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Wednesday, July 08, 2015

The government would have loved it if I had quietly slunk away, but that I was not willing to do: Amartya Sen

Amartya Sen speaks about his assessment of Modi's first year as PM, researching gender in the 1960s, his love for Sanskrit literature, and what judo can teach those who frame social policy.

Nobel laureate Amartya Sen’s new book is a collection of essays, brought out by the Oxford University Press in collaboration with The Little Magazine. In this wide-ranging interview, he speaks to Amrita Dutta about his assessment of Narendra Modi’s first year as PM, researching gender in the 1960s, his love for Sanskrit literature, and what judo can teach those who frame social policy.
The Country of First Boys is the title of your new book, a collection of essays. Could you talk a bit about what the phrase is trying to say?
When I was growing up in Bengal, it was a big thing: ‘Who is the first boy in class?’ It had to be a boy, and, second, he had to be a great achiever. And it didn’t matter what the others did. I found it very offensive, even as a child. There are three things here. One, there is a strong gender preference, which is characteristic of India, much more so than we often recognise. If you compare India with Thailand, Indonesia, Malaysia, not to mention China, we come out worse in female life expectancy, female literacy, female schooling, female survival. The previous government did not do enough, but the present government is doing less than enough.
The second thing is the concentration on the more successful and neglecting what happens to the rest. [Of course], we see great successes. Indians go abroad and run institutions, whether it be Microsoft or Deutsche Bank. On the other hand, there are a whole lot of people from whom we have no expectations, nor do they have any expectations from themselves. The third point is that success or failure depends a great deal on social stratification, on caste, class, community and so on.
A year on, how do you read the PM as a leader? Were some of your fears about Narendra Modi unfounded? Were some confirmed?
The positive thing about Modi, which I recognized even earlier, was that he was telling people: we can get things done. I admired it then, I admired it now. The problem begins with what it is that he wants to get done.
I think he has a wrong understanding of economic development. You can think of development as a process with human beings at the centre, or you can see it as a process with financial and industrial leadership [at the centre]. He definitely belongs to the latter [school of thought]. You need the financial leaders, no doubt, you also need the industrial entrepreneurs. But humanity has to be in the middle. The previous government also failed in that but they were trying to correct a bit with [schemes like] Sarva Siksha Abhiyan, funding for which has just been cut. Funding for school meals too has just been cut. I don’t think we recognise how out of tune India is with Asia, because the Asian model of economic development has been to combine the power of the market economy with human beings having the capability to lead a good life. There is some idea that you first become rich, and then raise the level of human development. But every country that has been successful, whether we look at Europe and America, Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, Singapore, Hong Kong, China or Thailand, has concentrated on raising human capability along with the power of market economy. We pay no attention to that, as if the quality of human beings is not central to human development. If India was bad at that earlier, it’s worse at it now.

