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Tuesday, January 13, 2015

Jan 13 2015 : The Economic Times (Delhi)
BY INVITATION - A New Year Wish for More Decentralisation


There is a pressing need to focus on imparting technical skills while respecting serial failure
In the wake of the January burst of optimism, let's make a wish list of [economic transformations].The world today is, in many respects, better than that of our grandparents, except for the vulnerability. The very technologies that improved the lives of millions have the side effects of bringing unprecedented fragility into the system. Never before has the world been so interconnected, with the consequences that small disturbances in one place can lead -very rapidly -to large effects in another, or even generalised cascades. Furthermore, never have we been less robust in the face of disorder, with institutions that operate brilliantly in normal times, but aren't equipped to confront the new conditions. This is a byproduct of efficiency: an electronic tablet compresses more information than a book, but it breaks more easily.
The good news is that we know what works best under random events -and what is antifragile, that is, can actually benefit from disorder.
The first wish is to have more decentralisation, a distribution of decision making across as many centres as possible, both at the administrative and economic level.We have lived since modernity under the illusion that centralisation is better, more “efficient“, that the large works better than the small, and that the reduction of the numbers of decision-makers improves stability.
However centralisation, while making systems less noisy, causes them to be less opportunistic, less capable of changing direction, and worsens their performance at times of crisis.
In fact, government decentralisation would help reduce public deficits. Large public projects, under the myth of costs savings, appear to incur disproportionately large costs overruns. Size produces visible benefits but also hidden risks; it increases exposure to large losses.
This wish translates into a principle of maximal effective diversification and decentralisation, which, when applied to administrations, is similar to that of “subsidiarity“ which helped the Catholic Church survive two millennia.Nothing in a hierarchy should be done at a higher level if it can be effectively managed at a lower one.The principle doesn't mean that some things should not be centralised: the military, for example, cannot be effectively decentralised, except for guerilla warfare.
Compare canton-based decision making in Switzerland or the federal system in Germany to the centralised regimes in Soviet Russia and Baathist Iraq and Syria. In fact, historically, both Pharaonic Egypt and Imperial China achieved success prior to the centralisation around scribes and scholars, not after, when they fell apart. The Roman empire, on the other hand, was maximally decentralised.
The distribution of decisions and projects across as many units as reasonable reinforces the system by spreading errors. Uniformity is risky: while, for instance, monoculture seems more efficient and a more stable form of agriculture, such concentration makes the system more prone to consequential trauma, “Black Swans“ such as the Irish potato famine of the 19th Century. Oil-dependent countries such as Saudi Arabia and Venezuela are currently getting a crash course on that.
Decentralisation leads to smaller, more adaptable companies -In Germany it led to the rise of midsize companies, the Mittelstadt, which have fueled the latest economic performance. A centralised state is more vulnerable to lobbyists giving an advantage to the bailout-prone large corporations.
Further decentralisation reduces the risk of coups -Italy's distribution of power prevented it from falling into dictatorship, as Greece did in the 1960s. It also curtails ethnic violence -as shown by complexity specialist Yaneer Bar-Yam, good fences make good neighbours.
The second wish is for economies to focus on technical skills, instead of formal higher education. Rich countries with highly educated populations became rich first, with education catching up. What these countries had was down-toearth practical skills. Germany, ever so robust, has nearly half its youth undergoing some apprenticeship -learning real, useable, things. Beyond a point, education decreases entrepreneurial risk taking -the good kind of tinkering-style risk taking with small downside that has generated wealth since the Industrial Revolution. Just imagine what would have happened if Bill Gates, Steve Jobs, Marc Zuckerberg, and Larry Ellison stayed in school -and ended up as lawyers or consultants. We know that higher education increases the income of a family but it does not increase that of a country -label education is helpful for employment in bureaucracies and large mature corporations, and the parent's ego. Even doctors are trained according to an apprenticeship mode under the cover of science.
The third, associated wish is for culture shift in favour of serial fail ure. Industries that perform the best -such as technology -are those in which failure is a badge of honour. “Fail fast“ is the mode of Silicon Valley, and places like Japan and France where failure carry a stigma are doomed.
The final wish is to have more long term stability via less overstabilisation: the 2008 crisis resulted from a US Federal Reserve providing cheap money to stifle economic volatility which, ironically, led to the accumulation of hidden risks in the economic system. Preventing severe crises may be necessary; preventing fluctuations is not recommended. For it is during economic fluctuations that evolutionary pressures in an economy clean up the dead wood and opens up opportunities for newcomers -systematic stabilisation disadvantage entrepreneurs in favour of established large corporations fit for yesterday, not tomorrow.
I have more wishes, but I leave these for 2016.
A derivatives traderrisk taker for 20 years, Nassim Nicholas Taleb is an essayist, scholar, statistician and risk analyst. He is the author of the Incerto (The Black Swan, Fooled by Randomness, and Antifragile), a multivolume philosophical essay on uncertainty.

