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Tuesday, October 13, 2015

Oneness & Wellness


The word `health' comes from the root word `whole'. When we say we're `feeling healthy', we're saying that we've a sense of wholeness within us. A person can be said to be of good health only if he feels complete in body , mind and spirit.Physically , one may be healthy , but energies may be lethargic. For every physical or psychological situation that you go through in life, there is an energy basis, which, in turn, has a chemical basis. In a way , modern allopathic medicines have been reduced to mere chemistry . Whatever is happening on the chemistry level in your body is only controlled by the way your energies function. If a man has excess acids within him, you introduce some alkaline medicine into him.
But why does he have excessive acids? Because of the way his mind, his body and his energy function. In yoga, neither the body nor the mind is looked at in isolation -the focus is on energy . If your energy body is in balance and full flow, your physical body and mental body will be in perfect health.
For this, you have to go to the foundations of your energy system and activate it, building a foundational yogic practice that establishes your energy in a way that your body and mind are naturally fine. The more our activities, the greater our exposure to things that can throw our chemistry asunder, creating health problems.
This life energy in you creat ed your whole body: bones, heart, everything. If your energies are kept in full flow and proper balance, they are capable of much more than just health.
Money Mirage: Women in India Believe They Earn the Same Salary as Men
Mumbai:
Our Bureau


Nearly 61% of Indian women are confident they earn at least the same salary as a man doing the same work, according to the India findings of a poll across G-20 countries by the Thomson Reuters Foundation supported by the Rockefeller Foundation.The perception that they earn the same as their male peers — and one they share with their counterparts in Saudi Arabia — seems particularly out of sync with reality in the light of World Economic Forum data. That shows that these two countries came in last in the G20 on a female-tomale ratio on earned income.
Misplaced perceptions aren’t the only issue. Women in India are among those facing the greatest workplace inequities but least likely to speak out.
Surprisingly — and in sharp contrast — Indian women are the most likely to speak out against harassment at work, an issue faced by one-third of women in G20 countries, and suffered in silence by most. Where 27% of Indian women said they had been harassed at work; of those harassed, 53% said they would always or most of the time report it.
The above are among the India-specific findings of a global poll that assesses the top five issues faced by women working across the G20 countries. The survey comes at a time when statistics show evidence that economies benefit when more women work, with a direct impact on life prospects for children.
According to the findings, the top five issues of concern for women across G20 countries are: work-life balance, harassment, equal pay, equal career opportunities and ma ternity impact on career prospects. More than 9,500 women were polled by independent polling agency Ipsos-Mori to offer insights into the way women feel and how they fare in the workplace.
In line with global findings, women in India — along with their counterparts in Russia, South Korea, China and Japan — rated work-life balance as the most challenging issue they faced in the workplace. Nearly 57% Indian women said it was their biggest concern. The second biggest worry for Indian women was flexible working, flagged by 42% of women.
Women in the country were also upbeat about having the same access to business networks as men with 53% agreeing they had. However, 40% felt that men had better access to jobs. 61% Indian women feel they can have a family without damaging their career.
Indian women being so vocal about speaking out against harassment was related to the aftermath of the Nirbhaya incident following which a blitz in media coverage highlighted the poor treatment of women, Thomson Reuters Foundation CEO Monique Villa told ET. “Five years ago, most women would not have spoken up. It shows how perceptions can change very quickly,” said Villa.
Overall, the global poll also threw light on other positive trends. Women, particularly millennials, are more upbeat when it comes to their role in the workplace. More younger women feel they can have children without damaging their career and more are confident they have the same chance of success as men in starting their own business. said it was their biggest concern. The second biggest worry for Indian women was flexible working, flagged by 42% of women.
Women in the country were also upbeat about having the same access to business networks as men with 53% agreeing they had. However, 40% felt that men had better access to jobs. 61% Indian women feel they can have a family without damaging their career.
Indian women being so vocal about speaking out against harassment was related to the aftermath of the Nirbhaya incident following which a blitz in media coverage highlighted the poor treatment of women, Thomson Reuters Foundation CEO Monique Villa told ET. “Five years ago, most women would not have spoken up. It shows how perceptions can change very quickly,“ said Villa.
Overall, the global poll also threw light on other positive trends. Women, particularly millennials, are more upbeat when it comes to their role in the workplace. More younger women feel they can have children without damaging their career and more are confident they have the same chance of success as men in starting their own business.


