Wednesday, August 20, 2014

MODI & PAKISTAN

The intention was good and the offer, probably genuine. But surely, Narendra Modi, the new Prime Minister, wouldn’t have bargained for a situation like this. In the process he had ignited the anti-Indian sentiments of the separatist Kashmiris and the Pakistanis.

The case of Pakistan is classic - a country tottering on economic collapse, shunted by countries of the world for being the sponsor of global terrorism, with huge political strife brewing internally, and the hawkish Army trying to wrest control, the situation gave the country the proverbial ‘last straw’.

Was it necessary or could the status quo have helped? We hear the BJP and the Congress wrestling it out on the media, plenty.

What are we going to do? Send the Pakistan High Commissioner back and face the same act by Pakistan in return and thereby improve the enmity into bigger scale?

One feels that The PM could have attempted the reconciliation move little later. For him there were so many other pressing matters for the country, from Policy Paralysis down, to focus upon. Knowing that the Indo-Pak relationship had never been good for more than six decades, in spite of the best attempts by many statesmen, including his own former PM; he could have aimed to attempt it a little later, after giving stability to the country.

So what is the suggestion? Now that we had decided not to talk at the Secretary level, drop the whole thing down. Do nothing. Don’t attempt anything for some time. And that includes the Hurriyat too.

The best punishment that you can meet out to someone, is to ignore him. And let it be.

IROM SHARMILA - SAINTHOOD OR MARTYRDOM?

Cruelty to fellowmen by the military of her own country, backed by its lopsided policies in the guise of security of the nation, forced her to hunger strike, to push the central government to repeal the rule.  Did she ever think that it was going to be an eternal act? The indifference of the government and her resolve of not going back until something happens, have forced her to be at it, ever!

In the process, Irom Sharmila lost her real life. She became a poster girl of the media and a role model for all such NGOs and associations that take-up issues of suppression & cruelty of the State on its citizens. Huge newsprint reams and thousands of hours of media time were spent on her.  A normal women, she was forced to spurn the love of Desmond who wanted to marry her. She hasn’t eaten solid food for 14 years and the all the pleasures of living had become a mirage to her.

What is left for Irom Sharmila now? From a living crusader, she will have to move into sainthood but posthumously. Or if she loses her life in the middle, a martyrdom!

That perfectly fits Indian political system. All political parties are looking for martyrs. From MK Gandhi downwards, we have plenty of them. But from time to time, these parties, in order to rejig its importance, need fresh martyrs. The Sharmilas of the world come handy for them.

Whose life is it anyway?

Thursday, May 22, 2014

PEOPLE, PEOPLE


NARENDRA MODI:  The Chai-wala from Mehsana, Gujrat had reached the  PM’s ‘gaddhi’ and what an accomplishment it is! Can we term the BJP getting majority to itself to rule the country, as an end to coalition politics (at least for some time)? The Indian industry is pumped up to see him in action. He could achieve what many stalwarts of BJP (who are supposed to be much higher in social order than him) could not. Surely there could be heartburns when he decides to invite his party men to join him in the Cabinet. Let us wait and see.  One suspicion on him is how he is going to appease and take the trust of Indian minority communities. They could be worried about uniform civil code, Ram temple and repealing article 370 on Kashmir etc. Knowing him, based on his performance of the past in Gujrat, one thing is certain; Narendra Modi wouldn’t be found wanting on decision making.

RAHUL GANDHI: What a whimper he turned out to be!  An abstract personality who used a queer strategy to show his connect and empathy with the poor countrymen, could not sustain the campaign which he led for the Congress Party.  With his only fame to glory being a Gandhi progeny, the man never understood the country, its people and the politics. The electorate had seen him thru finally, it seems. What a show he made, smiling to glory, addressing the Press, happily owning up the responsibility of the election debacle! Will he ever learn?  Will the country ever be saddled to bear him as its PM in future?