I can’t say I am disappointed, I was expecting that. Because they were playing up Gujarat, which may have had a high growth rate but has neglected the human side—recently the Economist ran an article on how its immunisation rates are lower than Bihar’s.
But what made me speak up at the time of the elections was my concern at the Hindutva elements in Modi’s agenda. You see that as an academic very much now, in the interference in the academic administration of the National Book Trust, where A Sethumadhavan has been replaced by an RSS ideologue, or at the Indian Council of Cultural Relations or the Indian Council of Historical Research. There has been that sectarianism [on display]. And despite rhetoric to the contrary, there have been cases of church burning, talk of ghar wapsi. India deserves better than that. In that respect, have I been reassured? I am afraid not.
What is happening at the Nalanda University now? Has some kind of a compromise been worked out?
What happened at Nalanda is a relatively nicer story than either it first appeared and also compared with what is happening to other educational/cultural institutions like ICCR or NBT or ICHR or for that matter TIFR, as well as what might be happening to the IIMs if the bill goes through. The board wanted unanimously me to continue as chancellor, but the government’s advice was clear: under no circumstances. Some people wanted to continue the battle but I thought that would be a mistake. First, because attention was being diverted to a personality issue. Second, it was clear to me that even if my friends in the board were to win in keeping me as chancellor, I could not be an effective leader because I would have to fight the government all the time. But I decided to make it a public affair so that it would be difficult to put a Hindutva ideologue in charge at Nalanda. The government did not want it to be made public at all. They would have loved it if I had quietly slunk away, but that, I am afraid, I was not willing to do.
Did anybody in the government reach out — the PM or the Minister of External Affairs — to you after you spoke out?
They couldn’t reassure me. The ministry of external affairs put out a lot of misleading statements, like ‘Amartya Sen was impatient. We would have liked him to continue’. But the minister did not say so. The minister spoke clearly to the members of the board and said that Amartya Sen wasn’t acceptable. Even if the ministry made public statements, they were at odds with what the minister was saying to the board. I think she was also trying to get a non-Sen solution, and we’ve got a good solution. [Former foreign minister of Singapore George Yeo has been appointed chancellor.] I am happy with the way it has turned out. If there’s one thing to learn from this, it is that in a democracy, if you are critical of the government, you have to express it. Sitting quietly and grumbling about it is not going to help. That’s not what democracy is for.
Could you talk a bit about your love for Sanskrit literature? What sense does it give you ancient Indian culture?
Sanskrit and maths were my favourite subjects in school. When the Nobel academy asked me to donate two items to its museum, I gave them Aryabhata’s book on maths, Aryabhatiya, which I had read in Sanskrit in school, and my bicycle. The bike I had used to collect data about the famine period. I would ride to farms in Bengal and get them to open their dusty rooms where they had kept their records. I used it even more while researching on gender and inequality, when I would go to villages near Santiniketan to weigh boys and girls under the age of five. (By the time girls were five, they had fallen behind in terms of weight.) I was very proud that I had become quite good at weighing children. I had a very good research assistant, the first Santhal in her village to get a BA. On one occasion, she called me to help her weigh a teething child. And I did it without getting bitten.
I get an extraordinary positive impression of the past, which makes me very proud. I get an impression of a very cerebrally active society — never as remarkable as the Chinese in observational science — but in the philosophy of science, and the speculation of it, very high brow. On the philosophy of jurispredence. In fact, my book Idea of Justice is based on a distinction that only Sanskrit scholars make, between niti and nyaya. I think Meghdootam is extraordinarily important to understanding Indian culture. But my favourite Kalidasa play is Mricchakatika — and it had a profound influence on my understanding of justice. I also like the Vedas, and I don’t think you have to be a passionate believer in Hindutva to like it — it is a great book. People don’t even recognise that it is not just a book on religion but also a book on human behaviour. Some of the verses are absolutely overpowering. But I don’t at all accept the view that the Vedas had interesting mathematics. It had some arithmetic puzzles, that is all.

When you started analysing women’s health and education with respect to economic growth, in the 1960s, what were the reactions?
I became interested in gender equality when I was in college at Presidency, Kolkata. Marx’s idea of false consciousness, I thought, applied to women. I also did a few papers when I was teaching in Jadavpur University. I was amazed not just at the inequality but the fact that people knew about it and took it for granted. Secondly, if you drew their attention to it, they would give you lectures about culture. I was told that this was a Western point of view, that Indian women do not think of themselves as individuals, but as an extension of their families. I had an argument at the Delhi School of Economics in the 1960s, and I said this was a form of ultimate denial of a person’s individuality, which is one of the huge possessions we have. That is the way inequality survives, by making underdogs become upholders of the inequality.
Are you working on any books right now?
I wrote a mathematical book when I was at the Delhi School of Economics, it was published in 1970, called Collective Choice and Social Welfare, which I hope I am not being immodest when I say that it had quite an influence in the literature that followed in economics. A lot of people have grumbled that I should write a follow-up. But then some people, including the big influence on my economic thinking, Kenneth Arrow, told me that it’s a classic, you can’t change it. So I have begun adding a few chapters to it, and I am about half-way there.
I am also writing something of a memoir, not to be confused with an autobiography. It is not about what happened, but about what I thought. I have reached the age of 12 or 13, so I have a long way to go.