Source: Economic Times, 13-10-2015
The Significance Of Navaratri Celebrations


Navratri is traditionally celebrated in honour of Devi, the Divine Mother. The Divine Mother is symbolic of energy , a manifestation of the Divine itself. Each day of Navratri we honour specific qualities of divinity with different homas and with different intentions. It is this energy , which helps God to proceed with the work of creation, preservation and destruction.Shakti means strength, power and energy , the womb for all creation, expressed as the mother aspect of the Divine. Shakti is the seed for all dynamism, radiance, beauty , equanimity , peace and nourishment. Shakti is the life-force.
There are five aspects of creation: asti, is-ness; bhati, knowledge and expression; preeti, love; nama, name and rupa, form.Matter has two aspects, name and form.Consciousness has three aspects, asti, bhati and preeti. Maya is ignorance or delusion, not being aware of the three aspects of consciousness and getting caught up in name and form. Different functional aspects of the divine energy , Shakti, have different names and forms.The “i“ (ee) in Shakti is energy. Without the “i“, “Shiva“ becomes “shava“ which in Sanskrit means lifeless.
There are seven centres of energy or Shakti in the body called chakras in Sanskrit. The Sri Chakra is thought to represent the whole body with the Devi in different forms, residing in different chakras.
Sri Sri Ravi Shankar, has spoken in detail about the chakras. He says, “Different emotions are linked with each of these energy centres.“ The first chakra, muladhara, is located in the base of the spine.Here, the energy manifests as inertia or enthusiasm. The Devi residing in this chakra is five-faced representing the five sense organs. Musical instruments are also associated with these energy centres.Sound vibrations produced by bass drums are connected to this chakra.
The second chakra, swadhistana is the sex centre just four inches above the base of the spine. Here energy manifests as pro-creativity or creativity. Here, the Divine mother has four faces representing the four Vedas. The third chakra, manipura, is the navel centre where energy manifests as four emotions: Generosity , joy, greed and jealousy (two positive and two negative emo tions). Here, Devi has three faces representing srishti (creation), stith (maintenance) and laya (dissolution). Wind instruments like trumpets and clarinets are connected to this energy centre.
The fourth Chakra, anahata, is located in the chest region where energy manifests as three emotions ­ love, fear and hatred.Devi is represented with two faces, signifying inward and outward focus. This energy centre is influenced by the sound vibrations of string instruments like the violin and harp. The fifth Chakra, vishuddhi, is located in the throat region where energy manifests as two emotions ­ gratitude and grief. In the vishuddhi chakra, Devi's form has a single face.She is beyond all duality . The melody of the flute connects with this chakra.
The sixth Chakra, ajna, is located between the eyebrows where energy manifests as anger and alertness. Here, Devi is six-faced, representing the five senses (sight, hearing, smell, touch, taste) and the mind. Cymbals, chimes and bells connect with this energy centre.
The seventh chakra, sahasrara, is located on the top of the head where energy manifests as bliss. It is also called brahmarandhra. Devi is represented as a fully blossomed lotus of a thousand petals. All the qualities in creation belong to her and are blossomed to their complete potential.The conch is the musical instrument connected with this energy centre.
Work on India helped Brit bag Eco Nobel
London:


He has spent a considerable amount of time working on the connection between `stunting' among Indian children due to abysmally low calorie consumption and its connection with poverty in the country.He later concluded that widespread `growth faltering' was a human development disaster as height reflected early life nutrition which helps brains to grow.
On Monday , the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences awarded the Nobel Prize for Economics to British economist Angus Deaton, who teaches at Princeton University , “for his analysis of consumption, poverty , and welfare“. He stud ied if the consumption of adult goods such as clothes, tobacco or alcohol diminish when a family has kids, and whether this reduction is greater when the child is a boy rather than a girl -an important correlation for India.
Source: Times of India, 13-10-2015

Monday, October 12, 2015

Economic and Political Weekly: Table of Contents

Monetary Policy Transparency under Uncertainty

The central bank's rate reduction is consistent with its infl ation targeting approach.

