President Murmu Urges Officers to Drive Inclusive Growth, Improve Lives

President Droupadi Murmu addressed officers of the Central Power Engineering Service (CPES) and Indian Economic Service (IES), emphasizing their decisive role in India's growth and self-reliance. She urged them to adopt a solution-oriented approach, ensuring policies translate into tangible benefits for citizens, especially the most vulnerable. The President highlighted the need for synergy between technical and analytical services for effective implementation of development initiatives. She stressed that true policy success lies in uplifting lives, with governance requiring both expertise and empathy.

Key Points: President Murmu to CPES, IES Officers: Drive Inclusive Growth

  • Critical role in development
  • Forward-looking governance
  • Synergy between services
  • Policies must uplift lives
  • Infrastructure and economic steering
3 min read

President Murmu urges CPES, IES officers to drive inclusive growth, improve lives through policy outcomes

President Droupadi Murmu urges CPES & IES officers to ensure policies translate into tangible benefits, focusing on inclusive, sustainable development.

"Behind every data point is a human story. - President Droupadi Murmu"

New Delhi, March 27

President Droupadi Murmu on Friday emphasised the critical role of the Central Power Engineering Service and the Indian Economic Service in shaping India's development trajectory and ensuring that economic policies translate into tangible benefits for citizens.

Addressing the officers of both services as they called on her at the Rashtrapati Bhavan, the President said they stand at the forefront of India's growth story and will play a decisive role in building a stronger, self-reliant nation. She noted that their work would significantly influence policy formulation, reform implementation, and the promotion of inclusive and sustainable development across sectors.

President Murmu urged the officers to adopt a forward-looking and solution-oriented approach in governance. She highlighted that India's rapid economic transformation requires policymakers and technical experts to remain agile, innovative, and deeply committed to public service. She encouraged them to embrace challenges as opportunities to contribute meaningfully to nation-building.

The President stressed the importance of continuous learning and professional excellence, stating that governance in the modern era demands not only technical expertise but also empathy and ethical commitment. She reminded the officers that policies must be responsive to the needs of a diverse population and grounded in real-world impact.

Speaking specifically to CPES officers, Murmu described electricity as a key driver of industrial growth, technological innovation, and improved quality of life. She acknowledged the service's contribution to developing robust power infrastructure, including generation, transmission, and distribution systems, while maintaining reliability, efficiency, and safety standards.

In her interaction with IES officers, she underlined that in a rapidly evolving global and domestic economic environment, their role has become even more crucial. She said IES officers would be instrumental in steering economic policy, managing inflationary pressures, fostering employment, and reducing socio-economic inequalities.

President Murmu emphasised that policymaking must go beyond numbers and statistics. "Behind every data point is a human story," she said, adding that the true success of economic policies lies in their ability to uplift lives, especially those of the most vulnerable sections of society.

She also highlighted the need for coordination between technical services like CPES and analytical services like IES to ensure that development initiatives are both well-designed and effectively implemented. According to her, such synergy is essential for achieving long-term national goals and ensuring balanced regional development.

The interaction underscored the government's focus on aligning technical expertise and economic planning with citizen-centric outcomes, reinforcing the pivotal role of civil services in driving inclusive and sustainable growth in the country.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
"Behind every data point is a human story" – this line really resonated with me. Often, policies are made in Delhi but their real impact is felt in remote districts. I hope the officers take this to heart and ensure their work actually improves lives on the ground, not just looks good on paper.
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Rohit P
Coordination between CPES and IES is key. You can have the best economic policy for manufacturing, but if the power infrastructure in that state is weak, it will fail. Hope they work together more closely. The focus on self-reliance (Aatmanirbhar Bharat) needs this kind of integrated approach.
S
Sarah B
As someone working in the development sector, I appreciate the emphasis on empathy and ethical commitment. Technical expertise alone isn't enough. Policies must be designed with the end-user, the common citizen, in mind. This is a good direction from the leadership.
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Vikram M
The call for a forward-looking approach is timely. With climate change, we need our power engineers to innovate with solar, wind, and green hydrogen. And our economic officers must plan for jobs in these new sectors. The future is green and digital.
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Karthik V
While the intent is good, the challenge is in execution. We often hear such speeches but see little change on the ground. I respectfully urge these officers to break silos, reduce red tape, and actually be "solution-oriented" as the President said. The common man faces so many hurdles in accessing basic services.

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