SONIA GANDHI: The back seat driving is over. She could relax now and look after her health. Whatever be, one should admire that the lady is sheer steel. It really takes so much of guts to be the uncrowned queen of a country where once she came in as a bride of a native. She had undergone the transformation very well. Anyone in her place could have crumbled or ran away! Not her, of course. And, surely, there is plenty to look after and the unlimited assets, movable and immovable, created by her ‘family’ preserved here and there…

PRIYANKA GANDHI: Still a stunner, she continues to be the aspiration of millions of Indians. More articulate than her brother and more connected to the masses of India, everyone felt and wanted her to be in public life, leading the fortunes of the Congress Party. It never happened that way. The country’s loss had been the gain of Vadra, someone who came out of nowhere and took her hand (and surely benefitted a lot by it). Who knows, for the Congress Party, maybe she is still the ‘reserve’. Certainly we would hear about her a lot, in time to come….

NITHISH KUMAR : As one of the Socialist thinker and follower of Jayaprakash Narain, his early political life was that of a vagabond dreamer leader. He led an uneventful life until he met his mentor Mr George Fernandez under whose tutelage he sprung up to become a visionary Railway minister of the country and with that reputation, as the progressive Chief Minister of Bihar, one the most backward of Indian States. There too he did wonders to take the state out of the clutches of Lalu Yadav’s corrupt legacy. Ambition took the better of him (he nursed strong hopes being the leader of the nation one day) and that led to his ‘fights’ with Narendra Modi and finally that led to his nemesis. Will we hear about him again? Being from a state called Bihar, it is unlikely……

RUSSI MODY: He was a colossus once, on whose shoulders rested the largest company of the largest business group of the nation. Until Ratan Tata took charge of the Tata Empire, he was the heavy weight of the group and mainly within the company and the group, his writ ran. When Ratan Tata came to the helm, his fall started. Someone who had ingrained with the Tata’s name so much, it must have taken huge efforts by him to erase the distress of rejection in the last phase of his life. After living up to a full life of 96 years, he bid farewell, before seeing his namesake take charge of the nation. Salutes to the Corporate doyen!

CAPTAIN KRISHNAN NAIR: A late bloomer in business, he had created some of the finest edifices of Indian hospitality, before he took his journey to the heavenly abode at the ripe age of 92. In that sphere in India, his name compares only with the Oberoi.  A person with childlike enthusiasm and full of vigor, he was positivity personified. While most of his enterprises are located outside the state of his birth (and wisely so), his love and concern for Kerala was always high.  Though seemingly he had achieved everything in his life, including rare recognition such as Padma Bhushan, one is not able to fathom as to what were the thoughts in his mind when his group has a debt of about INR 5000 Crores at the time of his death! We read that only Socrates the Greek thinker cleared all his debts before his death.

Thursday, May 15, 2014

HOW WOULD YOU RATE MANMOHAN SINGH?


Sardar Manmohan Sigh became the 13th Prime minister of India in the year 2004 (not chronologically but people wise) when his party leader Mrs. Sonia Gandhi, an Italian turned Indian and also the wife of slain former Prime minister Rajiv Gandhi, refused to adorn the PM Chair after the Congress winning the election that year by deposing the Bhartiya Janta Party (BJP).  For a family that ruled India for 65 % of the independent era till 2004, the sacrifice of giving away the hot seat was done by ensuring a crony PM in the seat and Manmohan Singh fitted the bill very well, for he was part of no group within congress and his loyalty to the family was absolutely TOTAL.  Also, having no political base of his own (he represented the upper house of parliament as a nominated member of Assam State), he would be in no position to usurp the so called “first family” of the country.  In comparison with other PM aspirants like Pranab Mukherji, AK antony, Arjun Singh etc., the family knew that with Singh on the chair, it would have perfect control of everything;  power, position and  money

Academically brilliant, Dr Singh did his doctorate in Economics from Oxford University. After having worked in UNCTAD for two years, he came back to India to become a professor of International trade in Delhi School of Economics. Later he became a bureaucrat as an advisor to Central Minister of Trade & Commerce and thereafter, ascended to prestigious positions as the Chief Economic advisor to the Country’s Finance Minister, Governor of Reserve Bank of India and the coveted post of Deputy Chairman of Indian Planning Commission!  When Narasimha Rao became the Prime Minister of India in the year 1991, he handpicked Manmohan Singh as his finance minister. The peculiarity of India’s economic position then demanded a forward thinking economist to change the financial fortunes of the country and as finance minister of India, Singh truly did wonders by opening up Indian economy and also by ensuring fastest economic growth for the nation from then on. One could easily give him full credit of bringing financial independence to Indians who otherwise languished so poorly in a closed up economy dictated by socialistic democratic (!) norms.

All the while as a minister, he was always very calm, never was part of group politics in Congress Party (for which the party is very famous) and he never blew his own trumpet. He was completely obedient to his political masters. And his integrity was unquestionable. Lo and behold, Madam Gandhi gave the hot seat away by gifting it to Manmohan Singh, knowing fully well that he would completely be loyal to the family, come what may! This consistent, dogged loyalty gave him 10 years as the Prime Minister of India. While he allowed the back seat driving pleasures to Sonia Gandhi, in his own way, he tried to grow the country. In his first term, the nation grew very well and as a result, the people rewarded the Congress to return to power after the elections for another five years. Nobody would ever refute that it is only thanks to the good governance delivered to the country that Manmohan Singh was returned to power for another term, a feat other than Nehru, no PMs could achieve, in independent India.

However, nothing went well in his second term. It is not that he became complacent but many elements worked against him. The power of coalition politics was at its best wherein the regional parties such as DMK, TMC etc. made merry.  Within his own party, a level of political polarization took place in favour of Rahul Gandhi, the son of the Congress President and he had to live with two masters than one. The Rahul Gandhi factor led to many embarrassments and humiliations to Mr Singh.  The cancer of corruption, both within Congress and the various ministries, destroyed the credibility of his rule during the second term. His own health was not at its best. The multitudes of scams never allowed the smooth functioning of the Parliament and governance went into disarray. Everything in the country needed a judicial intervention.  The people’s movements led by Anna Hazare and Kejariwal added to his agony. Practically his second term saw complete policy paralysis within the country. Its’ growth suffered, inflation grew, Rupee failed and CAD went astray.

In the last year, the Prince in waiting took control of the party and tried to fight the election with a different perspective. But the damage was already done. While writing this, the Election results are yet to be announced but it is expected that the Congress would get the worst drubbing of its existence and the NDA led by BJP is expected to ascend to power. That is where things lay as of now.

How would posterity remember Manmohan Singh ?  A weak Prime Minister or someone for whom the circumstances didn’t help to emerge as a great PM?

On the plus side, his contributions to the economic growth of the country both as FM and later as PM, will ever be remembered. As PM, he also looked at welfare of the downtrodden with great concern. Several programs such as MNREGS, Food Security Bill etc. were carved out to help the rural, unemployed, poverty stricken countrymen.  He took India to higher levels in world order (e.g. G20). His integrity and character were impeccable (something we can seldom speak about all those great personalities of the country).

On the minus side, he was tied down by the party boss and the coalition polity. There were only a few instances of him putting his foot down on policy making (e.g. Nuclear Bill). He never could wade thru the quagmire, byzantine, ever-shifting political currents around him and many times suffered in the process. His communication, bodily and orally, was never inspiring.

His is a case of a well-meaning, straight forward, brilliant academician and bureaucrat of high integrity turning out as a Destiny’s child. As a professor in DSE, he would never have thought adorning the PM’s hot seat, ever in his life. There were several provocations on him during his PM ship that would have resulted in a man of high self-esteem throw away and walk out. He was forced to eat humble pie many times. But he swallowed all of it and held on to his chair. Why, you may ask.

For an Economics professor who had come to enjoy all those frills associated with power (PM’s perquisites, foreign sojourns, position and equation with global statesmen),  Manmohan Singh would have thought to give them higher weightage than the pricking ego bashings that he had endured. I am sure, he would have taken it as occupational hazard!

Time will tell about him, wait and see………………………

Tuesday, March 18, 2014

WHATEVER WILL BE, WILL BE


It is said that the first feeling that a child encounters, is FEAR. It starts with the fear of sound, to fear of falling to so many other fears.

As the child grows, he learns to be rationale, to reason out with many of the feelings including fear, rage, anxiety etc. However in some form, certain lurking fears stay inside. Anxieties on whether one would make out in the exams, in marriage, in career, in career etc. grow to disturb one’s state of mind.

By simply fearing and being anxious, we are only letting these emotions stay and grow inside us, to take over us. In order to overcome it, we need to come to terms with it. And that is the key.

Instead of being afraid of things, we need to think and understand as to what we need to be the outcome for us  and work towards letting it happen. The beauty of any effort is that it would produce results. Once the efforts are rendered with positive thoughts of the outcome, it would happen, surely.

This understanding and the confidence can reduce many anxieties that we continuously keep and worry about.

Remember, nothing is stationery. Things are always moving and changing. In the change and move, positive outcomes are very much possible. If only we have the trust and put the efforts.

Worry is the worst thing to keep! Consciously, one needs to come out of it. Positive thoughts and earnest efforts are the only solution to it.

Remember, whatever will be, will be.  So why worry and allow it to kill you.

IT IS SMALL THINGS THAT GIVE BIG HAPPINESS


Life is the sum total of transactions, experiences and learnings.  It is only natural that a true understanding of the life comes in only when one traverses at least half the distance.

With the hormones pumping, at the youth stage we are normally aggressive. With the increasing materialism, we initially look at life for positions, power and money.

However, any amount of power, money and position will not deliver happiness unless you are tuned towards happiness. Power, positions and money are not synonymous with happiness. They are considered to be the means to that, as per the materialistic thinking.

See the case of Princess Diana (God save her soul), married to  the ruling monarch in waiting who was rich beyond, she had everything going for her, money, power and position. Look at how her life ended up at!

After our marriage, when we rented out a small house to live, we planted several marigold plants in the garden and it blossomed big, giving such a fantastic, colorful view to everyone; us, neighbors, passersby - all. We derived so much of happiness seeing the flowers. So did we derive happiness when we travelled together in buses, jeeps and rikshaws soaking in the thrill of the experiences there-in. These were truly small things. If we had considered them small and insignificant, and if we were not tuned towards them, the happiness would have eluded us, for sure.

Saying a good morning, giving a helping hand, thanking someone for a good deed, feeding a hungry; all these are happiness providers. These are small, small things. But happiness that they deliver are immense. Only, we need to be tuned towards it.

Happiness is a state of mind. It comes from deep within. It needs tuning and it needs an attitude to create.

Look for happiness in small small things. Create those occasions in plenty. Do soak in the bliss it delivers!

IT IS IMPORTANT TO LIVE WELL TODAY


We can only live in the present.

 The present is so dynamic that it becomes past immediately. It depends upon in what haste we view our present. It could be microsecond, millisecond, second, minute, hour, day or week. The fact is every second passes by to become ‘past’. So, the present is eve- changing. True, change is the only constant at present.

 In these times, when everything happens in nanosecond, the past alone does not lead to the present. Past is passé. With the dynamic intensity of change being so high, we simply cannot live by the past. Past is only indicative, it is not a determinant.

Future truly beckons. Future is where the hope lay. Future therefore, is very aspirational. We look at future with all the positive yearnings. Future is what we are always on the lookout for.

Bad experience of the past and worries of the future can only spoil the present. When we don’t live well in the present, neither will we have a good past nor a hopeful future.

A good present makes a good past. A good past gives a positive indication for the future. Present lived well, not only makes a good past but a great hope for the future.  THE PRESENT IS MEANT TO LIVE WELL, THAT WILL MAKE THE PAST GOOD AND THE FUTURE GREAT.

And that is why we call it present, for present is a GIFT to us, to live well, positively  and happily.

Monday, March 3, 2014

THE ALL POWERFUL ‘PATRIOTIC’ COMPANY; FINALLY GETTING CAUGHT


He was every body’s man. Irrespective of political ideologies, he was every party’s favorite. He is ‘Dada’; the big brother to all.  He advertises Bharat Mata as his mother. His hospitality is legion. His company sponsors Indian Cricket team, Hockey team and many more. His Son’s marriage was attended by the entire Bollywood, transported to Lucknow by charter flights.  From a Peerless employee, Subroto Roy had come a long way. Today he jets around the world and buys up global companies with global finance. He had a say in many matters of the nation. He is deemed respected by all and sundry. Though the corporate name of his company resonates the largest desert on planet earth, actually the name Sahara in Hindi means something that stand by you, some sort of a major help.