Burying Grass-roots Democracy

Educational cut-offs for panchayats discriminate against women and the poor.
Comment
When the reality of a fractured society back home gets elided into a homogeneous "people of Indian origin."
H T Parekh Finance Column
The Labour Party of the United Kingdom (UK) was defeated in the 2015 general elections on 7 May. The next day, the leader of the party, Ed Miliband, resigned from his post and triggered the 2015 Labour Party leadership election. The election...
Commentary
Power for All is the new programme to provide 24×7 electricity to the entire population by 2019. There have been many such plans in the past which have failed. What have we learnt from those experiences? There remain many concerns about the...
Commentary
One of the most striking features of the report by the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights Investigation on Sri Lanka, 2015 is its consistent effort to be even-handed in its view of Government of Sri Lanka and Liberation Tigers of...
Commentary
India needs to find an optimal patenting regime that will safeguard incentives for innovation while simultaneously ensuring that medicines are available at reasonable prices.
Commentary
What are the challenges in providing quality education in hilly and tribal areas? This article argues that the current educational structures, even when properly implemented, may not meet the needs of students in such areas. Based on a field...
Commentary
In the important (and controversial) area of prices for natural gas there are relentless efforts by deeply vested interests to obfuscate facts and misinform this impoverished and energy-starved nation about how prices should be set and what they...
Commentary
China's rapid growth has been based on the intense exploitation of the working class, ruthless environmental degradation, and exports to the global capitalist market. However, all three conditions required for China's capital accumulation have...
Book Reviews
Interrogating Inclusive Growth: Poverty and Inequality in India by K P Kannan, New Delhi: Routledge, 2014; pp xx + 310, Rs 795.
Persistence of Poverty in India edited by Nandini Gooptu and...
Book Reviews
India's Look East Policy and the Northeast by Thongkholal Haokip, New Delhi: Sage India, 2015; pp xvi + 190, Rs 795.
The Look East Policy and Northeast India by Gorky Chakraborty and Asok...
Perspectives
What do feminists want? What visions of an ideal society have we conceptualised or dreamt of? What are the possibilities and limits of iterations of a feminist futurity? Even as we ask, however, we are brought up short by a more...
Special Articles
Describing the relocation of the patronage-based relationship between the state and the private sector in post-liberalisation India, this article goes on to address the consequences of this relationship for democracy. It points out that the...
Special Articles
This paper first makes a comprehensive assessment of the performance of states in the post-reform period in terms of growth as well as reduction of income poverty and multiple deprivations. It then investigates whether there is any systematic...
Special Articles
Despite widespread and substantial household expenditure on private tutoring in many developing countries, not much is known about their effects on learning outcomes. The main challenge in estimating such an effect is that the decision to send...
Notes
Macroeconomic data shows a lack of improvement in the incremental capital-output ratio along with diminishing total factor productivity in India's services sector--surely a warning. If far-reaching measures are not taken, India may soon be unable...
Discussion
This comment points out an erroneous assumption in the calculations and central argument of Rajakumar and Shetty ("Gross Value Added: Why Not the Double Deflation Method for Estimation?," EPW, 15 August 2015) that reverses almost all...
Postscript
Riding on the exponential power of networks, godmen and charlatans like Guruji exploit the fraternal feeling amongst fellow followers to offer specious solutions. 
 
Postscript
As a society, the Japanese exhibit exquisite politeness and immeasurable hospitality in the manner in which they deal with visitors and guests. 
Postscript
At his death bed
He said
‘I have no beef with you
Dear neighbours
Just an advice...
Postscript
Subsidies

