Wednesday, December 7, 2011

FDI IN RETAIL: IMPLICATIONS

Hey! With the FDI in retail creating a huge controversy, I'd like all opposing the government's decision to consider this. PLEASE.

SOURCE: HINDUSTAN TIMES.

An amazingly well-written article lays bare all the facets of this decision and the counter effects of implementing it. go ahead and give it a reading.

ONLY THE UNPATRIOTIC WILL OPPOSE FDI IN RETAIL!

Short sighted! Self-seeking! Cynical! Even unpatriotic!

That’s the only way to describe the opposition of the BJP, the Left and sections of the UPA to the imminent entry of large global retailers into the country.

Consider this: almost everyone and his uncle opposed computers when they were introduced in a big way in the 1980s. And most politicians resisted economic liberalisation half a decade later.

Imagine what would have happened if they had had their way.

* We would not have been an IT superpower;

* Infosys Technologies, TCS and Wipro wouldn’t have been the blue-chip generators of millions of jobs they are today;

* Our economy would not have been the toast of the world; and

* We would have remained the Third World basket case we were in the first four-and-a-half decades of Independence.

Those of you who are 40-plus will remember what the (then strong) Left, the (still minuscule) Right and parts of the (Left-leaning) centre had said computers would do to the Indian job market when, in the mid-1980s, Rajiv Gandhi spoke of taking India into the 21st century.

I still remember one speech by Jyoti Basu, the chief minister of my native state, sometime in 1985 or 1986.

“The Left Front would never allow computers to be introduced in India,” he thundered at yet another half-a-million-strong rally that brought Kolkata to yet another grinding halt on a working day, “because one computer can do the job of four people. Computers will throw Indian workers out of jobs and fill the coffers of imperialism (IBM was then almost synonymous in India with the clunky monochrome desktops that were making waves around the world).”

Cut to 2006: Basu’s handpicked successor Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee won a landslide in the assembly elections promising to usher in, among other things, a computer revolution in the state.

“We made a mistake earlier by opposing computers,” the CPI(M) admitted.

Result: Millions of young boys and girls, as well as dozens of entrepreneurs, in Bengal who could have been at the cutting edge of India’s tech revolution, are today leading mediocre lives as lower division clerks, sales reps of companies based elsewhere or as part of a vast army of frustrated educated unemployed.

When Dr Manmohan Singh ushered in economic liberalisation in 1991, the same prophets of doom predicted that Indian industry would be swamped by MNCs.

What does the report card say after 20 years?

* The Tatas, Birlas, Reliance and other Indian business groups have become world-beating MNCs in their own right;

* The MNCs, which were supposed to take over India, are nowhere in sight;

* India is now the second-fastest growing big economy in the world and a toast of the world;

* 300 million Indians have pulled themselves out of socialist drudgery into the burgeoning middle class;

* The 2.5-3.5% (so-called) Hindu rate of growth that the socialist intellectual elite had condemned the country to is now a distant memory;

* Even worst-case scenarios predict a 7%+ rate of GDP growth.

The Left’s opposition to FDI in retail is understandable – albeit cynical. They will oppose anything that their dog-eared, and completely outdated, Holy Book disapproves of.

Then, the politics of aspiration – as opposed to the politics of grievance of earlier decades – as a result of rising income levels and greater exposure to the world, have driven away two key Left constituencies – the youth and the middle class.

The CPI(M), groping desperately for relevance and a constituency in 21st century India, realises that the raison d’etre for its existence will disappear if this new circle of prosperity expands to encompass the semi-urban middle-class and the rural poor.

Many old-school Congressmen and some UPA allies like Mamata Banerjee, too, have not been able to shed their instinctive ideological opposition to free markets – as well their fondness for the politics of patronage.

Hence, their strident opposition to the move!

But why on earth is the BJP, which has a stellar track record of pushing reforms when in power, opposing FDI in retail? Could it be because several leaders are jockeying for pole position in the “party with a difference” and all of them feel competitive populism over this emotive issue can take them over the finish line? Hopefully, better sense will prevail after the initial cacophony has subsided.

After a long time, the UPA government seems to have overcome the paralysis that had set in and come out with a bold step to take the country forward.

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

INTERPRETATION OF FREEDOM.

Well folks, my blog "Freedom of Speech" mentions a very strong, yet important word of the English language. "Freedom"! And as we approach the day our country achieved freedom against the British raj, i had to write a post about it. Different people across the world interpret this word in different forms. I read this story a really long time back but it is somehow etched in my memory since it taught me a profound meaning of the word!
An English gentleman decided to take a walk in a park, one fine day. As he was in good spirits, he started twirling his umbrella around as he strolled down the path in the park. Unfortunately, the umbrella ended up smacking another pedestrian on the nose, and the second gentleman was understandably very upset about this. When the injured man took up the issue with the first man, the first man said "I have the freedom to walk around in a public place in any manner i choose fit.” The second man replied, "Sir, your freedom ends where my nose begins."
This particular story redefines the word freedom for me. My rights should not hamper the way in which another person is accommodating his. Freedom has been a rallying call for reformers and revolutionaries throughout human history. The passion and sacrifice poured into that cause has however, not been based on any general consensus about the definition of the term. Almost the first thing to strike any student of the subject is the bewildering variety of concepts, social constructs and meanings that have become attached to this single emotive word. This is an issue in human history far too important to be ignored. An attempt must therefore be made to build the idea anew on the base of an acceptance of the axioms and choice of the dogma, and on the principles and aim of the society that arise from those decisions. The principle establishes that our survival both as individuals and as a species depends on our willingness to co-operate with one another, and to accept and maintain the degree of social order that makes a mutually supportive communal life possible. If it is to be consistent in its teachings therefore, the society should hold that freedom can only be enjoyed under conditions of social order compatible with that principle. The society will always teach that without stable social order no-one can hope to live long enough, or have sufficient liberty from the struggle to ensure the infinite survival of our species, to be fully free. This defines the word “freedom” for me!

Saturday, June 11, 2011

IF ONLY.....


She came out of the house
remembering her childhood
when she played with dolls
wishing "if only i could"

she had cried bitterly
'coz of continuous blabbering
and then she realized her childhood dream
"if only i could sing"

the day had been a tiresome one
working, cleaning dishes
but she occasionally dozed off
wishing "if only i could recall those wishes"

only days had passed since she got married
but treated like a maid
her in-laws butchered her gruesomely
all she wished
"if only these memories could fade."

she remembered her parents
and her playhouse shack
but sitting under the kitchen roof
she wished "if only i could get those days back."

days went by, months went by
and so did years
her pain had turned to agony
agony to tears.

those tears made her frail
and weak
but her values taught her
to be gentle and meek.

and now hanging by the fan
with a note in her hand
her in-laws rest in jail
cursing those "torturous days"

the girl's dreams left with an "IF"
none of them fulfilled
to condemn such acts
the field of knowledge has to be tilled!

GIRL CHILD


The tender cry
on the soft pillow
drifts away the heart
far below

finding it might be difficult
as the heart drifts away
but killing the child forever
is a sin committed today

girl child, yes
is whom i'm talking about
but you don't care
as you yourself act as a lout

the poor soul
cant say a word
but hopes to fly away from you
like a bird

high up in the sky
will it soar
but you kill it
without a feeling in your heart's core

sons are all
you wish to have buddy
but killing the child,
is an act fuddy-duddy!

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