Tuesday, January 6, 2026

The Indian Road Paradox: Why Wide Roads Still Feel Narrow

Indian cities have changed dramatically over the last two decades. Flyovers have multiplied, roads have widened, and signal systems have improved. Yet for the everyday commuter, one thing has remained stubbornly the same—traffic chaos.

The road is wide.
The markings are clear.
The signal is green.

Still, nothing moves.

This is the Indian road paradox. Despite heavy investment in infrastructure, traffic congestion and road stress continue to define urban life. The uncomfortable truth is this: the real problem is not the road, but our driving discipline.

 

Not Bad Drivers, Just Poor Discipline

Indian drivers are often criticised as careless or unskilled. That assessment is lazy and inaccurate.

Most Indian drivers are highly adaptable. We navigate potholes, waterlogged streets, stray animals, jaywalking pedestrians, and sudden U-turns daily. Skill is not the issue.

The issue is habitual rule-breaking.

Traffic rules in India are treated as optional guidelines rather than collective commitments. We follow them when convenient and abandon them when they slow us down. Over time, this behaviour has become normalised.

Driving discipline in India is not missing because people don’t know the rules—it’s missing because we don’t respect them.

 

Why Discipline Feels Optional on Indian Roads

Ask any driver why they don’t strictly follow traffic rules, and you will hear familiar responses:

  • “If I follow lanes, others will overtake me.”
  • “Stopping at red lights wastes time.”
  • “Indian roads are not designed for discipline.”

These explanations feel practical, but they are deeply flawed.

Traffic discipline works only when it is collective, not when individuals try to “outsmart” the system. Every shortcut taken by one driver becomes a delay or danger for someone else.

Ironically, our attempts to save time are exactly what slow everyone down.

 

Lane Discipline: The Simplest Solution We Ignore

Lane discipline is perhaps the most underrated solution to Indian traffic congestion.

On most urban roads, lanes exist. What doesn’t exist is respect for them.

Cars drift across lanes.
Two-wheelers treat lanes as flexible suggestions.
Autos stop abruptly wherever passengers wave.

The result is constant braking, sudden swerving, and unpredictable movement.

If lane discipline were followed—even partially—traffic flow would improve instantly, without adding a single new road or flyover. Yet this remains one of the most ignored aspects of Indian driving behaviour.

 

Honking: Noise Without Purpose

Honking on Indian roads has evolved beyond communication. It has become a reflex.

We honk at red lights.
We honk in traffic jams.
We honk when there is nowhere to go.

Excessive honking does not reduce congestion. It increases stress, aggression, and confusion. It also contributes significantly to noise pollution in Indian cities.

If honking solved traffic problems, India would be leading the world in traffic efficiency. Clearly, it does not.

 

The Hidden Cost of Undisciplined Driving

The damage caused by poor driving discipline goes far beyond accidents.

It includes:

  • Wasted fuel due to stop-and-go traffic
  • Lost productive hours every day
  • Mental exhaustion before and after work
  • Increased road rage incidents

Over time, chaos becomes normal. We stop questioning it. We accept stress as part of commuting. That acceptance is the most dangerous outcome of all.

 

Discipline Is Not Obedience—It Is Respect

There is a misconception that traffic discipline means blind obedience to authority. It does not.

Driving discipline is about respect:

  • Respect for the pedestrian crossing the road
  • Respect for the vehicle behind you
  • Respect for emergency vehicles trying to pass
  • Respect for your own safety and time

When you jump a signal or block a lane, you are not being efficient—you are transferring risk to someone else.

 

A Change That Starts Small

No single article can fix Indian traffic. No increase in fines can do it alone either.

Change begins with mindset.

Stay in your lane even if others don’t.
Stop at red lights even when no one is watching.
Use the horn only when necessary.

Driving discipline is not about being perfect. It is about being predictable.

Because on the road, predictability saves time, fuel, and lives. 

No comments: