Not anymore. Chandigarh, a capital city of 2 states in India, has more cars registered than the total population (there are multiple reasons for that).
Almost every household in the national has at least one hatchback. Many people are also copying Americans, now, like buying small trucks, just for showing off.
While cars may have come down in price (or wages gone up) to the point where the average person can reasonably afford one, people can still view a car as a status symbol because historically it was expensive to obtain. That combination would result in utterly congested roads.
Bangalore has more registered cars than people living there as well, IIRC. And it’s worse there because Chandigarh is Atleast a planned city ( the only planned one India built from scratch post Independence) but Bangalore mushroomed exponentially after the IT boom of 90s.
As for Gurgaon, it’s tragedy that only a small circular Rapid Metro runs there. Rest of Delhi has Atleast multiple lines.
Not anymore. Chandigarh, a capital city of 2 states in India, has more cars registered than the total population (there are multiple reasons for that).
Almost every household in the national has at least one hatchback. Many people are also copying Americans, now, like buying small trucks, just for showing off.
Both things can be true at the same time
While cars may have come down in price (or wages gone up) to the point where the average person can reasonably afford one, people can still view a car as a status symbol because historically it was expensive to obtain. That combination would result in utterly congested roads.
Bangalore has more registered cars than people living there as well, IIRC. And it’s worse there because Chandigarh is Atleast a planned city ( the only planned one India built from scratch post Independence) but Bangalore mushroomed exponentially after the IT boom of 90s.
As for Gurgaon, it’s tragedy that only a small circular Rapid Metro runs there. Rest of Delhi has Atleast multiple lines.