Jan 13 2015 : The Times of India (Delhi)
Addicted to net? You may have `netbrain' disorder
London
THE INDEPENDENT


Smartphone Users 3 Times More Likely To Get Affected
About 11% of British adults suffer from `netbrain' -a disorder caused by overuse of the internet -and may show narcissism, distraction and fear of missing out, a new study has found.Those suffering from `netbrain' are more likely to be found gambling online, socialising on social networks and playing video games, researchers said.
The affliction is said to affect 5.7 million British adults, or 11% of the population -the same proportion that suffers from dyslexia, researchers added.
Smartphone owners are nearly three times more likely to have netbrain and those suffering from the condition are nearly four times more likely to exhibit anti-social behaviour than those who do not, `The Times' reported.
Nearly a third of adults aged between 18 to 34 suffer from `netbrain' disorder, compared with 11% of 35 to 54-year-olds and 4% of those aged over 55, according to a study of 1,000 people conducted by VisualDNA, a London-based technology and psychometrics company , and University College London.
WhatsApp gets 700m users, beats texting
People now send 50% more messages over WhatsApp than texts -and the rise looks set to continue. WhatsApp now has 700 million users sending 30 billion messages per day, it said last week.That is in comparison with about 20 billion messages a day sent over SMS, according to analysis by Benedict Evans. The increasing gap between WhatsApp and texting in market has seen a decline in texting since about 2011. WhatsApp is rumoured to be adding a Skype-like video calling feature as part of its plan for growth.
A phone battery that gets charged in 2 min
An Israeli start-up has designed a new ultra-fast smartphone battery that can be fully charged in less than two minutes. The battery, made by StoreDot, has slightly shorter life, but can still last about five hours on a two minute charge.Rather than trying to improve the capacity of the battery itself, the company redesigned the internal structure of the battery so it can charge rapidly, Mashable reported.By cutting charging time down, the final product will have a recharge time of under two minutes, StoreDot CEO Doron Myersdorf said.
Jan 13 2015 : The Times of India (Delhi)
Out of 3L MBA grads every year, only 10% are employable: Experts
Coimbatore:


Reason Said To Be Lack Of Global Skills
India produces about three lakh management graduates every year, but hardly 35,000 of them are employable, said experts who gathered here for a conference of B-school heads.According to All India Council for Technical Education (AICTE), 3,54,421 students enrolled for MBA in 3,364 institutions across the country last year. Speaking to TOI at the southern regional round table conclave of business school directors and deans, J Philip, former director of IIM-Bengaluru said, “Today , the requirement of managerial candidates in the Indian market is between 35,000 and 40,000 every year.There are two reasons for unemployment: Lack of global skills and excess supply.“ Philip said India is probably the only country that could help supply managers to European countries and Japan. “Most countries in Europe are facing a crunch,“ said Philip, who is now the director of Xavier Institute of Management and Entrepreneurship, Bangalore.
An expert, who did not wish to be named, said, “Around year 2000, there were about 10 world class business schools in India.Now we have 25, but we have a long way to go. We need an industry-oriented syllabus and interaction with industry to improve employability .“
Parag Kalkar, director of Singhad Institute of Business Administration and Computer Application, Pune said in the past 10 years the number of management institutes in the country has doubled.“While the previous central governments have aimed at reaching the global enrolment ratio for higher education (27%), AICTE has randomly allowed institutes of engineering,“ Kalkar said.
According to AICTE, the number of management institutions have risen from 2,614 in 2006-07 to 3,364 in 2013-14. While the numbers have continuously risen until 2011-12, at least 71 institutes shut shop in 2012-13 and 107 in 2013-14.
Kalkar added, “While quantity has improved, the government and AICTE have been compromising on quality. Institutes have been given approval without examining or inspecting documents, infrastructure, faculty and other basic requirements.“
Lack of industrial exposure of faculty and students is another issue. “Many institutes do not have faculty with industrial experience. Some wish to join a management institute immediately after completing their postgraduate study ,“ said R Nandagopal, director, PSG Institute of Management. The same applies to students, too.
“Many engineering graduates do not want to waste time.Hence they apply for MBA immediately after graduation,“ said Nandagopal. “While in the US and Europe, institutes consider work experience as a criterion for admission to MBA. It is a mid-career education for them,“ he said.

