Friday, October 31, 2008

Lord of the universe..

Now the turn has come to salute yet another genius - Vishwanathan Anand, the champion who is all smiles at all times. The person who has proved to the world that one can be a superstar and world champion in chess, without having to be rough, ill-mannered, overtly aggressive, and indulging in 'hate-speak' at all times. Whenever he is seen on TV or in the press, a smiling cheerful face is probably what strikes us the most..The ruffians that champion chess players ought to be is a belief, certainly a wrong one at that, that is unfortunately rooted deep in the psyche of many a chess-player - not fortunately in the part of the world where we hail from, but in many other parts of the world. Please see the related report in Times of India, and the blog post of Prem Panicker (from 'Smoke Signals'), from where I got this TOI link.

Let me salute the champion, one more time.. May there be many more laurels coming your way, Anand - we're proud of you..

Monday, October 27, 2008

About the girl child - cry thy beloved country..

This morning, or more correctly some time in between late last night and this morning, at some point when brain slips to a kind of delirium, when images that we have seen past but can't be irretrievably relegated to the inner folds of memory start circling around you, I was thinking of the girl child.. ..Just the other day, while coming back from a business travel, my co-passenger was a girl surely past her teens and possibly into her mid twenties..a very intelligent girl - not the type who is absolutely oblivious of things happening outside of her county, leave alone her country..very sweet and smart, who one would wish had been his or her daughter ..Her first destination was Kathmandu, possibly a Himalayan trek, and then the next few weeks in our homeland..she told me she'd love to travel all over India.

That return flight was a journey of close to 7 hours, and she slept for half the time...and was taking notes from a book when not asleep..probably making preparations for her trip I thought..

One question she did not ask me was about how safe would a girl just past her teens be in India, alone.. probably it is her own surroundings, the nature of her environs or what she'd have seen all around her while growing up, that made her not ask that question.. or she may have been in the know..but if she were to ask that question, what answer should I have given..?

And this morning I happened to read this..coincidental or not, I can't say either way..

Your words, Babita, somehow pierce into my heart..and surely it bleeds..when you write 'bodies lusted and whisked away in the name of love', I shudder to think it could be anyone's dear daughter, lovely sister who a father and a mother would have grown by giving love beyond what they could... but looking at her being disrobed and raped, the collective conscious of the society feigns to be attentive while talking about the stock exchange or TV serials with nauseating detachment.. yes - it is a collective betrayal on what I'd tend to believe, or what my upbringing has taught me to believe, as world's most wonderful creation..

Looking at the whole thing with a kind of impassioned detachment, I'd tend to believe that ours is a society which is hypocrisy personified in the truest sense of the term.. God's own country - it is made out to be. True, it made a good copy for the ad world , but does it mean anything to us? Society which imbibes relief when "my husband/my wife/my children" (sorry - parents not included) are safe, even when our neighbour has lost his entire family.. when our next door neighbour gets physically attacked in broad day light, we tend to close our front door and look at our wrist watch to see if it is time for the 5.30 serial..we have political parties, why political parties we have a reigning Chief Minister at the moment, who outsmarted anyone else in conveniently using the plight of the girl child to ride a popular wave and snatch a political victory, then only to forget the agonies of the girl child and relegate several of those police cases into the convenient oblivion of our collective conscious..

As a society, we have not seen a war being fought..except dawn to dusk strikes and harthals.... We have never seen even a fraction of the agonies of our freedom struggle, or taken part in any kind, yet ashamedly courageous enough declare before the masses in a self congratulatory mode the fruits of our incessant struggle..what has been our collective contribution to any cause, except certain isolated works by individuals - I wonder..

Cry thy beloved country..what else.. at least let your sins get washed off by your tears (unless they are not induced by glycerine)..

Thanks Babita for the strikingly forceful and violently forthright writing..

Saturday, October 18, 2008

എഴുത്തും സ്വാതന്ത്ര്യവും...

ഈ എഴുതുന്നതിൽ ആർക്കെന്തു തോന്നുന്നു എന്നതു് എന്റെ വിഷയം അല്ല.. അതിനോടുള്ള പ്രതികരണങ്ങൾ എന്റെ ബൌദ്ധികസ്വത്തല്ല താനും.. ഞാൻ എന്തെഴുതുന്നു എന്നതു മാത്രം ആണു് എനിക്കു സംബന്ധം.. അതെന്റെ സ്വാതന്ത്ര്യം ആണു താനും. അതിൽ ‘എന്തു കൊണ്ടു്’ ‘എന്തിനു്’ എന്നുള്ള ചോദ്യങ്ങൾ അപ്രസക്തമാണു് എന്നെ സംബന്ധിച്ചിടത്തോളം. ആ കവിത താങ്കൾ വായിച്ചതെന്തിനു്, അതിനെക്കുറിച്ചു് അങ്ങനെ എഴുതിയതെന്തിനു് എന്നു ആരെങ്കിലും നേരേ വന്നു ചോദിച്ചാൽ അതെന്റെ സ്വാതന്ത്ര്യപരിധിയിൽ വരുന്നതു കൊണ്ടു് എന്ന ഒരുത്തരമേ എനിക്കുള്ളു. ഒരർത്ഥത്തിൽ അതു മാത്രമല്ലേ ഉത്തരം ഉള്ളൂ എന്നും തോന്നാം..

ആക്ഷേപഹാസ്യങ്ങൾക്കു് മൌനം ആണു് ചിലപ്പോൾ നല്ല മറുപടി. "Silence speaks more than words can" എന്നല്ലേ പരിണതപ്രജ്ഞർ പറയാറു്...

ആനുഷങ്ഗികമായി ഇത്തിരി ഉച്ചത്തിൽ ഓർത്തു പോയി എന്നേയുള്ളൂ....

Friday, October 17, 2008

Sachin crosses Brian Lara's record!!!

As I write this, the fire-crackers at Mohali haven't yet gone mute.. and let me salute that great cricketer Sachin Ramesh Tandulkar for the feat that he's achieved in the first over after tea against Australia on day 0ne (October 17, 2008)..He has gone past Brian Lara in becoming the highest run getter in Test cricket. Now he holds all the big four records in cricket - highest run getter in Test cricket, highest run getter in One-Day International cricket, maximum number of centuries in Test cricket and maximum number of centuries in One-Day International cricket...

A big feat that...something which could get broken at some time in the future, but not an easy one to get over at that..!!!

Let me join the cricketing world, the cricketing fraternity and my fellow Indians in lauding his feat...

Saturday, October 11, 2008

Why pamper industries at the cost of agriculture? A Tata example..

It was more than a decade and a half ago, in 1992 to be precise, that I happened to hear an economist speak on 'sustainable integrated balanced development'. Just to reminisce, that was the beginning of the globalisation phase of India, probably just before India Inc. started receiving the limelight, or shall I say more positively skewed share of focus, from the powers that be. The internet boom had not yet started its ascendancy. We had just survived the fall outs from the liberation of Kuwait and the (first) Iraq war by Mr. Bush, the Senior. It was only a few months prior to that, that we'd been through the the Indian Express expose on the pawning of gold by our government under the stewardship of the then Finance Minister Yashwant Sinha, who was at that time with the Janata Dal (his pre-BJP days). Dr. Manmohan Singh (MMS) had unveiled his first budget. P. Chidambaram was commerce minister at that time. IMF doctrines had just began its influence on governmental policies.

This sets out the back drop. 

It may be just coincidental that the 'economist-speak' (which I have referred to in the opening paragraph) was in Calcutta, in Narendrapur to be more precise. It took place during a refresher course which I was attending in my then employer's training complex at Narendrapur. Among several interesting things which he shared with us, he recounted his student days at the famed Delhi School of Economics, particularly the discussions that took place with MMS himself. He was tangentially indicating that there was a gradual shift since then in the economic postulates of Dr. MMS, compared to where he was in his DSE days, and he tried to make out a case that that was possibly due to the 'learning unlearning' process he subjected himself to in his is days at Washington. He (our speaker) felt that MMS got catapaulted to a totally different kind of doctrinated pedestal after his stint with the IMF.

