He was addressing the students of Indian Institute of Rural Management here during its 35th convocation.
"I have been living in Delhi for several years but the voice of villages does not reach Delhi," Gadkari said,
"Politicians and bureaucracy are far removed from the problems of rural India. And because of this, the amount of efforts that should be taken to resolve their problems is not happening.
"Agriculture hardly generates 8 to 14 per cent of GDP," the Minister noted, adding "our Finance Minister has set aside Rs 9 lakh crore for agricultural crop finance and Rs 20,000 crore for interest subsidy in this year's budget. And several states are even offering interest-free agricultural loans. But despite all this, we are not getting the results that we should be getting."
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"Because then kids will start going to schools, farmers can carry their agricultural products to urban centres and agro-processing industry will grow," he said.
"Lack of vision for appropriate development of rural areas is our most vital problem," Gadkari said.
In a lighter vein, Gadkari also asked students to stay away from government officials and government for development.
"It is better to stay away from government officials and government for development. It is not appropriate for me to say so being a minister myself, but then, better stay away from them," he said, adding that students should take their entrepreneurial efforts to the social sector.
The Government had pledged Rs 12 lakh crore for Sagarmala project (port modernisation and coastal development), he noted. "Rs 4 lakh crore infrastructure development work for Sagarmala and Rs 8 lakh crore for port development project have been planned, and we will achieve that as we do not have shortage of money or technology," he said.