Monday, January 12, 2015

Urdu Purely an Indian Language Loved and Nurtured by all Indians


New Delhi: Urdu is a language which has been nurtured lovingly by people across all religions class and creed. It does not belong to any particular caste or religion. Urdu is purely an Indian language. It is a fact that Urdu language is read less widely as it should be but it is also a fact that it is very commonly used in day to day conversations. It is the language of the common man. 

Stating this during the Foundation Day address at the Maulana Azad National Urdu University (MANUU), Hyderabad yesterday, Shri Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi, Union Minister of State for Minority Affairs & Parliamentary Affairs said, the MANUU has played a great role in changing this perception and making Urdu an instrument for technical and professional education. It is a very important language used in all areas. The MANUU has created enough opportunities and arrangements even to teach Engineering & Technology to the Urdu medium students, a great achievement indeed, he added. 

He further said that, the Modi government is in position at the Centre with a strong vision and mandate for development of all. The passing out students must constantly keep in mind their role towards contributing in nation building. This University is in tune with its progressive movement of preparing the future generations. 

The central government is concerned about the socio-economic and educational empowerment of minorities and trying to reach out to far-flung regions to understand the hurdles faced in implementation of welfare schemes and programmes. 
TERI launches Prakriti School to focus on environment and sustainable development education
Report by India Education bureau, Gurgaon: The Energy and Resources Institute (TERI) today launched TERI Prakriti School, a global school which will focus on sustainable learning and living practices. The groundwork has been laid for providing sustainability education worldwide. The school is TERI’s maiden initiative to promote scientific education and help children imbibe sustainable values and living practices at a time when sustainable development has become the need of the hour.
 
TERI Prakriti School will be a K-12 school affiliated to CBSE, with its curricula focusing on issues of sustainable development and environment conservation across the world. The session will start from April 2015.
 
At the inauguration of the school, Shri Prakash Javadekar, Hon’ble Minister of State for Environment, Forests and Climate Change, Government of India, said: “The building of any institute is not important but how you build it is important. I congratulate and compliment Ms Vaidyanathan and Dr Pachauri for their efforts. Our nature is our best teacher and teaches us very beautifully. Our civilization and lifestyle is very pro-environment… Sustainable practices are the need of 21st Century. I am glad that TERI Prakriti School will focus on life skills, knowledge, spirituality and ethos, all these values should to come from within and are important for all individuals.”
 
He also said that most countries talk much about climate change but do very little towards achieving it. India can be a leading example in bringing about change by adopting sustainable way of life.  
 
He further added that the government is planning to introduce a logo for the Green Buildings so that they can be differentiated from the rest.      
 
Speaking at the event, Dr. R.K. Pachauri, Director General, TERI, said: “Protection of the environment and respect for nature is entirely a matter of values and knowledge based on the role of human beings in the larger creation around us. Imbibing these values and knowledge has to begin early in life and must be an integral part of all the subjects that we learn in school. It is for this reason that TERI is establishing this novel institution called the TERI Prakriti School wherein school children will be motivated to excel in all the subjects taught as part of the CBSE and other curricula, but with a strong foundation that inculcates reverence for nature and a focus on sustainable development.”

The school and the teachers will sensitize students on issues, such as climate change, reducing carbon footprint, proper and effective utilization of natural resources, use of renewable energy and make them responsible citizens in managing wastes from a very young age. The school will be headed by veteran educationist Mrs Lata Vaidyanathan, who has been instrumental in spearheading burden-free and green education. 
Speaking at the launch, Mrs Vaidyanathan, Director, TERI Prakriti School, said: “The world is changing in an unprecedented rate. Climate change and its impact on all ecosystems is a definite threat to the survival of the human race. It is time to arrest the negative impact.  Therefore, present day schools need to give a definite bias to sustainability issues in its curriculum.  These changes can be brought in, only if there is a change of ‘climate’ within us.”
Capt. Abhimanyu, Hon’ble Minister for Finance, Forests and Environment, Government of Haryana, said: “I can visualize the future in the field of academics as the name signifies Prakriti, the school will endeavor in the field of knowledge and sustainability. This is a school with universal values. Also, the Chief Minister has assured all support required to build up the school.”
 
