There's good news. And I have already started taking my driving lessons. (It was highly incidental, but what a coincidence!) The newspaper reports say (and so gulp them with a pinch of salt) that the 'Nano'- the cheapest car in the world, will be priced around INR One lakh...
So while I was thinking to save up my money and go for a second hand dabba car within one lakh range sometime in six months, I now might as well wait another few months and add another few thousand and get a brand new Nano.
Makes perfect economic sense, nai? So it will, for many others like me. And so in a year from now, we all will be happily hopping to TATA showrooms like we now hop to Big Bazaar and get ourselves a car each for a change instead of a t-shirt or a jeans or steel vessel. I am thrilled, I am swooning in disbelief...
Utopia rings bells of alarms, doesn't it? What's wrong here? What's the catch? Let's rack our brains and think a bit.
Kudos to the Tatas to make a car within the reach of the "common man". Kudos to the very communist government for putting a step forward to usher in 'development' and 'industrialization'.
Okay, hold on. I am going to explain the quote-unquote thing.
"Common man." Whom are you talking about? Surely not he, who spends most of his time traveling in a bus or a metro. Not he, who gets fascinated and starry-eyed on being offered a credit card. Surely not he, who sweats each day on his way to office, sweats back all his way, and then haggles over the price of tomatoes somewhere in between.