Let us come back to our theme. His (our speaker's) one question was - why should we give primacy to industries and particularly so, at the cost of agriculture? His argument was that stimulated economic growth derived from enhanced industrial growth in a manner out-pacing agriculture may be less meaningful to a country like India. Politicians after politicians speak about the fortunes of industrialisation, but do not spare even an iota of thought on agriculture. Unless we have a sustainable environment-friendly integrated and balanced development where the primary, secondary and tertiary sectors are given balanced focus, it can only help widen the rift between the rich and the poor. As the saying goes, how does the rich becoming richer help the poor who is left with only one option - to become only poorer. Increase in the number of millionaires is by no means a good measure of what real development is. This was the crux of his rather thought provoking speech.

However, it is nothing but a bare fact that the story is no different irrespective of whether the state is ruled by the left or the right or those who take a middle path. Let us take the Tata project which was supposed to have gone to fruition in Singur. Have we spared a thought on how much financial assistance was promised to the Tatas by the Left-controlled WB government?Here's a snap shot of some of the "highlights" of the deal.
  • Tata's investment supposedly ~ Rs. 1500 Crore.
  • Heavily subsidised lease of ~1000 acres of land to the Tata on an express way, supposedly worth upwards of Rs. 600 Crore. Here's what a 'Rediff' report says

Incidentally, land for the factory had also been provided at a subsidised rate with 645 acres being provided to Tata Motors at Rs 1 crore a year against market rate of Rs 19.3 crore a year in that area, and with 290 acres being provided for the vendor and related facilities units at Rs 23 lakh a year against a market rate of Rs 8.7 crore a year. This excluded the cost of acquisition of the land pegged at around Rs 120 crore.

  • Concessional power @ more than half of the rates charged to any high tension industrial unit, and promise of offset should the tariff increase by more than 25 paisa per KwH.
  • Soft loan to Tatas of Rs. 200 crore loaned within two months of inking the MoU in May, 2006 at an interest rate of 1% per annum repayable 21 years thence, in five equal installments. By way of aside, please do a small calculation how much this amount would grow to, if invested as an FD in a bank. On interest subsidy alone, this would mean something like Rs. 25 crores a year.
  • Reimbursement by WB government of Central Excise Duties that Tata pays for 10 years.
  • Reimbursement by WB government of all corporate income taxes in full for first five years and 30% for next five years payable by Tata.
  • All sales taxes i.e.VAT and CST collected by the Tata Motors from the customers to be kept with the Tatas for 31 years at an interest rate of 0.1% per annum!!!
  • Reimbursement by WB government of the loan interest payable by the Tatas to build the project. A 'Yahoo' group report reads thus:

This can be described in very simple words that who ever buys any car and pays
taxes on that, the money is retained by Tatas for thirty years and instead of
depositing in the exchequer within 45 or 90 days, will deposit after 31 years.
If the amount of money that the Tatas will retain during the thirty years, it
will amount to huge sums of money to which 1500 crore will look pigmy.

In addition to the above, the government would have had to open new sections within the government secretariat, only to run separate accounts for this project keeping in view the accounting complications involved in the deferment of loans, reimbursements etc. explained in the foregoing..

My initial thought on reading the related reports is - who cannot be starting and running a project given the sops and incentives? Is the public aware of all these? It is nothing but an absolute shame that nobody speaks about any of these, but will outrun the other in fixing the blame squarely on Ms. Mamta Banerjee, who for whatever reasons chose to speak for the farmers. She may have had her own political agenda behind it, but can that reason mask the facts behind the deal? And to get what benefit - tangible or intangible - in return? 

More details about these here and here. Those who are inclined can read on...

PS: It will be interesting to do some research on the specifcs behind the likes of this - say the 'Smart City' project in Kerala, and see if similar things come up there as well.....

പാവം കവിത...

മാതൃഭൂമി (86:31) ഒക്റ്റോബർ 5-11 ലക്കത്തിൽ ഒരു അനുഗ്രഹീത കവിയുടെ ‘പാവം’ എന്ന ഉദാത്ത രചന. ചില വരികൾ ഉദ്ധരിക്കാം.

“..തിടുക്കത്തിൽ ടോയ്‌ലെറ്റിൽ കയറുമ്പോഴാ‍വും
ചുവരിൽ അവ നിശ്ചലമായി ഇരിക്കുന്നതു കാണുക....
.............
‘മുട്ടലെല്ലാം‘ അതോടെ പോവും
ടോയ്‌ലെറ്റിൽ നിന്നു പുറത്തു വരും...” ഇങ്ങനെ പോവുന്നു വരികൾ..

