Why do some people think that India's free drug system for healthcare and education is chicken feed?

India's so-called free healthcare system is actually no different from none. First of all, India's so-called medical free system is only for some states and regions to implement, and the beneficiary population is only about 5%; in addition, India has always been a private payment rate of up to seventy percent, a long period of time to occupy the world's top three, steady. India's public hospitals are said to have 170,000 beds with free healthcare, but China is supposed to have 6 million, but the rigor of the data is still unclear.

In fact, it seems that, on the whole, the Indian people are not very comfortable, on the contrary, they are still quite poor. It is said that the level of illiteracy in India is very high, reaching 80% of the total population base. So many people are uneducated and still don't have the financial means to afford medical treatment. Maybe some people will think why so bitter, India as a whole seems to be quite stable, unreasonable ah. In fact, this phenomenon is attributed to the caste system.

The so-called caste system, also known as the untouchability system. It's not just in India, it's in Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, etc. It's just worse in India.

Actually, after India gained independence from the colonial system in 1947, this traditional system was abolished and it was explicitly stated in the constitution that there shall be no more divisions on the basis of descent and that there shall be no discrimination. But even so, in India this hierarchical system is in fact y rooted, especially in rural India has not made any substantial progress. For example, like the Brahmins are the highest race and have less than 4% of the country's population, but hold nearly half of the country's parliamentary seats.