You were around 11 when you first saw the ruins of Nalanda. What has the idea of Nalanda come to mean to you?
I remember being bowled over, especially at the sight of the excavations at the site. That’s when I thought I should do something about it. So my ability to lead the first stage of the Nalanda revival has been a fulfillment of a dream. The idea of Nalanda emphasises that human progress has always been linked to thinking, and not just doing. Secondly, that Indians were capable of building and running such a university at that time is a matter of considerable pride. They were teaching religion and philosophy, but also medicine, public healthcare, linguistics, certainly astronomy—in a way that is distinctly modern. Third, Nalanda attracted people from everywhere. They were ready to sit down together and discuss things together, resolve differences through discussion.
You have lived all your life on university campuses, haven’t you?
My father was a teacher, my grandfather was a teacher. One reason I haven’t retired even though I am 81 is because I love students, and they like me. Ultimately, when I look back on my life, the thing that I am happiest with is that I was a teacher.
You have written for decades on India’s education. What was your experience of school like?
I was very lucky because I went to a very nice school in Santiniketan. [Before that], I had a little over a year at St Gregory’s School in Dhaka, which was very keen on performance. After I got the Nobel, I visited the school. The headmaster said they had started a few scholarships in my name. He also said he got out my old exam scripts to inspire the students. Inspire, I said? ‘That was my hope,’ said the headmaster. But then he checked that my position in class was 33rd in a class of 36, and he wondered whether it was a good idea.
I have to say I became a relatively good student once I went to Santiniketan, where no one worried about grades, it was almost shameful to worry about them. One of my teachers described a classmate of mine: “She is quite an original thinker, even though her grades are very good.” I liked that aspect: there was no pressure to be a first boy.
Not only were there girls with me (I was in school in the 1940s) but my mother was also schooled there earlier. She was proud of the fact that she did judo there, 90 years ago. She must have been one of the first Indian women to do judo. She had a Japanese teacher, who for the first week, only taught them how to fall without hurting themselves. In some ways, the idea of what happens to those who fall seems to me not just an approach fit for judo, but for humanity at large—and for social policy.
- See more at: http://indianexpress.com/article/india/india-others/the-government-would-have-loved-it-if-i-had-quietly-slunk-away-but-that-i-was-not-willing-to-do-amartya-sen/#sthash.MvYMtLN8.dpuf

Karnataka worst in the south in manual scavenging numbers

The figures may be under-reported as the definition of manual scavengers was amended in 2013.