“ഈ സിനിമ കണ്ടില്ലെങ്കിൽ നിങ്ങൾ നല്ല സിനിമ കണ്ടിട്ടില്ല“ എന്നു് പണ്ടു് സിനിമ പരസ്യ വാചകങ്ങളിൽ ധാരാളം കണ്ടിരുന്നു.. അതു പോലെ “ഈ കവിത വായിച്ചില്ലെങ്കിൽ നിങ്ങൾ ഉദാത്തമായ കവിത വായിച്ചിട്ടില്ല“ എന്നു് നിസ്സംശയം പറയാം - അല്ലേ!!

ഏതായാലും മാതൃഭൂമിയോടു നമുക്കു നന്ദി പറയണം - ഇതു വായിക്കാൻ അവസരം ഒരുക്കിയതിനു്.. ഇതിന്റെ അടുത്ത ഭാഗങ്ങൾ ഇനിയും എഴുതപ്പെടുമെന്നും അവ മാതൃഭൂമിയിൽ പ്രസിദ്ധീകൃതമാകുമെന്നും നമുക്കു പ്രത്യാശിക്കാം...

Friday, October 10, 2008

Impudence - but can that go to this extent?

Amidst the turmoils that we are witnessing day by day in the financial world, who would have expected that the American International Group (AIG) would dare throw a party at a Californian resort to celebrate US Government's bailout of their group with tax payer's money?

Please see what AIG officials have done (here) and some reactions to it (here)
WASHINGTON — Less than a week after the federal government had to bail out American International Group Inc., the company sent executives on a $440,000 retreat to a posh California resort, lawmakers investigating the company's meltdown said Tuesday.

The tab included $23,380 worth of spa treatments for AIG employees at the coastal St. Regis resort south of Los Angeles even as the company tapped into an $85 billion loan from the government it needed to stave off bankruptcy.

The retreat didn't include anyone from the financial products division that nearly drove AIG under, but lawmakers were still enraged over thousands of dollars spent on catered banquets, golf outings and visits to the resort's spa and salon for executives of AIG's main U.S. life insurance subsidiary.

"Average Americans are suffering economically. They're losing their jobs, their homes and their health insurance," House Oversight Committee Chairman Henry Waxman, D-Calif., scolded. "Yet less than one week after the taxpayers rescued AIG, company executives could be found wining and dining at one of the most exclusive resorts in the nation."
Some gory details of the spend...
Here is your hard earned tax dollars at work....

$139,375.30 for rooms. $147, 301.71 for "banquets." $1,488 for the Vogue Salon, which features manicures, pedicures and hairstyling. $6,939.09 on golf. $2,949 for tips. $5,016.32 at the Stonehill Tavern. $3,064.71 for in-room dining and the lobby lounge. That's part of the $440,000 bill from a recent weekend bash that an American International Group Inc. subsidiary threw for its top performers ........

നന്ദിയുടെ മൃഗരൂപം

ഇതു മനുഷ്യൻ പലപ്പോഴും നന്ദി പറയേണ്ട ഒരു മൃഗത്തെപ്പറ്റിയാണു് - നായ അല്ലെങ്കിൽ സാധാരണ ഭാഷയിൽ പറഞ്ഞാൽ പട്ടി.... സ്വർഗ്ഗാരോഹണ സമയത്തു് ധർമ്മപുത്രർക്കൊപ്പം ഒരു പട്ടി ഉണ്ടായിരുന്നു എന്നു് മഹാഭാരതത്തിൽ. അവസാനം വരെ നമ്മോടൊപ്പം അവനുണ്ടാവും എന്നതിന്റെ ഒരു പ്രതീകം ആവാം ആ കഥ. പട്ടിയെപ്പറ്റി കൂടുതൽ ഇവിടെ.

Thursday, October 2, 2008

Research versus Cruelty versus Ethics

Quite difficult a topic this. However, in a moral crisis, we can't but be taking sides for "..the hottest place in the hell is reserved for those who remain neutral in a moral crisis" (some say this is a quote by Dante Alighieri, and some say this quote never appeared in his works, but is an interpretation given by JFK who had a great liking for this quote)..

Is it not to cruel to do this to those closest to human beings? Please read on..

