"If India is to meet the challenge of change, mere incremental progress is not enough. A metamorphosis is needed. That is why my vision for India is rapid transformation, not gradual evolution," he said at the first 'Transforming India' Lecture organised by the NITI Aayog here.
Stressing on the need to bring changes through transformation of governance, Modi said it cannot happen with an administrative system of the 19th century.
"We have to change laws, eliminate unnecessary procedures, speed up processes and adopt technology. We cannot march through the 21st century with the administrative systems of the 19th century," he said.
With his entire Cabinet in attendance, Modi said the change has to be for both external and internal reasons.
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Each country, he said, has its own experiences, resources and strengths.
"Thirty years ago, a country might have been able to look inward and find its own solutions. Today, countries are inter-dependent and inter-connected. No country can afford any longer to develop in isolation. Every country has to benchmark its activities to global standards, or else fall behind," he said.
The Prime Minister further said that fundamental changes in administrative mindsets usually occur through sudden shocks or crisis.
With a stable democratic polity in India, special efforts will have to be made to force transformative changes, he added.
Modi said there was a time when development was believed
to depend on the quantity of capital and labour but today it depends as much on the quality of institutions and ideas.
NITI's functions, he said, include mainstreaming external ideas into government policies through collaboration with national and international experts.
It also has to be the government's link to the world, outside experts and practitioners as well as be the instrument through which ideas from outside are incorporated into policy-making, Modi said.
Stating that often new ideas are heard and understood but not act upon them, because it is beyond individual capacity, he said, "If we sit together, we will have the collective force to convert ideas into action.
The Centre and the state governments have a long administrative tradition that combines indigenous and external ideas from the country's past, he added.
"This administrative tradition has served India well in many ways. Above all, it has preserved democracy and federalism, unity and integrity, in a country of glorious diversity. These are not small achievements. Yet, we now live in an age where change is constant and we are variables," he said.
"These efforts have been to tap ideas from inside. The next step is to bring in ideas from outside. Culturally, Indians have always been receptive to ideas from elsewhere," he said.
With this in mind, the Transforming India Lecture Series is being organised, he noted.
"We will draw the best from the wisdom and knowledge of eminent persons, who changed, or influenced change in the lives of many, to make their nation a better place on the planet," he said.
Seeking names of experts and panelists from inside and outside India, he said all government secretaries will conduct a follow up discussion in a week's time.
"The purpose is to convert ideas that emerge in today's session into specific action points relevant to each group. Wherever possible, I request the Ministers also to participate in these sessions," he added.