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Wednesday, January 20, 2016

Never Adds Up


We have somehow come to think that we progress mainly by a process of addition. That is, we start off deficient and we progress by addition that gradually minimises the state of deficiency state. This is a big flaw in our perception; it leads to us wasting our lives in adding things at all levels, physical or mental. We accumulate objects and information, opinions and perceptions. But the truth is that we were not deficient to begin with.We need some self-appreciation to take us on the right path to divinity . However, we complicate things by our desire or longing for `something' from outside that we think is `missing' and that is required to rectify the defect in us.
What we actually need is some way of clearing the `dust' that obscures our brilliance. What we tend to do, instead, is think we are `dirty' or `faulty' or `incomplete' and add artificial layers to mask the `defect' in us. Human progress is based not on addition but on subtraction. The aim in life should be to strip down to the bare minimum.
Stop asking, `What do I want?' Instead, ask, `What can I give up today? What is superfluous?' Subtraction then becomes addition and our joy multiplies. The bad habit of `addition' makes us `hoarders'. What we hoard makes it difficult for us to move forward. They also create a lot of `noise' in our lives such that we can't hear the real melody of life. To listen to our inner self, we need silence. We don't want to be distracted by the `noise'.

Tuesday, January 19, 2016

Robomate+ – Free App for Entrance Exams Preparation - 


The time of the year is back when students across the country go through the final stretch of preparation for important entrance exams. Whether it is IIT, MBA, CA, CBSE, ICSE, SSC and HSC students and parents alike feel a sense of anxiety and anticipation due to the forthcoming exams. In such a high stress environment, the announcement of Global Education Trust (GET) to extend Mahesh Tutorial Educare’s Robomate+ App (consisting of free video lectures of expert faculty), comes as a welcome relief to students and parents across the country.
This is in continuation to the contributions that GET has made over the past few years. In coordination with MT Educare, it has imparted high quality education to thousands of BMC students over the past seven years. As a result of these initiatives, many students have secured 90 per cent plus marks in SSC exams.
Last year GET, in coordination with MT Educare, had shared Robomate with thousands of students for free and made available, result oriented video content of MT Educare. The release of MT Educare’s Robomate+ App is another step in the same direction. Robomate+ can help students revise and sharpen concepts by viewing lectures online, repeatedly to their satisfaction. Students can get full access to some of India’s best faculty in their preparation for entrance exams such as IIT, CA, MBA or Board exams such as CBSE, ICSE, SSC and HSC. They can learn subjects at their own pace and place. In today’s fast moving world, it can help students save precious travel time and study at their own convenience.
The App currently works on all Android platforms. The versions supporting iOS and Windows are expected to be released in the near future.


Source: Elets News Network (ENN) Posted on January 18, 2016 

Start-up India: Did the government overreach?