In the animal kingdom, you can't get closer to humans than chimpanzees since we share around 99 percent of the same DNA. For proponents of animal testing, that genetic proximity makes chimps prime "human models" to help find cures for the viruses and diseases that plague us. On the other hand, because they exhibit remarkably human traits, opponents believe testing and captive research represent forms of cruelty....

Gandhiji In The Context Of Globalisation – A Glance At The Ethics Of Globalisation

Last two three weeks had been quite hectic at work, so much so that getting organised mentally to go astray on blogging thoughts was quite difficult. There was one more reason, in fact, for that. My intent was to write on the Indo-US nuclear deal, but then the amount of opinionated, and many a times conflicting, information that was coming in from various sources made it rather difficult to get a firm pedestal on which to start writing from. The conflict continues still, with the left parties deciding to observe the day on which the agreement gets inked as a 'black day'. As the saying in our vernacular goes, ours is a society where sides are taken even on an issue of one beating his mother, and no wonder the polity is so wide apart on its affiliations to this deal that the hapless millions who are caught in between the two sides (those using the grey cells, perhaps?) really find it a struggle to distinguish black form the white...Anyway, few more things to read on before I ink my thoughts on that.

But then today is October 2, the day on which the greatest of Indians was born 139 years ago. Perhaps now is the time when the ordinary Indians will be missing this great man, more dearly than ever. Just thought it timely to reproduce an article that I wrote a few years ago for a souvenir that was being published by the Embassy of India here commemorating the Indian Republic day. To be honest, the write up is more of a compilation, and several publications have been relied upon, in compiling that write up.

Here goes.....

Quite oft-quoted in social and economic circles the world over, and almost clichéd as a result, is the submission that today’s is an era of globalisation, and that globalisation is here to stay, and that nations and peoples will necessarily have to go through a “learning- unlearning” process or bring about a paradigm-shift to stand up to this social, economic and irreversible inevitability. Much as strong as this argument presented by protagonists of globalization remains, there stands an “equal and opposite” reaction to it, validating yet again the famed postulates of Newtonian physics. Most of the thinking world, more so many of the NGOs, have voiced and tabled their stiff opposition to having sweeping changes under this guise. Nevertheless, there is no denying the fact that globalization, whether right or wrong, has become a defining moment in contemporary human history. Globalisation impacts every human being in every aspect of their being - ranging from the conceptual to the materialistic, from a philosophical definition of ourselves to more mundane, physical, material and down-to-earth aspects of our lives. Something loosely akin to the Industrial revolution and colonization; probably following a similar chronological sequence too.

This write up examines how Gandhiji’s views on globalisation have become crucially relevant today, as they indeed were decades ago during the colonial days. 20th century history tells us that India's Independence scripted one of the most significant defining moments in history – one that ignited a world-wide process of decolonization, probably ending with the handover of Hong Kong to China, five decades later. But almost coinciding with this period of political de-colonisation, one could see the emergence of another kind of economic transition commencing with the establishment of the “Bretton Woods” institutions, the end of the Cold war etc. – symbolically represented by the fall of the Berlin Wall or the collapse of the USSR.

A larger sweep of history could, however, indicate that the above statement may not entirely be correct. The notion that universal identities must always take precedence over particular identities can be seen to be an old one. Karl Marx identified the highest solidarity as that of man’s with his species-being. And, one could also argue that globalisation is a process that has been going on for a long time. Amitav Ghosh, in his novel “In an Antique Land”, narrates how global links had been established long ago between traders from the Middle East and Indian merchants, long before Vasco da Gama landed on the coast of Kozhikode in Kerala.

But globalisation then had a more humane face than what it has today. Since the advent of Vasco da Gama, the trade scenario changed – the links have started assuming inhumane proportions, leading to slavery, oppression, colonialism, imperialism, and above all inequality. In one view, it may look as though globalisation has expanded choices and created more goods and services for consumption, and resulted in economic expansion of various countries. However, one should not forget that while globalisation may well have expanded the economy, it has fundamentally, and often negatively, affected the conditions of production and employment. Whether this has resulted in any upliftment of the common man - the man in the streets, the man who struggles to win his bread, clothing and shelter, is very much open to question. In one sense, 'production by the masses' which provided dignity to the worker, and is more appropriate to a society with a huge population, had to make way to 'mass production', the brutally aggressive, ecologically damaging, and self-destructive product of the market forces. As Schumacher put it, it dehumanizes the labour. The market instead of being one’s servant, has become his master.

