From childhood, we've been fed that democracy is the latest and the greatest form of governance, that it is a "government of the people, by the people, and for the people", without even attempting to to define what 'governance' is. The situation is muddied further when economic philosophies of the incumbent government come into play, be they capitalism, communism, socialism, or a hogdepodge of whatever fancies the high and mighty who rule over us, "democratically". Furthermore, given the dismal quality of primary and even graduate level education in India, entire generations have passed without learning or worrying about (ignorance is bliss!!) what words like governance, capitalism, communism etc. really mean.
That the Indian democracy is a sham can be readily proved, especially the parts - "of the people" and "for the people". The manner in which the constitution that all political parties across the spectrum claim to pledge allegiance to, and the other arms of the government rely on for functioning, was written, by coping most of the *constitution* of the foreign power that looted enormous wealth, oppressed natives for centuries, and treated them worse than wild animals, inspires no confidence that it would even attempt to deliver a "democracy", based on the definition above. No wonder, then, that every single government since "independence" (another undefined word), has turned out to be a kleptocracy, or a mobocracy, or a plutocracy, or a kakistocracy, or, more accurately, a mix of all of the above. You can't do the same thing and expect a different outcome.
On the economic front, admittedly, there is no country that is a 100% capitalist, or socialist. But, that should not stop us from trying to identify where, on the spectrum, we stand as a country. After all, should we decide to move in a particular direction, it serves us well to know where we stand, in which direction we ought to turn, and how far we must travel before reaching the destination we intend to reach. I confess it is impossible for me to pinpoint where, on paper, or ideologically, the Indian government claims to stand. However, as I write this post, I know well where it stands, really.