Dave Thomas, founder of the famous fast-food restaurant chain Wendy’s, once said, “What do you need to start a business? Three simple things: know your product better than anyone, know your customer, and have a burning desire to succeed.” But in a country as difficult to do business as India, an entrepreneur also needs a fourth attribute: knowledge of a complex maze of laws and regulations. In this context, the government’s Start-up India campaign, initially announced by Prime Minister Narendra Modi during his last Independence Day speech, was eagerly awaited.
The daylong event on Saturday saw the unveiling of an action plan for the campaign. The measures announced by the government fall under three distinct heads: simplification and handholding; funding support; and industry-academia partnership and incubation.
Sometimes, the most salutary practice a government can adopt for a sector to flourish is to stay away. While the start-ups in India have, of late, seen a boom, most of it is despite the government and not because of it. The year 2015 was, by far, the best year for Indian start-ups. On the back of a massive spurt in funding, India is now— according to a report by software lobby group Nasscom—the world’s fastest growing and the third largest start-up ecosystem. With a lively venture capital financing culture, the government would have been better off avoiding the funding support it announced on Saturday.
Though this fund—amounting to ` 10,000 crore over four years—will be in the nature of Fund of Funds and will be invested in Securities and Exchange Board of India-registered venture funds (many of the big-name investors aren’t), the selection of appropriate venture funds for investment is a privilege the government can do without. Besides the high opportunity cost and potential charges of cronyism, the government fund is neither sufficient to resurrect the start-up ecosystem if it is floundering, nor is it required if the ecosystem is alive and kicking. Likewise, the government should also desist from the temptation of organizing start-up fests and such events, and leave this job to industry associations.
A whole host of simplification measures announced to make business easier for start-ups is indeed welcome, but with a caveat. A lot of these steps need to be taken for improving the business environment across the board and not just for startups. For instance, it will help if a mobile app and portal is available to all businesses, and not just to start-ups, for clarification of regulatory requirements. And what about reducing the number of regulations and discarding the archaic laws which would make such an app superfluous? This should be part of the government’s broader effort towards ‘ease of doing business’ and the app should not become the permanent solution.
Most of the exemptions and concessions offered to start-ups were either not needed or not desirable. The tax holiday for the first three years is much ado about nothing. Few start-ups, if any, can be expected to start returning profit in just three years of existence. A number of other exemptions and “handholding” measures are a throwback to the “infant industry argument” which becomes an excuse to protect a certain class of industries from market competition. A number of concessions available to the small and medium enterprises in India, for instance, have done little more than keep them from growing up. Moreover, these exemptions stand in direct contrast to the government’s intention to phase out all exemptions and reduce corporate tax rates from 30% to 25% by 2019.
The government’s focus on industry-academia partnership is perhaps the most appropriate one. Most of India’s top institutes of higher learning are not known for their research outputs. Moreover, a lot needs to be done to make research outputs useful for industry. Conversely, the feedback from industry should be used as inputs for research. Such centres of excellence which combine education, research and industry experience can become hotspots for disruptive technologies and start-up ideas.
Most of the Indian start-ups are engaged in fixing broken markets. While this is commendable in itself, India also needs start-ups throwing up globally path-breaking products. An enabling environment for this will comprise incubation centres which can plug into cutting-edge research happening in the country. If the government pulls this off, the Start-up India campaign would have done some good.
Will the Start-up India campaign end up making India the start-up hub of the world? Tell us at views@livemint.com

A tale of two economists

Chief Economic Advisor Arvind Subramanian publicly differed with RBI Governor Raghuram Rajan and took a bet on accelerating growth. He is clearly losing

Chief Economic Advisor (CEA) Arvind Subramanian started 2015 on an over-optimistic note. He is likely to have ended it in disappointment. The economy is slowing down: in the first six months of the financial year, real GDP grew 7.2 per cent, slower than the 7.5 per cent in the corresponding earlier-year period. In 2016-17 too, GDP growth will not be significantly greater unless some specific steps are taken, the CEA has said. Thankfully, there are few takers in the government for the main measure he is suggesting: a further pause on fiscal deficit reduction.
About a year ago, barely months into his job in the Finance Ministry, Dr. Subramanian projected a sharp recovery with growth of up to 8.1-8.5 per cent. He forecast the acceleration even though he did not expect any big-bang reforms (on this count, his forecast was correct). In his scheme of things, the spurt in growth would come from incremental policy pushes, such as to subsidy reforms, direct benefit transfers, and financial inclusion of the poor.
The brave outlook underestimated the weakness in the exports sector. It relied on the Rs. 70,000 crore of public investment that was earmarked in the year’s budget — as suggested by him — for building infrastructure to stimulate private investments. The stimulus he had designed was implemented. It proved insufficient to generate the growth impulses needed to kick-start the over $2 trillion economy and rekindle animal spirits gone numb in the dying years of the United Progressive Alliance’s 10-year stint due to policy paralysis and corruption scandals.
As things stand, it seems unlikely that industrial growth will cross 5 per cent. Growth in lending by banks to industry, a proxy for investment sentiment, hasn’t budged from a 20-year low. Corporate balance sheets are burdened with mountains of debt. The worst exports performance since 1952-53 is inevitable.
A government not shy of its business-friendly credentials should have picked up these stress signals early on and administered the remedies, but its mandarins were too excited: international agencies had declared that 2015 was going to be the year in which India would race past China (the Chinese economy is about five times as large as India’s) to be the fastest growing economy in the world.
It was. But that this had probably more to do with China slowing down rather than India picking up, and the stark difference in size made the comparison between the two economies irrelevant. But the cheerleaders among bureaucrats and ministers couldn’t be bothered with technical minutiae — all that mattered was that India is a bright spot in a gloomy global economy.
Why is growth slowing?