One had always wondered where did it all start!  This group always had huge quantum of funds available with it at all times.  Mostly it has been ‘benami’ investment, coming from corrupt politicians belonging to all parties of the nation. This group has been laundering money for close to three decades, with absolute impunity.  No wonder he was the darling of the powers that be. And no wonder every rule of the nation was bent to accommodate his wishes. The finance company’s business has been either MLM (multilevel marketing)  or Ponzy models which is not on the right side of the law.

Things came to such a head that the company floated many group companies and started collecting money from the masses (or in that pretext) with absolute disregard for the law of the land. Mind you, over the last two decades SEBI and RBI have been watching many financial companies undergoing meteoric growth. Sahara evaded the radar for very long, of course under the connivance from his friends in power.

It took an upright Civil Servant from Kerala (Dr K.M. Abraham, presently Additional Chief Secretary of the Govt. of Kerala) while he was the Executive Director of SEBI, to find out the company undertaking illegal means to float debentures without  taking permission from the regulators. Meticulous study and analysis by him over a period of time unsheathed the company’s ploy of amassing INR 20,000 Crores . Sahara group tried all it’s trick to get off SEBI’s clutches. Persistent and diligent follow up SEBI Chairman and the Supreme Court of India had now finally nailed the Chairman of this Group, Mr Subroto Roy. After evading arrest, he finally surrendered to the police and is now kept in police custody. He employs the finest and costliest legal brains to fight his cases (lawyers such as Ram Jetmalani!). But I feel that the nemesis is catching up with him now. One cannot say anything yet, with powerful friends in all walks of life, one wouldn’t be surprised if he goes scot free.

The judiciary played a major role in catching the Group. At this point in time, in India only Judiciary could do such an act as our executives and bureaucracy had completely lost its teeth.

These are case studies of how corruption permeates in all walks of life and how people at high places evade law and engage in fraudulent activities under the cloak of Patriotism.

One thing is sure. What goes around, has to come around. It is only a matter of time.

Saturday, March 1, 2014

ENABLING INDIA; EXPLORING OPPORTUNITIES


It is well-known that progress and growth of a nation not only depend on economic factors but the political, cultural and geographical factors as well. Additionally, it depends on many external factors in which the country may not have any control. The last four to five years of the Indian story is intertwined with both the global and the internal challenges. Global meltdown & Eurozone crisis had well augmented to the coalition political pressures that the Governments have been undergoing here. Further, corporate greed, corruption, nepotism and collusion between executives and the corporates; and the resultant policy paralysis had negated our forward movement considerably. Industrial slow down, unemployment, and inflation too had added to our agony. The year 2012 and 13 had been extremely bad for the country. It is in this background that we are now exploring the opportunities to enable India to surge forward.

Enabling India

It is very critical to have a positive ambience prevailing across, to enable growth. The confidence of the populace is a major factor for them to get empowered. Though currently there is nothing to write home about in this front, it is hoped that the impending national election could turn things for the better. The country is seriously looking forward to a stable, strong government at the center, to enable the nation. While it is anybody’s guess, if the leading political parties of the country go by their past experience in handing coalition, there would be good learning to manage the political equations. It is imperative that we need to have a stable government, if we have to grow as we did in the nineties and beyond till the last three years. Experience suggests us to keep our fingers crossed!

Exploring opportunities

While every difficulty brings down the confidence of the nation, it poses an opportunity for us to catch on.  What is important is to identify and tap the opportunity. These opportunities may not expose themselves well to be seen and therefore one needs to search for it and bring it out of the quagmire of complexities under which it lay. It is easier said than done but the indications would be there and an experienced eye could decipher it.  In order to do so, let us look at the following inputs and see if  the inputs help us identify the opportunities that we get to tap, for the country to progress better.

India’s Demographic dividend

No nation in the world has the level of demographic advantage that India has and that is its youth population that the nation possesses. India has more than 50% of its population below the age of 25 and more than 65% below the age of 35. It is expected that, by the year 2020, the average age of an Indian will be 29 years, compared to 37 for China and 48 for Japan and still higher for America & Europe. That is the people at their productive best. To get them into employment and entrepreneurship is the major task. Not everybody is equipped with the skills and knowledge for getting into employment and business. For a country which lives in the villages, among our youth, large percentage belong to lowest educational and technical skill level, for taking up meaningful employment. Thus, skill development becomes the single most important means to enable India’s youth. Our institutions meant for imparting skills loitered a lot during the last 3 decades. Whereas countries like China had developed close to five thousand distinct skills for its people to get employed, the Indian story is very dismal. It has to be the top most national agenda for India to develop and impart skills to the youth for making them employable.