With over 15,000 enumerated manual scavengers in rural parts of the State, Karnataka remains in the top five of the ignominious list recorded by the Socio Economic and Caste Census – 2011. While the State also represents the worst of the Southern Region — where the rest of the four States find themselves in the better end of the spectrum — the data also flies in the face of the State government’s claim that just 306 cases of manual scavenging having been registered.
According to the recently released data, Karnataka has 15,375 manual scavengers in rural areas. This represents 0.19 per cent of the more than 80 lakh households enumerated in the survey in 2011. Only Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh and Tripura fare worse.
The numbers may, in fact, be fundamentally under-reported as the definition of manual scavengers was amended in 2013 to include any sanitary worker handling waste manually. The survey was conducted in 2011 when scavengers were defined only as those who removed night soil.
“This should be a wake-up call for the State. It is a shame, and it has shown how the State has failed to curtail this,” said Narayana, Chairman of the Karnataka State Commission for Safai Karamcharis.
Even till 2013, the State government had shown just 306 “registered” manual scavengers in Karnataka — of which 202 were based out of Bengaluru itself. In statements made since, Minister for Social Welfare H. Anjaneya had estimated the number was “more than 10,000” persons; while, Mr. Narayana claimed it could be as high as 25,000.
“In 2013, the Union government allotted around Rs. 225 crore for manual scavenging relief to the State. As the government showed just 306 people, this money was taken back by the Centre,” said Mr. Narayana, who added that an independent, “comprehensive” census was proposed to ascertain “actual” figures.
Activist B. Venkatesh, convener of Dalit Bahujan Movement, said the census showed “clearly” that the State was underplaying the issue. “There seems to be no will to bring manual scavengers to the mainstream,” he said.
Clifton Rosario from Alternative Law Forum, which handled a manual scavenging petition with the High Court of Karnataka, said the census figures may be unrepresented, even considering the old definition.
Bonded labour bad too
It isn’t just in manual scavenging numbers that the State finds itself in the dock. The Socio Economic and Caste Census – 2011 notes that the State has had 18,452 “released” bonded labourers, which makes it the fifth worst in the country.
What they have to say:
Narayana, Chairman, Karnataka State Commission for Safai Karamcharis: The census figures are an underestimation. During my visits to nearly 22 districts, I can say with certainty that every village has manual scavengers. This will continue as there are no drainage facilities in most rural areas.
B. Venkatesh, activist: Though 15,375 is much more than what the State government claims, the census figures may be under-reported. But, what it definitely shows is that there is no will in Karnataka to put a curb on manual scavenging.
Clifton Rosario, Alternative Law Forum:
It is sad that Karnataka, which was the pioneer in the eradication of manual scavenging four decades ago, still possess such high numbers.
***
Socio Economic and Caste Census – 2011
No. of households enumerated: 80.48 lakh
Manual scavengers: 15,375
Ministry of Social Justice note to Lok Sabha – 2013
7,740 houses in Karnataka are manually serviced
Estimated manual scavengers in Karnataka (urban and rural areas) is 14,555
Census 2011
13.6 per cent of nearly 13 lakh households in Karnataka have pit latrines
Legislation
Scavenging banned under The Employment of Manual Scavengers and Construction of Dry Latrines (Prohibition) Act, 1993 and The Prohibition of Employment as Manual Scavengers and their Rehabilitation Act, 2013
Congress’ Assembly election manifesto promised to end manual scavenging
Vedanta - Enjoy Your Meditation


Meditation is the natural process of withdrawing attention from environmental, physical and mental processes and consciously directing it inward to a chosen focus of attention.The beneficial side effects of regular meditation practice include stress reduction, strengthening of the body's immune system, more orderly thinking, improvement in powers of concentration and a slowing of the biological ageing process.For these reasons, meditation practice is recommended by an increasing number of doctors as a harmless way for patients to be more responsible for their total well-being. The primary purpose of meditation practice, however, is to bring forth clear states of awareness that will make authentic spiritual gro wth easier to experience.
Engaging in self-examina tion and self discipline is important to clear away any psychological conflict that might pose a problem. Study of `lower' or secular knowledge helps us function effectively in the world. Many get educated so that they can live more effectively . But also important is the acquisition of higher knowledge or metaphysics to inquire about God, cosmic mind, manifestation of universes, our relationship with God -why are we here, and for what purpose?
Then the formal practice of meditation begins that is a process of sitting and breathing right, good posture and poise.First, decide to practice meditation for at least 30 minutes a day . Become aware of your natural breathing rhythm. Let all of your thoughts, feelings and actions be wholesome and constructive. You will then be empowered to live enjoyably , effectively and successfully .
Jul 08 2015 : The Economic Times (Delhi)
Govt May Fast-track Labour Reforms
New Delhi:


