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Logic Chimp's avatar

"To skip a line, to find parking, to get your concierge to buy something, to negotiate a safari booking that needs to get changed, to get a customised menu to eat, to argue against an unjust traffic stop, it goes on and on."

I cannot tell you how much i related to this line. I don't even know if most Indian's notice it, a bit like do fish notice water. The first time i noticed it was when I came back to India after having been in america for 2 years.

I think the most unfortunate part of this is the game theoretic dynamic, where following the rules will just put you at a loss. Not cutting the line will just result in being slow. This then leads to a culture that valorises the negotiation skills - you are a genius if you manage to do some jugad and not follow the rules.

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Rolf A. E. Mueller's avatar

Re: "What causes the average driver in Indian roads to treat driving like a game of water filling cracks on the pavement? It's not trust, it's the lack of an agreed upon equilibrium. There's no norms to adhere to."

Yes, there is - or was - a norm to adhere to. I learned it in 1984 from ICRISAT's research director, Kanwar Lal Sahrawat. He taught new ex-pat arrivals at ICRISAT: "In the US you go on the right, in the UK you go on the left, and in India, you go on what is left". So it was - and still is.

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