Entrepreneurship

Undoubtedly, the corner stone of any nation’s economic progress is the entrepreneurship that happens within it.  Entrepreneurship is all about creating value and through which, creating wealth and distributing the same, of course staying within the ambit of our laws. The last two decades saw the start and mushrooming good number of IT and software companies in India and it had brought laurels to the country, not to speak of the high export growth we achieved with it. Employment possibilities also increased in this sector. We now need to replicate this story in other verticals; be it in service sector or manufacturing. For a nation of more than a billion people, we still need many more productive enterprises to cater to the needs of its citizens. While enterprises are concentrating on meeting the requirements of the middles class and high class categories of the society, it is at the bottom of the pyramid (BoP) that the entrepreneurial opportunities abound. To many segments of Indian society, which is predominantly agrarian in nature, entrepreneurship is a taboo. Risk averse population looks forward to jobs than being entrepreneurial. It is a cultural aspect that we need to overcome. Such cultural changes have to be brought about by recognizing and celebrating entrepreneurship. From the school level onwards children must be made aware of the possibilities of entrepreneurship. They should read, hear from and get inspired by the stories of successful entrepreneurs, say the Narayana Murthys of the world.

MSME & Start-ups

The story of MSME is nothing but the extension of entrepreneurship. Almost close 40 percent of the manufacturing in India takes place in MSME and this sector is the largest employer in the country, after agriculture. As most of the enterprises start-up in the Micro and Small sector, adequate attention is required to MSME. Nurturing a startup is the beginning of developing an enterprise.  It has to be an ongoing endeavor to motivate, train and assist people to start-up their enterprises. Funding and marketing are critical for the proliferation SME companies. While financial institutions speak a lot about giving assistance SME sector, in real sense, it is nothing much. Separate SME centric policies, though exist now, the implementation of the same is not done with the sincerity that it deserves.

Manufacturing

It has been the strategic achievement of rich nations over the last several hundred years to create a high-quality manufacturing sector in order to develop national wealth and power. As indicated by the rise of the US, Germany, Japan and the USSR in the 20th century, to the newly industrializing countries like Korea, Taiwan, and now China; manufacturing has been the key to prosperity.

The most powerful nations in the world are those that control the bulk of the global production of manufacturing technology. That is, it isn’t enough to have factories that produce more goods, it is important to have to know-how to make the machinery that makes the goods. The key to power, therefore, is to make the means of production. About 80% of the world’s production of factory machinery has been controlled by the great industrialized nations. The growth of manufacturing machinery output and technological improvements in that machinery; are the main drivers of economic growth. So in order to improve and our manufacturing capability we should master the art making the production machinery ourselves and greater attention needs to be put in this area.

Research & Development

It must be clearly understood that future economic progress will be driven by the invention and application of new technologies. Research & Development has to be major area of spending, in order to develop and drive the new technologies. Private sector firms are prone to focus their R&D on applied projects, where the payoff in terms of profit is likely to go only to them. Industry does not undertake broad R&D for the general benefit of the nation. In contrast, Governments can sponsor the basic research projects that seek wide ranging scientific understanding that can impact entire industries. Globally, government research funding has been critical to many technologies of everyday importance. Many of the government-sponsored technological advances have been instrumental in driving economic growth and raising the living standards for the citizens. It had created new industries and high paying jobs that have benefitted a wide-range of regional, state and local economies.

It is very unfortunate that the India’s role in R&D and innovation has been dismal, particularly in the industrial, technological, medical and agricultural front, notwithstanding the umpteenth number of national laboratories that are operated across the nation. These research centers today dwell as white elephants that consume the national wealth without creating anything worthy enough innovation to benefit the country and its people. There sure exist opportunities for India in R&D.  R&D delivers the knowledge that is of highest economic value and the knowledge, that is otherwise called as ‘intellectual property’, can go a long way in establishing leadership in many spheres.