The Narendra Modi government is looking to put labour law reform on the fast track by getting states and trade unions on board. The Prime Minister is expected to stress the need to tweak archaic rules that deter investment and job creation at the 46th Indian Labour Conference likely to be held on July 20-21. Last week, senior functionaries in the Prime Minister's Office spoke directly to chief secretaries of several states, including non-BJP ruled ones such as Odisha, in order to assess their views and actionable ideas on reforming labour laws.Separately, members of the standing labour committee-which includes state labour ministers, employers and trade union leaders-have been asked to convene on July 10 to review the agenda for the Indian Labour Confer ence. The Indian Labour Conference, usually an annual affair, hasn't been held since May 2013 and the agenda for its next meeting had already been finalised by the standing labour committee at its 46th meeting on January 31, 2014. This agenda includes amendments to the Factories Act to exempt small and micro units from compliance, social security for workers, changes to the Pay ment of Bonus Act and a status check on earlier decisions with a focus on contract labour, minimum wages and the tripartite negotiation mechanism.
“The government has invited suggestions on what could be added to the existing agenda. However, it's too short a notice for us to provide any meaningful input,“ said an industry representative invited to the July 10 meet requesting anonymity. “This suggests that the government itself could spring something new to be discussed across the table.“
Minister of state for labour and employment Bandaru Dattatreya will chair the standing labour committee meet on Friday and official sources said the agenda item regarding the Payment of Bonus Act may be replaced with something more substantive on revisiting several difficult labour laws such as the Industrial Disputes Act of 1947. Since labour is on the concurrent list of subjects under the constitution, the government's strategy was initially to encourage states such as Rajasthan and Madhya Pradesh to take the lead in reforming the Industrial Disputes Act and other contentious items of legislation. The Centre is now looking to take on a lead role rather than wait for more states to follow suit.
The labour ministry has been fleshing out a plan to merge the Industrial Disputes Act, Industrial Employment (Standing Orders) Act and the Trade Unions Act into a single code for industrial rela tions. Trade union leaders said this was the first time that the standing labour committee had been asked to consider revisions to an agenda already agreed upon.Virjesh Upadhyay, general secretary of the Bharatiya Mazdoor Sangh, part of the Sangh Parivar, said the existing agenda was still relevant and must be taken up.

Jul 08 2015 : The Economic Times (Delhi)
Minimum Daily Wage Raised to Rs 160
New Delhi:


Govt raises threshold from `. 137 on the basi of average hike in CPI for industrial workers
The government has increased minimum wage across the country to ` . 137 . 160 a day from ` with effect from this month. It has raised the threshold after two years on the basis of average increase in the consumer price index for industrial workers during this period.Labour minister Bandaru Dattatreya on Tuesday said he has written to all chief ministers and lieutenant governors to take necessary steps to fix minimum rates of wages in respect of all scheduled employments in states and union territories not below the revised level. “While reviewing the movement of CPI-IW (consumer price index for industrial workers) during s April 2014 to March 2015 over the period April 2012 to March 2013, it was observed that the average CPI IW has risen from 215.17 to 250.83. Ac cordingly , the NFLMW (national floor level minimum wage) has been re vised upwards from existing ` . 160 . 137 to ` per day with effect from July 1, 2015,“ Dattatreya said. In or der to have a uniform wage structure and to reduce the disparity in minimum wages across the country , NFLMW is fixed on the basis of the CPI-IW . The NFLMW was last revised from ` . 115 . 137 per day in July 2013.to ` NFLMW is a non-statutory measure and after every revision states are persuaded to fix minimum wages such that in none of the scheduled employments the minimum wage is ess than NFLMW . The list of scheduled employment under the Minimum Wage Act, 1948, differs from state to state and covers a wide spectrum of employment creating sectors including industry , construction, agriculture and services sector.
In a separate letter, Dattatreya urged all chief ministers and LGs to ensure compliance regarding social security coverage of outsourced staff working in the government departments, public sector undertakings, state cooperatives and other bodies. “The National Human Rights Commission incidentally is also monitoring the implementation as the social security is considered as a human right of an individual,“ the minister said in his letter written on Tuesday .
He further said, “It has been observed that various departments, PSUs, state cooperatives and other state-run bodies are increasingly employing a large number of staff on outsourcing basis.“
the speaking tree - Mere Concepts And Ideas Are Not Reality


