Nine days ago India’s space mission termed Mangalyaan, the voyage 
towards the planet Mars, was launched. It was what one calls a 
“textbook” launch with zero error, and one that has made India say “Yes,
 we can”. And in 300 days, it will have covered 680 million kilometres 
to orbit the Red Planet on September 24, 2014. Once that happens, it 
will start analysing the surface of the planet for any methane, a gas 
which is believed to hint at the presence of any Martian biology or life
 forms. 
It is a proud moment in the history of India, a nation that started its 
space programme just about 50 years ago, or to put it in another way, 
with the “Chutzpah” of a teenage nation. With the Mangalyaan experiment,
 some say that India has “arrived” as a member of technically advanced 
nations. 
Yet some voices have been raised in the country about whether this is 
worth it, whether it is a meaningless bombast, and whether this money of
 Rs 460 crores spent on Mangalyan could not have been used to feed the 
starving millions across the country. India is a land of stark 
contrasts. Half the people here live on less than two dollars a day, of 
which many are estimated to live on even less than Rupees 30 a day. 
To this, the criticism, the Space Commission Chairman Dr K Radhakrishnan responded saying that every rupee spent here benefits people all across India. To put it in perspective, he said that Mangalyan cost each of us 115 crore Indians about Rupees Four. 
What has the “aam admi” got out of these four rupees; or even forty or 
four hundred, counting over the year? Plenty! Recall how Indian 
satellites hovering around us give us real time information on weather, 
information to fishermen and coastal farmers on the tides and fish 
flock, on the state of ships and other vessels near and far from the 
coast, carry radio and TV waves, and most of all help in saving lives of
 millions. 
Thanks to help from our space programme, the loss of lives in the recent
 cyclone Phanini was limited to 44 and almost a million people were 
saved by prior evacuation. Earlier cyclones, when we did not have this 
facility of early warning killed tens of thousands. Yes, but why to 
Mars? Herein is where the idea of development becomes important. India 
is still thought of as a “developing nation”, once ridiculed as a “ship 
to mouth” economy. 
How does development occur? When and how does a country become “developed”? 
Development has multiple components: proper food, clothing and shelter 
for the people; adequate education and culture; good health; good 
environment; equal opportunity for all; ability to defend from enemies; 
economic stability and growth; and above all, good governance, all 
leading to a feeling of justifiable national pride. If you look at any 
one of these above components, technology plays a vital role in it. 
Technology comes out of logical, scientific and rational thought and its
 application. The greatest thing about technology is that it is scalable
 to millions, it becomes cheap and affordable once it is spread, 
demanded and used; it can thus offer convenience and progress for the 
entire nation. Thanks to technology, we have now moved from “ship to 
mouth” to a “silo to ship” economy, and we rid ourselves of smallpox and
 polio, and are vaccinating all children against some common childhood 
diseases. It is here that Mangalyan is relevant. The 460 crores 
expenditure has several useful effects. We are using the latest 
technology, indeed creating new ones, and at a frugal cost. Mars 
missions by European or American countries would be at least thrice 
costlier. And the design, building, testing and setting up have all been
 done by Indian engineers. Only some vital components are imported. It 
has thus led us to be self-sufficient and advanced our capabilities. The
 technological prowess to aim for Mars means that we can apply it, and 
even better it for terrestrial needs at home. It also brings us business
 (recall that we pack the payloads of other countries in our 
satellites). It has captured the imagination of youngsters (over 2 lakh 
“likes” on Facebook by 18-21 year-olds). Mangalyan thus is a tool to 
attract youth and advance science. 
It is therefore not an expense but an investment for the future. Today 
it is Mars, tomorrow even greater challenges. Should India not be ready?
 Mars is thus a metaphor. 
Should these 460 crores not have been spent on feeding the poor? Look at
 the larger picture. The budget of India for the year 2013-14 is Rs 
16,65,297 crores; this amounts to an individual amount of about Rs 
14,500 per person. We have budgeted Rs 27,049 crores for agriculture (Rs
 235 per Indian), plus Rs 33,000 crores on the Mahatma Gandhi National 
Rural Employment Guarantee Act or MGNREGA, to help the rural poor, which
 is another Rs 280 per person. 
Money is thus earmarked and distributed to help the rural poor 
(Mangalyan has not taken away even a rupee out of these allocations). 
Despite these efforts, there are large holes in the programme, thanks to
 inefficient governance. 
If we can tighten this up, complaint about feeding the poor will be far 
less or can even vanish. Here too, technology helps through efficiency, 
cutting out the middlemen and so forth. Compared to these, Rs 460 crores
 on Mangalyan, or Rs 4 per Indian (about an onion or two) is not just a 
grand bargain but a steal!