Affection Economy in India

Why in News: Earlier epochs of growth were driven by land (feudal era), minerals (industrial age), and creativity/innovation (knowledge economy). Today’s fragmented and attention-driven world demands a new model — the affection economy.

Introduction

  • Economic epochs have always been defined by the resources or drivers of power they prioritized. In earlier times, land, minerals, or industrial production determined prosperity. 
  • Later, creativity and innovation underpinned national and global dominance. 
  • In the 21st century, however, as societies become fragmented, divided, and attention-driven, the defining driver of power and influence is shifting towards care, connection, and belonging. 
  • This transformation marks the rise of what can be called the affection economy.

Features of the Affection Economy

1. Community & Connection

  • Success depends on how skillfully one nurtures bonds of kinship, trust, and cooperation.
  • Communities are the building blocks of social and economic success.

2. Soft Power & Belonging

  • Countries increasingly invest in strategies that build attachment and belonging.
  • Examples: UAE’s “Dubai Life, Dubai Buy,” Australia/New Zealand’s community appeal, and Germany’s social solidarity.

3. Corporate Examples

  • Reliance Stadium in India builds a sense of community and collective pride.
  • US companies built global platforms like Apple and Google by creating consumption communities.

4. Technology & Social Capital

  • Digital networks determine the influence of nations and companies.
  • Social capital (trust, reciprocity, cooperation) is now central to prosperity.

Challenges of the Affection Economy Erosion of Social Capital

  • As Robert Putnam highlighted in Bowling Alone, civic disengagement and declining community participation weaken democracy and collective action.
  • This undermines the very foundation of the affection economy, which thrives on trust and cooperation.

Digital Isolation and Alienation

  • Over-dependence on virtual spaces and social media, especially post-Covid, has reduced real-world communities.
  • This fosters loneliness, reduces empathy, and creates fragile digital belonging instead of genuine connection.

Rise of Extremism and Radicalization

  • Fragmented societies with weakened bonds create fertile ground for alienation-driven extremism, lone-actor violence, and polarization.
  • Affection economy requires trust, but radicalization thrives on mistrust.

Limits of Soft Power

  • Nations may be respected but not loved (e.g., China’s global projection).
  • Similarly, even countries with large networks (like the US) face ceilings due to internal isolationism and social divides.

Exclusivity and Inequality of Belonging

  • Affection economy risks being exclusionary, where only certain groups or privileged classes enjoy belonging, leaving others alienated.
  • This may reinforce inequality rather than reduce it, undermining legitimacy.

Future Outlook of the Affection Economy

1. Integration of Technology with Human Belonging

  • Digital innovation must move beyond efficiency to foster real trust and community, blending artificial intelligence with human empathy.

2. Soft Power through Care and Connectivity

  • Nations that invest in cultural diplomacy, diaspora engagement, and global solidarity will gain sustainable influence, not just material dominance.

3. Revival of Social Capital

  • Rebuilding civic engagement, trust, and cooperation will be central to strengthening democracies and ensuring inclusive development.

4. Stakeholder-Centric Corporations

  • Businesses will need to go beyond profit and build communities of consumers, employees, and partners anchored in shared identity and purpose.

5. Indian Civilizational Ethos as a Guiding Model

  • Principles like Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam (“the world is one family”) position India to lead globally by combining technology with belonging, empathy, and inclusivity.

GS Paper 1 (Society):

  • Social capital, community belonging, and changing nature of human relationships

GS Paper 3 (Economy):

  • Changing paradigms of prosperity and wealth creation beyond material resources.

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