There are many factors to consider in achieving sustainable and inclusive growth, but two key elements are the growth rate and investment. Achieving a high growth rate is essential for reducing poverty, but it must be balanced with investment in education, health care, and other social services. Inclusive sustainability works to draw genuine connections between environmental sustainability and social justice. This new concept challenges traditional environmental practices that ignore or overlook important social justice issues. Inclusive sustainability directly engages students and increases student success. India needs inclusive growth to ensure equitable distribution of wealth and opportunities, reduce poverty and inequality, promote social and economic development, and foster a sense of national unity and cohesion. India is ranked 62nd out of 74 emerging nations by the World Economic Forum's "Inclusive Development Index" in terms of inclusive growth. Environmental and social sustainability combine to make everyone's living conditions bearable until they run out of money to keep it all going. Economic and social sustainability combine to make everyone's living conditions equitable until the environment degrades to where Earth can't sustain human life. Sustainability's three main pillars represent the environment, social responsibility, and the economic. These three pillars are also informally referred to as people, planet, purpose, and profits.