In the boom years during the UPA government’s tenure, four engines had powered the economy. Of those, just two are still running: government investments and private consumption. Exports and private investments, the other two, are out of steam. The UPA years saw an investment boom, which was bound to turn sooner or later, and has.
Lower borrowing costs could restart the investments cycle but the hands of the Reserve Bank of India Governor, Raghuram Rajan, are tied. An agreement that the government and the RBI signed a year ago has made controlling inflation the main objective of monetary policy. The agreement formalised a policy goal that the central bank has always pursued anyway, except that it set the targets in terms of consumer price inflation. Moreover, government-owned public sector banks have been slow to pass on to borrowers the rate reductions that Dr. Rajan has announced. Banks are a cartel and keep interest rates high because higher interest rates mean bigger profits.
Dr. Rajan is well on course to bring inflation within the 6 per cent target that the government set around the same time the CEA made his cheery growth forecast. In fact, the ‘rock star’ Governor, with whom the CEA has worked closely earlier in the International Monetary Fund, has had an excellent year. India was still one of the ‘fragile five economies’ when the year began. Yet, it is the only one to have come out of the phase of heightened currency volatility and current account deficit instability that characterised the group. Besides, the purse-string managers of the government’s budget in North Block, who haven’t yet let its fiscal deficit slip, Dr. Rajan too deserves credit for restoring India’s macroeconomic stability, which the government hasn’t quite leveraged to push growth, just as it has been caught sitting on its hands despite the favourable global trends in oil and commodity prices.
On growth, Dr. Rajan has been spot on. By the end of the summer, he had cut the Reserve Bank’s GDP growth projection for the year not once but twice. In July, even as Dr. Subramanian was sticking to 8.1-8.5 per cent, Dr. Rajan’s call was 7.4 per cent.
The overconfidence in Delhi lasted till the last day of November, when new official data released, revealed a slowdown instead of the promised smart recovery. Within hours, the government cut its growth projection to 7.5 per cent.
In the following weeks, the CEA did a few mea culpas on earlier positions, raised fresh concerns about the state of the economy and declared the official data puzzling and unusually difficult to interpret. And he called for reassessing the government’s commitment to fiscal deficit reduction.
Environment for lower interest rates

Abandoning the committed path for fiscal rectitude now will put macroeconomic stability at risk. It might end up hurting growth rather than supporting it with the government and the RBI working at cross purposes. How? To fund a wider deficit, the government will have to borrow more, which could push up interest rates and crowd out private borrowers.
Inflation might have been tamed but the Reserve Bank’s key interest rate, despite cuts adding up to 125 basis points in 12 months, is still high for a revival in investments and growth. Although higher public investments are desirable, the government needs to do all it can to create the environment for lower interest rates, not higher.
Public investments can be increased without deferring deficit reduction, though. There is a perceptible improvement in the quality of government spending with a shift towards capital expenditure. This can be built upon. Savings from efficiency in spending remain an underrated resource. The government ought to cross the political hurdles for strategic disinvestment. If the government’s fiscal consolidation would distract from the demand in the economy, much of its spending will also add to it. Government employees’ salaries and pensions are set to rise as the Seventh Pay Commission award is accepted and disbursed. The hikes are bound to result in a surge in demand for goods and services. So are other transfers from the government.
The growth and the outlook won’t seem as lacklustre if Dr. Subramanian had corrected his forecast earlier, as Dr. Rajan had. He publicly differed with Dr. Rajan and took a bet on accelerating growth, and it looks as if he is going to lose the bet.
ndpuj@thehindu.co.in
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Source: The Hindu, 19-01-2016
Duality and Non-Duality