The first issue of The International Journal on Green Growth and Development was also released at the event.
 
Highlights:
·         Vision: Training students to be global leaders through sustainable living practices, develop values and understand the philosophy behind why one should care for nature and the world around us.
·         Curricula: The school will follow the NCERT/CBSE syllabus, suitably modified to include environmental and sustainability learnings and practices.
·    Programmes: At all levels, programmes will focus on development, experiential learning and incorporating beliefs, which are integral to our country. They will also help adopt best international practices. 

Glimpse at the 10 major expeditions to space in 2015

With the help of highly sensitive particle detectors, some of the world's most powerful lasers, and good-old-fashioned quantum mechanics, astronomers from around the world made important discoveries last year. 
From detecting elusive water particles forged in the core of the earth to sending satellites to Mars, scientists’ have helped us better understand the universe in which we live as well as pave the way for a future of space exploration. 
With the onset of 2015 let’s take a look at the streak of space missions set to be accomplished in the year.
While 2014 will be remembered as the year ESA landed on a comet , 2015 may be known as the year of Pluto. Here are the 10 amazing space expeditions in store this year!
NASA's Dawn spacecraft, which orbited the giant asteroid Vesta from July 2011 to September 2012,  is expected to start circling another target, the dwarf planet Ceres.
The Deep Space Climate Observatory, designed to monitor solar wind from about 900,000 miles from Earth, is set for launch on SpaceX's Falcon 9 rocket.
Europe is due to launch a test flight of its reusable Intermediate experimental Vehicle. The spacecraft is designed to make it back through Earth's atmosphere safely after flying to space
NASA's Messenger mission, currently orbiting Mercury, is expected come to an end by about March with a planned impact into the closest planet to the sun.
One-year mission of NASA, astronauts are scheduled to launch to the International Space Station for a one-year stay in space. This will mark the first time an American has ever spent a continuous year in space, and it is the first-ever mission of this length attempted on the space station.
New Horizons spacecraft, it will make its much-anticipated flyby of the dwarf planet Pluto. The probe will start making observations of the relatively small cosmic body, but it will get its best look at Pluto during the flyby. 
The European Space Agency's Rosetta spacecraft will accompany Comet 67P/ Churyumov-Gerasimenko on its closest approach to the sun. Rosetta will monitor the way the comet changes as it gets closer to the star, beaming back unprecedented science as it goes.
NASA's Curiosity rover will celebrate its third anniversary on the planet Mars on Aug. 5. The 1-ton robot has already discovered some incredible things about the Red Planet during its time on the Martian surface.
Japanese Akatsuki spacecraft, after missing its chance to enter into orbit around Venus in December 2010,Japan's Akatsuki spacecraft will have another chance to make it into orbit around the planet in November.
The European Space Agency's LISA Pathfinder mission, designed as a technology demonstration to detect ripples in space-time produced by the mergers of massive cosmic bodies, is expected to launch to space in 2015.
Of course, that’s not all. The Rosetta mission will continue through the year and potentially beyond, making more discoveries as the spacecraft studies its comet up close.  Here is an infographic of the space exploration highlights coming up in 2015.

