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Maharashtra News Updated Jun 26, 2026

Sanjeev Sanyal: Reviving Kolkata Key to Viksit Bharat's Eastern Growth

Sanjeev Sanyal stated that reviving Kolkata is essential for achieving a developed India. He highlighted the need for a network of fast-growing urban centers in eastern India. Sanyal called for investment in Kolkata's ecosystem and policy changes to restore its growth. He emphasized that Bengal's entrepreneurial spirit must be revived for national development.

Viksit Bharat needs a Viksit Kolkata: Sanjeev Sanyal

Kolkata, June 26

Reviving Kolkata as a major urban and economic hub is critical for building a high-growth network of cities in eastern India and achieving the goal of a Viksit Bharat, Member of the Economic Advisory Council to the Prime Minister, Sanjeev Sanyal, said on Friday.

Speaking to reporters in Kolkata, Sanyal said a developed eastern India and a developed Bengal are essential for realizing the vision of Viksit Bharat, with Kolkata continuing to remain the largest urban centre in the region.

"In order for you to have Viksit Bharat, you need to have a Viksit Eastern India and Viksit Bengal and Viksit Kolkata are key to this," Sanyal said, stressing the need to create a network of fast-growing urban centres across eastern India.

He said cities such as Patna, Guwahati, Ranchi and Bhubaneswar also need to emerge as growth centres, but noted that Kolkata remains the single largest hub in the region and its revival is crucial to accelerating economic growth across eastern India.

"Obviously you need Patna, Guwahati, Ranchi, Bhubaneswar, they need to fire up but let's be honest, Kolkata is still the single largest hub so really getting Kolkata going is critical to getting this network of urban hubs growing fast," he told.

Sanyal emphasised the need to invest in Kolkata's urban ecosystem and said multiple measures would be required to restore the city's growth momentum. These include redevelopment initiatives and changes in industrial policies that may not be sufficiently supportive of business and investment.

He said Bengal has a long history of trade and entrepreneurship and that business is deeply rooted in the state's culture. According to him, the spirit of innovation, risk-taking and entrepreneurship for which Bengalis were historically known needs to be revived.

Sanyal said a developed Bengal must play an important role in the larger goal of building a developed India, adding that strengthening Kolkata's economic and urban ecosystem would be central to achieving that objective.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Shreya B

As a Bengali myself, I agree—Kolkata’s spirit of entrepreneurship is still alive in neighborhoods like Burrabazar and College Street. But ground reality says we need better governance first. Metro expansion is great, but what about drainage, traffic, and safety? Without fixing basics, no 'Viksit Kolkata' is possible. 🙂

James A

Interesting take from Sanjeev Sanyal. I’ve visited Kolkata twice for work—it’s a city with incredible character but struggling with old infrastructure. If India wants to truly become a global power, eastern cities need investment. Hope the private sector steps in too, not just government babus.

Naveen S

Patna, Ranchi, Bhubaneswar—they all need growth, but yes, Kolkata is the anchor. I think the key is better regional connectivity (Vande Bharat trains, expressways) and a unified economic corridor. Also, why not make Kolkata a fintech hub like Bengaluru for IT? The potential is there. #ViksitBharat

Ravi K

One point that’s missing: industrial policies in West Bengal have to become business-friendly. I’ve seen many entrepreneurs move to Gujarat or Maharashtra because of red tape here. If we want to revive the 'Banga' business spirit, simplify taxes and land acquisition. That’s the real challenge. Sanyal sahab is right but implementation matters more.

Tanya I

Love this vision! Growing up in Kolkata, I’ve seen it transform from a 'dying city' to one with new malls and flyovers. But why is the eastern bypass

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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