Analytical Thinker | Data Analyst Specializing in Power BI, SQL, and Excel | Driving Business Efficiency Through Data
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Suraj Maurya is a LinkedIn creator based in Gautam Buddha Nagar, Uttar Pradesh, India with 1,621 followers, focused on Finance Tips, Finance Education, and Tech Trends content. Posts average 7 likes and 0.7% engagement.
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Profile Highlights
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1,621Total Followers
8Avg Likes
5Avg Comments
0.8%Avg Eng.
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My Activity & Engagement Calendar
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Influencer Activity & Engagement Calendar
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Most Engaged Posts
My Top 3 posts with the highest engagement
Suraj MauryaAnalytical Thinker | Data Analyst Specializing in Power BI, SQL, and Excel | Driving Business Efficiency Through Data
India’s growth engine is roaring.
The latest numbers are in: our economy grew at a stunning 7.8% in the first quarter of 2025-26. We are, by all accounts, the fastest-growing major economy in the world.
This is a story of incredible resilience, with domestic demand and investment looking strong. Every new factory, every new project, is a testament to our ambition.
But this is where the real question begins—one many are afraid to ask.
We see the multi-trillion-dollar economy... but what about the average Indian?
Our official GDP per capita is around $2,800. This is the "average."
This average hides a stunning gap. Recent reports highlight that India's richest 1% now hold over 40% of the nation's total wealth, while the bottom 50% of the population own just 3%.
This is the disconnect.
So when we ask, "How do people get jobs and survive?"—the answer is complex.
Youth (15-29) unemployment remains a huge challenge, at 13.8%.
Over 80% of our workforce is in the informal sector, often without social security or a stable income.
The headline growth is vital. But the real challenge is translating that national growth into household wealth.
The ultimate measure of success isn't just our GDP rank; it's how many of our 1.4 billion people are truly part of that success story.
What do you think is the single biggest step we can take to bridge this gap between our GDP and our people?
#India #Economy #GDP #Growth #Jobs #Inequality #Development
Suraj MauryaAnalytical Thinker | Data Analyst Specializing in Power BI, SQL, and Excel | Driving Business Efficiency Through Data
I’m happy to share that I’m starting a new position as Design Engineer at Congruex!
Thanks to Ajay Rajput Sonal Nagpal Vartika Kumar Akshay Aggarwal #congruex #gniot #aktu #telecommunications #telecom
Suraj MauryaAnalytical Thinker | Data Analyst Specializing in Power BI, SQL, and Excel | Driving Business Efficiency Through Data
Healthcare in India: When Money Decides Survival
A medical emergency should trigger care.
In India, it often triggers a calculation.
Not of symptoms.
Not of urgency.
But of money.
Let’s look at the reality—through facts that quietly shape millions of lives.
India has ~1 doctor for every 1,500 people (only MBBS/allopathic doctors).
The World Health Organization recommends 1:1,000.
Hospital beds?
India has ~1.3 beds per 1,000 people.
Countries with resilient systems have 3–5+ beds per 1,000.
What does this mean on the ground?
• Overcrowded government hospitals
• One doctor seeing 80–100 patients a day
• Patients waiting hours—or days—for a bed
• Critical cases managed in corridors
Now comes the most uncomfortable part: money.
In India, over 60% of healthcare spending comes directly from people’s pockets.
Not from insurance.
Not from the state.
From savings meant for homes, education, and old age.
Every year, ~55–60 million Indians are pushed into poverty due to medical expenses.
That’s not a statistic.
That’s families falling through the cracks.
Many studies show that a significant share of avoidable deaths in India are linked to delayed or unaffordable care:
• Treatment postponed because money wasn’t ready
• ICU denied because advance payment wasn’t possible
• Tests skipped because they were “too expensive”
People don’t die because medicine doesn’t exist.
They die because access does.
Public hospitals are stretched beyond limits.
Doctors are exhausted, not careless.
The system is overloaded, not heartless.
Private hospitals save lives—but often at costs that permanently break families.
One hospital bill can undo decades of hard work.
The most painful truth?
In India, getting sick is one of the biggest financial risks a family can face.
Healthcare should not depend on:
• Your income
• Your insurance fine print
• Your ability to arrange money overnight
It should depend on need.
A country’s progress is not measured only in GDP or growth rates,
but in how safely its people can fall sick—and still survive.
When money decides survival,
we are not just failing patients.
We are failing humanity.
If this post made you pause, it matters.
If you’ve seen this reality, speak up.
Because silence keeps broken systems alive.
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#IndianHealthcare #HealthcareCrisis #HealthcareForAll #PublicHealth #IndiaSpeaks #dataanalyst