Tuberculosis rate going down, but not fast enough to meet WHO target

India is unlikely to reach the WHO target of elimination of tuberculosis (TB) by 2050 going by the rate at which incidence of the disease is declining in the country.
“Incidence of TB in India is declining at the rate of about 2 per cent per year. However, in order to reach the TB elimination target by 2050, the rate should be 19 to 20 per cent per year,” WHO Representative to India Nata Menabde toldPTI.
She, however, said that on using available strategies and technologies effectively, along with universal health coverage and social protection, the country could achieve a reduction of TB incidence rate of 10 per cent per year by 2025.
“To hasten the decline of TB incidence beyond that would require new tools such as new effective vaccines, new points of care, effective diagnostics and new effective shortened treatment regimens,” she suggested.
Additionally, social determinants of TB such as under-nutrition, overcrowding and poor ventilation in slums and clinical risk factors such as diabetes mellitus, smoking etc should be addressed simultaneously, she added.
Citing the WHO Global TB Report 2014, Ms. Menabde said that India has already met the Million Development Goals (MDG) target of 50 per cent reduction in the prevalence of TB by 2015 compared to 1990. “India is also well on track for reducing TB death by 50 per cent by 2015,” she stated.
Ms. Menabde, however, said there was a need to improve the quality of care provided to TB patients at private clinics and hospitals as most approached such facilities for treatment, especially in urban areas.
“At least one-half of the TB patients in India, especially in urban areas, approach private sector for TB care. But the quality of care in the private sector in most situations is not satisfactory.
“There is a need for wider dissemination of ‘standards for TB care’ to the private sector, targeted approaches to engagement with them and more stringent implementation of mandatory notification of TB cases.
Ms. Menabde said, “Public health measures such as contact tracing, chemoprophylaxis, HIV testing, treatment adherence monitoring, access to social support etc should also be available to patients seeking care at private facilities.”
On social dogma attached to TB contributing to its spread in India, she said that “sustained and innovative mass awareness campaigns need to be developed to reach out to the community to reduce stigma associated with TB”.
“Community support groups/NGOs can be effectively used to create awareness and both WHO and government of India should pursue these collaborations,” she added.
According to her, the proportion of Extrapulmonary Tuberculosis (EPTB) in India was approximately 15-30 per cent and it was more difficult to diagnose and treat. She also stressed on the need for specialised care in some of its forms which are life-threatening, especially to children.
“Towards this goal, WHO’s Global TB programme has designated Delhi-based AIIMS as the centre of excellence for EPTB to develop guidelines and tools for the management of EPTB within the TB programme. This collaboration is expected to develop new and improved strategies for diagnosis and treatment of extra-pulmonary TB in India,” she said.
Ms. Menabde admitted that achieving global TB targets in the BRICS countries (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa), which account for around half of the globe’s detected tuberculosis cases, would be critical.
“Each BRICS country needs to formulate an approach that is based on country-specific context, share experiences and extend collaborative activities for TB control.
“BRICS countries can together stimulate price reduction in diagnostics and drugs for TB. There is also a need for joint actions for research and development,” she said, adding that, “WHO’s post-2015 TB strategy, now the ‘End TB strategy’, has a goal to end the global epidemic of the disease.”
“... It means the incidence of TB becomes so low that it is no longer a significant public health problem (less than one case per million population). The ‘End TB strategy’ has set targets for 2035 and immediate milestones for 2025,” she said.
By 2025, WHO’s milestones, Ms. Menabde said, would be a 75 per cent reduction in TB deaths (compared with 2015) besides, bringing down the TB incidence rate by 50 per cent (less than 55 TB cases per 100,000 population).
And by 2035, the reduction in TB deaths should be 95 per cent (compared with 2015) with a 90 per cent reduction in TB incidence rate and to see that no affected families face catastrophic costs due to the disease, she stated.
On whether a global eradication of the disease could be possible or not, the WHO official said, “Ending the global TB epidemic is feasible with dramatic decline in TB deaths and cases, and elimination of economic and social burden of TB.
Failure to do so will have serious individual and global public health consequences.”
Regarding countering TB in the country, Ms. Menabde pointed out that WHO has been providing technical guidance and support to India’s TB control programme.
“It (WHO) has been supporting the government in development of quality standards, treatment protocols, operational research, piloting innovations, validation of new tools, etc. The recently developed, ‘Standards for TB care in India’, is an important tool for achieving the goal of universal access to quality TB care,” she said.
Ms. Menabde said there were a number of key strategic documents such as the ‘End TB strategy’ of WHO Global TB programme which provide strategic directions for TB elimination which is the more immediate goal.
“The Standards for TB Care in India (STCI) is a useful technical guideline for all health care providers in India for practicing good diagnosis, treatment, public health and social standards for TB care. India’s national TB control programme has developed strategies for intensified TB control efforts, named TB Mission India 2020, and this too can act as an effective roadmap for TB control in India,” she said.
Meanwhile, on a U.N. Habitat report which claimed that overcrowding and poor ventilation in slums was conducive to the spread of the disease worldwide, she said, “Airborne infection control measures need to be prioritised in all health care settings.”
“To address the urban TB problem, active case finding strategies and use of sensitive diagnostic tools needs to be pursued. Further, every TB patient diagnosed should be placed on treatment as quickly as possible to prevent further transmission.
“Awareness programmes on cough hygiene also need to be prioritised. Every person living with HIV needs to be actively screened for TB and if not affected, then TB preventing therapy with isoniasid should be given,” she said.
Keywords: TuberculosisWHONata Menabde