What was the situation of roads in India before 2014, and how has it changed from 2014 until today?

Before 2014 — The Struggling Era

India’s road infrastructure before 2014 was severely underdeveloped and underfunded:

  • In 2013–14, India’s National Highway network measured just 91,287 km, and the pace of highway construction averaged only 11.6 km per day, a figure that appeared modest against the demands of a 1.4-billion-person democracy with vast geographic diversity.
  • Roads were plagued by poor quality, lack of maintenance, missing connectivity in rural and remote areas, and extremely slow project execution.
  • Budget allocation was low, land acquisition was a nightmare, and bureaucratic delays stalled most major projects.
  • Rural India was largely disconnected, villages lacked all-weather road access, hampering education, healthcare, and economic activity.

After 2014 — The Transformation

National Highways — Massive Expansion:

  • The NH network expanded by 60% from 91,287 km in 2014 to 1,46,145 km by 2023. The length of 4-laned NH increased 2.5 times, from 18,387 km to 46,179 km.
  • High-speed corridor length expanded from just 93 km in 2014 to 2,474 km today, with 3,600 km of high-speed corridors built in the last five years alone.

Speed of Construction — Record Breaking:

  • The highway construction pace rose dramatically to 34 km/day in 2025, up from 11.6 km/day in 2014.
  • The average annual highway construction during 2014–2024 increased by about 130% compared to the previous decade (2004–2014).

Budget — Unprecedented Investment:

  • There has been a 6.4 times increase in the Centre’s investment in road infrastructure between 2013–14 and 2024–25, and the road transport and highway budget shot up by 570% from 2014 to 2023–24.

Rural Roads — PMGSY:

  • An impressive 3.74 lakh km of rural roads were constructed since 2014 under the Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojana (PMGSY), connecting previously isolated villages.

Key Flagship Projects:

  • Bharatmala Pariyojana, one of India’s largest road development initiatives, has resulted in 17,411 km of roads being constructed and 26,425 km awarded, boosting the length of high-speed corridors 12-fold.
  • The Ganga Expressway — 594 km connecting Meerut to Prayagraj  was inaugurated in April 2026, reducing travel time and boosting logistics across Uttar Pradesh.

Global Recognition:

  • India climbed from Rank 54 in 2014 to Rank 38 in 2023 on the World Bank’s Logistics Performance Index.

In summary, pre-2014 India had slow, underfunded, and poorly connected roads. Post-2014 has seen a near-revolution — faster construction, larger networks, better quality, rural connectivity, and expressways that are genuinely world-class.

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