"Economic pundits talk about a jobless growth and try to tear out the few hair that I have on my head by asking where the jobs are?" Shah said, tongue firmly in cheek.
He was speaking at the launch of a coffee table book, 'The Making of a Legend', on Prime Minister Narendra Modi here today. The function was attended by RSS chief Mohan Bhagwat and several Union ministers and BJP leaders.
Highlighting Modi's schemes aimed at the poor strata of society, a segment he has been assiduously cultivating, Shah said that the government's biggest success was that it had provided opportunities to "the last man in the queue" to lift himself out of poverty.
The government ensured that every household had a bank account and had built over 4.38 crore toilets to give dignity to poor women who were otherwise forced to defecate in open, he said.
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The government has set a target of giving five crore LPG connections to poor women by 2019 and to every household by 2024.
Past debates on whether a government should focus on urban or rural India, on industry or agriculture and on reform or welfare schemes had been ended with the government striking a balance between them, he said.
The book has been authored by Bindeshwar Pathak, the founder of Sulabh International. Pathak said no Indian leader after Gandhi focused as much on cleanliness as Modi.
Shah traced Modi's focus on self-employment and skill development to his rule in Gujarat where he was chief minister for over 12 years.
Between 2006 and 2012, Modi had focused on solving the crisis of Gujarat's falling water table and many regions came out of the "dark zone" due to his efforts.
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