so soon after InMust Watch IN THIS STORY#Ahmedabad Plane Crash

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store