A `concept' is an idea or thought, which we are free to agree with or not; it is not synonymous with reality. That which is not always present, cannot be the reality . All scriptures say that reality subsumes concepts of time and space. Ramana Maharshi says, “The only reality is our very presence ­ the sense of `I am'.“ None can deny this presence.Reality is termed variously as `Consciousness' or `Source'; the innate experience of the sense of `I-I'. The `I am' current exists while we are in the waking, dreaming, sleeping or deep-sleep states. This `turiya' or fourth state continuously resonates within us.This gets validated because on waking up from deep slumber we confirm our experience of a peaceful rest! The prescribed route to connect with this ever-present state is attentiveness to our inner current. Everything else appears and disappears in this state, as fleeting experiences. They are concepts created by the mind, not reality .
What about the concept of God? Sri Ramana says that while our presence experienced as the `I-I' state is undeniable; the term `God' is a concept which needs to be transcended. Indeed God as a concept can become a point of debate. Theists vouch for it. Atheists deny it. The debate can be endless as with all other concepts like creation, moral norms, values, individual preferences and practices.
This chicken and egg debate can go on indefinitely; a pointless exercise. Anything created by the mind is debatable. It does not belong to what exists perpetually . Thus concepts of God, the world ­ which is absent in our deep sleep state ­ heaven or hell are all wonderful creations of the mind which thrive on the fertile soil of discursive debates, enriching the ego's survival urge. Raging discussions on a wide variety of concepts such as rebirth, thaumaturgy, creation, celibacy and yoga can drain us; they do little to enrich us within.When we realise the true purpose of an issue we start going beyond concepts.For instance, yoga means to join or merge. The merging is meant as part of our inner journey with our sense of `I Amess'. The inner quest leads to peace and tranquility of the mind. It goes beyond religion, dogmas and concepts.Similarly , brahmacharya is an exercise that enquires into the nature of `Brahmn' or Consciousness, not celibacy .Of what use would celibacy be, says Sri Ramana, “if the mind is preoccupied with thoughts of the phenomenal world, even as one is amidst the silent environment of a forest“! Opinions on diverse issues depend on cultural and societal backgrounds, among other things. They differ accord ing to the nature of the individual and as per prevailing norms. They are ideas (concepts), nothing more. Concepts never result in peaceful resolutions. For every concept, there will be an equal or more number of proponents or opponents. There will be never be a time when opinions are uniform on diverse issues driven by cultural differences, values and priorities.
Steadfastly proposing or opposing any concept will only lead to deviations from the true purpose of life's journey .It is wiser to work on our own inadequacies and inherent contradictions.Understanding and accepting how difficult it is to work on changing oneself makes one more tolerant and forgiving of others and their views. Concepts thrive on differences; reality flourishes where good intent combines with sincere effort. All scriptures focus on intent and effort, not outcomes. They emphasise the three S's of Simplicity , Silence and positive Surrender.
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20 lakh univ degrees to be disbursed in a single day!
 For the first time in the country, a university would disburse a record 20 lakh  pending degrees to its students on Tuesday. These degrees which were not  disbursed for the past20 years by University of Rajasthan would now be disbursed.
There would be  a convocation in which the chief guest would be  Governor Kalyan Singh. The main convocation which will be held at the new  convocation centre will a symbolic event in which out of the 20 lakh students, Chancellor Kalyan Singh will present five degrees of Doctor of Science and .DLitts and 72 gold medals.
The actingvice chancellor Hanuman Singh Bhati said Tuesday’ s convocation would be a unique event where 20 lakh degrees would be disbursed in a day.
The university did not issue any degrees  between 1990 and 2014. Between the year 1990 to 2002 over 80,388 degrees were pending and the number started swelling each year.
The University’s Chancellor Kalyan Singh on the plea made by the past student s ordered that they should be given degrees. A number of students, including doctors, IAS and IPS officers, MLAs, Union ministers, Ambassadors and high commissioners all these years could not get their degrees because of the apathy of the university. The university has set up 52 centres in the  city to disburse the degrees to those who want to collect the degrees from Jaipur.
The university has set up a separate website on which the unique number would be uploaded. Any institute can verify the validity of the degree from this website. The university has used micro text technology to prepare the degrees to enable give all the information about the course and the mark sheet of the student.  Bar codes will be used in the degree and one could get all the details by using the bar code reader.Getting the degrees printed was a big problem as a lot of security steps were needed to getthem printed.
“ In all 400gold medals which could  not be disbursed all these years will be disbursed. Pure gold worth 1.4 grams has been used for making these gold medals. Gold plating will have 0.5 gram of gold plating and 8.5 grams of silver plating. Each gold medal will weigh 10.4 grams and each gold medal would cost Rs 4585. The medal will carry the emblem of the university on one side and details about the student and course on the other side of the medal.”
Source | Free Press Journal | 7July 2015