Meerabai lived a life totally immersed in love, adulation, worship and service to Krishna.Every breath of hers was dedicated to her beloved. She was restless, desperate to meet and unite with him as the separation was unbearable; she pined for him, longing to be with him. She composed, sang and danced, all for him. For Meerabai, Krishna represented the very spirit of existence.Her devotion grew more steadfast and her consciousness was completely enveloped by Krishna. Her perseverance and dedication eventually led to divine communion. She and Krishna were One. Was illusory separation mandatory to experience this divine sublime emotion called bhakti? In the state of complete awareness, there was dissolution of her own identity . In overcoming duality , Meerabai now experienced the state of unmanifest singularity . She then continues in a paradoxically crestfallen and yet blissful state.
“Let things go on. Let this illusion be. Let all the rituals continue. Chala vahi Des.“ That is the wish of the Supreme. Through separateness and longing for union, comes about a realised union. That is what is divine leela. Multifarious manifestation is itself part of leela, or divine play of consciousness.
As a devotee who pines for union, thinking she is separated from the Divine, Meerabai savours the journey . “He chooses to masquerade as Deity and Devotee donning the mask of ignorance. Why should I endeavour to see through this deceit of delightful duality? Let me worship my own reflection.“
Europe seeing more deaths than births, says study
Washington:


: More people in Europe are dying than being born, according to a study that found, in contrast, that births are exceeding deaths by significant margins in the US.The researchers found that 17 European nations have more people dying than are be ng born (natural decrease), ncluding three of Europe's more populous nations: Russia, Germany and Italy . In contrast, in the US and in the state of Texas, births exceed deaths by a substantial margin.
“In 2013 in Texas, for example, there were over 387,000 births compared to ust over 179,000 deaths,“ said Dudley Poston, professor of sociology at Texas A&M University . “The only two states in the US with more deaths than births are the coal mining state of West Virginia and the forest product state of Maine,“ said Poston.
The research focused on the prevalence and dynamics of natural decrease in the counties and county-equiva ents of Europe and the US in the first decade of the 21st century (2000-2009).
Findings show that 58% of the 1,391 counties of Europe had more deaths than births compared to just 28% of the 3,141 counties of the US.
In Texas, just 24% of the state's 254 counties had more deaths than births. And between 2010 and 2014, 27% of the 254 counties had more deaths than births.
The researchers, including Kenneth Johnson from the University of New Hampshire, and Layton Field, from Mount St Mary's University , found that in Europe, deaths exceeded births in most of the counties of Germany , Hungary , Croatia, Romania, Bulgaria and the Czech Republic, as well as in Sweden and the Baltic States.
Further south, natural decrease is found occurring in the majority of the counties of Greece, Portugal and Italy. Though natural decrease was common in much of Europe, findings show that is far from universal.
“Natural decrease is much more common in Europe than in the US because its population is older, fertility rates are lower and there are fewer women of child-bearing age,“ Poston added. PTI
Source: Times of India, 19-01-2015

Monday, January 18, 2016

Economic and Political Weekly: Table of Contents

Vol. 51, Issue No. 3, 16 Jan, 2016

Editorials

50 Years of EPW

Commentary

Book Reviews

Perspectives

Special Articles

Notes

Discussion

Current Statistics

Postscript

Appointments/programmes/announcements 

Letter

Web Exclusives