According to WEF's Global Shapers Annual Survey 2016, around 49.6 per cent of respondents in India believe government accountability & transparency/corruption is a serious issues affecting the country.
While 39.7 per cent of Indian respondents believe the most pressing problem is poverty, 32.7 per cent believe it is religious conflict and 31.1 per cent says it is lack of education.
The global survey offers insights into the thinking, priorities and concerns of young people around the world. It covered more than 26,000 participants in 181 countries.
When asked who could successfully tackle these challenges in their countries on the global level, millennials trust themselves most with solving local challenges (26 per cent), followed by governments (20 per cent) and civil society (17 per cent).
For global challenges, young people trust international organisations (26 per cent) and, again, themselves (20 per cent).
The survey further noted that millennials are optimistic about technology, and 86 per cent of respondents globally believe that technology, while destroying some jobs, will eventually be a driver of job growth.
Meanwhile, governments across the world don't get high approval ratings from young people when it comes to the adoption of new technologies, with 41 per cent criticising them as too slow.
The biggest contribution from the private sector is job creation (36 per cent) and economic development/foreign investment, with 20 per cent of respondents choosing that option.
When it comes to their own careers, millennials are looking for jobs that provide a fair salary (54 per cent), a growth perspective (45 per cent) and a sense of purpose (36 per cent).
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