RTI on my side


Today, India celebrates 10 years of the practice of the right to information. In this decade, this law, one critical to Indian democracy, has established the citizen’s right to make informed choices, not just once every five years, but every single day. Governments at the Central and state levels have been forced to concede to the democratic principle of sharing power. An estimated five to eight million applications are filed every year, making it clear how popular the law is. The more than 45 RTI users who have been killed bear testimony to just how much the act threatens vested interests. In posterity, those studying governance in independent India will be able to mark the patterns of a pre- and post-RTI era. It is, therefore, important to understand the immense contribution of the ordinary Indians who battled for years to get the entitlement and, since 2005, to implement the law. Powerful and relevant local struggles can organically grow into national movements that enrich democratic practice. The demand for information was brilliant in its simplicity. People honed it locally on the nerve centers of unaccountable power. These demands for details of expenditures on roads, of life-saving medicines in hospitals, of disappearing rations, sent shockwaves through the establishment and shook the foundation of bureaucratic governance. The RTI has proved its efficacy from the panchayat to Parliament. Cutting through red tape and bureaucratic prevarication, it has exposed entrenched vested interests in policymaking and implementation, and undermined officials’ impunity in perpetuating both grand and mass corruption. The modes of putting information to use in the public domain have been equally important. Jan sunwais evolved as a form of public accountability from a historic first hearing held in the village of Kotkirana in Pali district on December 2, 1994. The process of sharing information initially obtained through informal means and publicly verifying the evidence with local citizens galvanised people. The opposition grew in proportion, as when panchayat officials went on strike against transparency and public audits and elected representatives gave them support. It became clear that accessing information would need a sustained struggle and campaign. The campaign built an effective and popular discourse on the right to information, using slogans and songs to articulate and communicate. The slogan “hamara paisa, hamara hisaab” powerfully asserted people’s ownership over public money and resources. The late Prabhash Joshi highlighted another slogan in his editorial in the Jansatta in 1996, “hum janenge, hum jiyenge (the right to know, the right to live)”. The RTI so defined was seen and used as a transformative right. The straightforward logic of the struggle and campaign drew diverse groups into articulating the demand for a law. A 40-day dharna in Beawar in April 1996 led to the formation of the National Campaign for People’s Right to Information (NCPRI). Set up with the twin objectives of drafting the law and supporting the use of the RTI by citizens’ groups, it circulated the first draft with the support of the Press Council of India in 1996. State laws began to be enacted in 1997, and continued to be in force till the national law was passed in 2005. The enactment of the RTI not only inspired a spate of other rights-based laws, but also embedded transparency and accountability within them. The structural design of social audits derived from public audits, or jan sunwais, is becoming a systemic part of democratic governance. Earlier this year, the Comptroller and Auditor General of India declared that social audits will be a part of the formal audit process. The mode of social audits is also spreading to other parts of the world. The RTI has been India’s most powerful “weapon of the weak”, enabling citizens everywhere to question and hold to account the legislature, executive and judiciary. They have exposed misdeeds by governments across the board, in the delivery of basic services, in land and mining, as well as grand corruption in arbitrary contracts, like in the allocations of 2G spectrum and coal blocks. With the current attack on rights-based laws and that framework, there are difficult times ahead. The few instances of obvious “misuse” by blackmailers and eccentrics have been blown out of proportion in an attempt to discredit the RTI. Governments have excelled in delays and manipulations in appointing information commissioners. The consensual (informal) decision by all political parties to ignore the orders of the information commission mandating their inclusion under the RTI has exposed the degree to which the establishment can go to brazenly undermine the rule of law. At one level, there is a sense of wonder that the law was enacted at all, defying prophecies that a corrupt system would never allow self-exposure. The truth is that the RTI did manage to build some statesmanship, and a consensus outside and in Parliament. Notwithstanding the implementation roadblocks, it is internationally acclaimed as amongst the strongest RTI laws in the world. The end of the first decade sees the RTI movement poised to fight battles for accountability — the passage and implementation of the grievance redress, whistleblowers’ protection and Lokpal legislation. The unfulfilled potential of people’s participation in the pre-legislative consultative process awaits parliamentary sanction. The unfinished promise of proactive disclosure under Section 4 of the RTI Act, the pendency in the commissions, the ever-looming threat of amendments, must keep the campaign alert to attacks to dilute the impact of the law. “RTI laga denge (we will file an RTI application)” has become one of the most popular refrains of the frustrated Indian facing the arbitrary exercise of power. In fact, it needs to be taken further. Much eventually depends on an alert and vocal people. The encouraging sign is that it seems like the argumentative Indian, who is now speaking truth to power, cannot and will not be gagged. The writers are social activists and founder members of the MKSS and the NCPRI -

Source: Indian Experess, 12-10-2015