In such a scenario, where does Gandhiji’s relevance spring up? Gurudev Rabindranath Tagore, inspired by the vision and values of Gandhiji, once wrote thus in an article titled “Crisis of Civilisation”:

"We have for over a century been dragged by the prosperous West behind its chariot, choked by the dust, deafened by the noise, humbled by our own helplessness and overwhelmed by the speed. We agreed to acknowledge that this chariot-drive was progress, and the progress was civilisation. If we ever ventured to ask, `progress towards what, and progress for whom', it was considered to be peculiarly and ridiculously oriental to entertain such ideas about the absoluteness of progress. Of late, a voice (Gandhi) has come to us to take count not only of the scientific perfection of the chariot but of the depth of the ditches lying in its path."

Nothing reflects Gandhiji’s relevance in this context, better than Gurudev’s quote. To be objective, there is nothing on record to prove that he was against globalisation per se, even though anti-globalisation movements often portray him as someone who shared their ideological leanings. Nor was he against India going global. Probably, it could not have been otherwise, as he himself was a product of globalisation – having been educated in London and influenced by the lives and teachings of the likes of Jesus, Tolstoy, Thoreau and Ruskin, and having started his political activities in South Africa before he even joined the political arena in India. He is in fact seen to have stated that globalisation is no bigger a threat to India than what she faced from the Greeks, or the Huns or the British.

Moral and ethical development should go alongside economical development. This was Gandhiji’s maxim. He believed, and rightly so, that wealth amassed unethically can only make a human being poorer – probably poorer than the poorest of a man who never neglected morals despite struggling hard to make both the ends meet. He advocated that every nation should adopt and execute a development model or strategy which is suited to improving the quality of its people's life. At the same time, he would also say that economic well-being of an individual or of a society by itself need not necessarily mean high quality of life if he, or that society, stands low on the cultural-moral scale. In other words, globalisation should be rooted in ethics. The idea which is the most foundational to his developmental model is that neither in planning nor in its execution, should there be anything unethical, or which prompts, or provides an opportunity, to any participant in it to do anything unethical. It may look outlandish to be so much concerned with ethics or morality at this time because many of the so-called world leaders of today’s tend to be believing, and firmly so, that certain amount of immorality or non-ethical behaviour is unavoidable or not worth bothering about in the larger interests of development. Gandhiji however believed that true economics never militates against ethical standards. He did not distinguish much between the two in fact. To him, good ethics must make good economics, as true economics stands for social justice, and promotes the good of all equally, including the weakest.

In the globalisation models that we see galore lately, development starts from the top with the affluent – a development measure that enriches the already-rich and the affluent, with an assumption that the resultant benefits may percolate to the poor and the under-privileged. But in reality, instead of percolating, the benefits simply evaporate or get dried up before they reach the bottom rung of the ladder. In the Gandhian model, on the other hand, the development process starts with those who are at the bottom of the affluence scale, and therefore it is sure to benefit the poor, which eventually promotes social harmony which in turn will benefit the society at large.

His economic ideals were not about the destruction of machinery, but about regulation of excesses. He did object to the 'craze for machinery’- the labour-saving machinery because such machinery can help only a few to ride on the back of the millions. He did not consider profit to be necessarily unethical; instead he postulated that a businessman has the right to make profit, but he has to do so within the bounds of morality. If profit is the sole motive of an enterprise, then such a motive is sure to throw humanity out of its equilibrium. The emphasis has to be shifted back to the person rather than the product. Costs have to be measured in human terms by taking cognizance of its benefit to human beings.

Gandhiji once said “Whenever you are in doubt or when the self becomes too much for you, apply the following test. Recall the face of the poorest and weakest man whom you have seen, and ask yourself if the step you contemplate is going to be of any use to him. Will he gain anything by it? Will it restore him to a control over his own life and destiny? Will it lead to Swaraj for the hungry and the spiritually starving millions? Then you will find your doubt and your self melting away”.

No doubt - there is no better test than this that could be applied in today’s world, in today’s economic order.