Agriculture

Agriculture in India is the means of livelihood for almost two thirds of the workforce of the country. It has been India's most important economic sector. Though the role of agriculture as a percentage of our GDP is diminishing gradually and secondary and tertiary sector are growing up considerably, it has to be understood that great majority of Indians;  particularly those in the rural sector, which is considerably large in number,  agriculture continues to be their means of existence.  Most of the agricultural land is in the form of small holding owned by impoverished farmers who, even after 65 years of Independence, are still at the mercy of the Monsoons with no scientifically implemented irrigation or water management policies laid out for them. Access to credit is very poor and most of them are controlled by loan sharks. Middlemen plays huge role in reaching the agricultural produce to market, thereby taking away the real profits of the efforts from the cultivators.

Women employment in Agriculture is high. Looking from a gender perspective too, women and self-help groups formed by them benefitting out of the agricultural activity, should be considered as true empowerment of them.  Really, plenty of opportunities exist in the sector which has been yearning for good leadership to come by to help them out.

Whither India?

The attempt so far has been to bring out the areas where opportunities exist in plenty. As mentioned, every difficulty offers an opportunity. The planners and managers of the country in various sectors may have to peer through the situations, in order to identify and tap the opportunities that lie under. The country has to shake off its complacency and indulge in positive policy making not only for the welfare of its citizens but for the economic progress that every society need to achieve. For a complex nation such as ours, the efforts and plan may have to be much more than the normal, for us to catch up the opportunities that would enable and empower our denizens. Let us remember, we are the creators of our own destiny and therefore the dream, the thought, the realization and the efforts have to come from within. Good luck to us!

Sunday, January 19, 2014

WANTING TO HAVE THE CAKE AND EAT IT TOO


Handsome person, celebrity author, central minister, former UN honcho, global citizen,  richie rich, intellectual and above all orator par excellence.  Really he is everything rolled into one. Very rarely could we see such a personality. For ordinary mortals, he is such an enviable proposition. And then, he adds a trophy wife, a vivacious beauty of Kashmiri origin (the Kashmiri penchant is strong, for his first wife was half Kashmiri).  A person of her own mite, who had seen enough, dealt with many powers that be, a true global socialite whose presence every man worth his salt would cherish.

And they were supposed to live happily ever after.

And that is not be! His troubles started with that. He lost his minister-ship, People of his own party started plotting against him but he had enough ampere to regain the lost glory to come back as a minister. She lost the sweat equity from Rendezvous consortium. Once the passion of the marriage was over, fissures developed. She suspected his roving eye, for him a ‘thing of beauty is a joy forever’. He not only wanted physical companionship but intellectual companionship too.  Probably she couldn’t have given the latter. When he got caught in intellectual companionship with beautiful women, she was distressed. To add to that she had this secret illness, something so bad,  that could damage her long term.  It looks like she never trusted him with beautiful mature women. She went into depression, physical exhaustion and created enough tantrums in the social media, did her bit of interviews with the press and then, she is gone, forever, to nether world, never to return!

The inquest and the autopsy say it is ‘sudden unnatural death’. He is devastated. The media is now going all over with so many theories and rumours. The opposition is clamoring for his ouster from the cabinet. Things aren’t looking good for him.

It is noticed that people who are writers, artists, intellectuals etc., there is a maverick aspect that becomes very pronounced in their behavior and often that also becomes their Achilles heel. Is there anything like that in him? Is it the roving eye? Or is it the need intellectual companionship with beautiful mature women? Or is it both put together?

Washing dirty linen in public isn’t the right thing, we all know. But today, Social media enables that on a very high degree. One of the causes that accentuated the distress and the depression in her is the social media. How many more celebrity lives will the Twitters and the Facebook take further? We will wait and see.

For him, it is time to take stock. For a public figure, a politician and central minister, certain discretion is a must. Too much of transparency and the naivety displayed in emails and twitter must be regulated (remember the ‘cattle class’ tweet!).  And before tying the knot again, he need to decide what types of companionship is needed for him.

Because he has to realize, ‘you can’t have  the cake and eat it too’.