Tuesday, December 18, 2012

Purveyors of the Foreign Fear and the Neglected Cattle Class

Finally, after the hurly burly at the Indian parliament regarding FDI that tended to almost disrupt another of the “Brief” working sessions, the juggernaut finally came to an end in the Winter Session – 2012. Leaders from both the Ruling & Seemingly in coalition government as well as the Seemingly divided opposition had been having a carnival of sorts for an extended period over an issue that most of India seemed to have lost an idea of. Finally, when the debates took place on December 6, 2012, it just turned out to be a session wasted in rhetoric and in honor of the humble veggie – The Potato.

BJP, the only credible answer to Congress and popularly “Believed” to be a Right-wing nationalist party just till the other day, took a stance that the Left-wing must have been both proud and surprised of. Its opposition to FDI in retail circumvolved mainly around Fear – of the Big Retailers (especially the Beast of Bentonville) eating away the Kirana stores (our neighborhood puppies); of millions of job losses at the cost of no new additions; benefits of big retail value chain (from farmer to retail store) –being passed on neither to the end consumer nor to the farmer, thus, a loss-loss game for farmer and consumer.

Congress, meanwhile, which has gained notoriety in recent times because of its Con games, suddenly seems to have gained the wisdom found lacking for the past almost 4 years. The PM staked his pagdi in favour of FDI in retail while the congress’s rhetoric mostly mirror imaged BJP’s.

But in the conundrum of the big FDI retail fight, the moot point got lost. Most democratic governments work in a utilitarian mode – maximum good for the maximum number of people (technical details of utilitarianism can be avoided here). If utilitarianism is what governments must work for then does FDI really act utilitarian?

According to me, FDI in retail in India would be a big dampener and BJP needn’t have wasted the precious little scope of maneuvering – which has already been relegated to rank outsiders like AAP – and little time it had before the general elections home in. I shall throw light on some of the points that I think trivialize the debates held in our parliament.

To start with, typically Big retailers need Big space to park themselves and space / real estate comes at a premium in India. For big retailers to be able to provide goods to consumers at prices lower than the competition they need to keep their fixed costs (ex: Real estate) and variable costs (ex: employee salaries) at a minimum. Considering employee salaries can’t be done away with, there is very little option for Big retailers to situate themselves within the precincts of big cities where price of estate remains low. In cities like Mumbai, Delhi and Kolkata, where there is hardly any real estate to negotiate, locating outside the city would for all pragmatic purpose remain the only option. And, to expect a person to traverse the city just to gain a few cents in discount can be a fool’s idea. +1 to Kirana shops here, who breach the width and depth of the cities and the city by-lanes to provide the right access to the goods that the consumers need.

Secondly, in countries like USA where 80% of the population owns personal vehicles, city traffic & roads permit quick transit time enabling residents to travel longer distances to avail big discounts. None of these are true for India, leaving little scope for residents to leverage the lower prices, that the retail giants have to offer, as people have to travel longer distances. -1 for Consumers & -1 for Big Retailers as they won’t have huge foot falls.

Thirdly, the government expects retailers to not only invest in the front end but also in the back end and in the process build cold chains. The government’s argument: “We need cold chains to prevent rotting food grains and big retailers have the financial might to invest in cold-chains – investment in cold-chains would prevent gargantuan wastage of food – in turn leading to subsequent drop in food item prices.” Hardly ever an argument that can placate investors. Even if retailers managed to build the cold chains, would it necessarily translate into profits for them? Doesn’t look so from the experiences of the existing Indian bigwigs. Most Indians prefer purchasing food items from Mandis or local vegetable shops early in the morning, where they can get fresh stuff. Experiences from Indian retailers show that the Indian consumer is totally disinclined to purchase food produce from retail outlets since the items are stale. Therefore, to expect the Indian consumer to change his preferences overnight remains a huge challenge for big retailers. -1 for Big Retailers.

It’s also the government’s own duty to build national infrastructure & not the job of a private entity. Then, why does it expect the retailers to invest in cold-chains? Is there a case here for the government caught in dereliction of duty? Well, lesser said the better. -1 for People’s Representatives

Fourthly, the government argues that retailers can get into direct contracts with farmers ensuring higher prices for their unit output as the middlemen get eliminated. Today, most of the margins are distributed among the middlemen, leaving little scope for better profits for the farmers. Pretty much a valid argument except the fact that truth is bitter than fiction. Retailers have been found to push farmers to the limits where farmers become over dependent on the retailers. In the long run as farmers become dependent on a single retailer based on the contracts they entered, retailers command greater bargaining power than the farmer. Thus, while retailers make wind fall profits farmers gain very little in the bargain. -1 for Farmers

Till now a loss-loss for everyone – From Farmers to Retailers to Consumers. Therefore, the opposition, which projected a dooms-day scenario in the parliament, would have gained hands down if it had only ensured that it sensitized the people of the possible pitfalls the government’s over indulgence in Big Retail. As Big Retailers would have failed, the opposition parties especially BJP could have used it as a poll campaign – “We Told You So” or “See How Congress Tried to Cheat the Citizens”. Alas !!!!

At the same time, the advent of Big retail, IFF it is successful, might as well have the following advantages.

Retailers would have to ensure quality of food produced remains high for end consumers. To achieve the same they would provide the Farmers with greater access to better technology, best in class farming practices and enable better productivity from an unit cultivatable land. +1 for the Farmers; +1 to consumers

As Retailers start engaging the farmers directly by entering into contractual farming, middle men get marginalized, in the process leaving better margins for the Farmers which can significantly improve their dilapidated lives. +1 to Farmers. Simultaneously, Consumers would have gained as the cost to middlemen disappeared. +1 to Consumers; Middle Finger to Middle Men.

However, today, no evidence shows that Big retailers provide cheaper products than Kirana shops. Even though the Big Bazaars and Reliance Freshs exist, Kirana shops seem to be flowering and co-existing felicitously with Big Retailers. This co-existence of the Davids and the Goliaths cannot be more appropriate than in Kolkata where a small Paw-Bhaji shop runs just outside the South City Mall – which incidentally houses the CCDs, the KFCs and the Pizza Huts – and makes enormous profits at that. Talk of Indian sensibilities about street food and local tastes? Last heard, the Chief Minister of Bengal withdrew her support from center, arguably to lend voice to these small vendors, who incidentally seem happy in the shadows of big retail. -1 to People’s representatives.; +1 to Kirana; +1 to Consumers

Finally, amidst all the talk of benefits to the farmers, big retailers and small shop owners, where is the Middle Class Consumer? Did the People’s representative forget him or was he purposely neglected? IN all possibility the latter, since, he doesn’t form a credible vote bank beyond the cities and remains largely a mute spectator.

In our country most political parties which gain a huge support from small retailers who fund their political existence, have little reason to celebrate the middle class. For instance, if the BJP didn’t take up the issue of SMEs and small retailers (who incidentally never pay taxes) it would tend to lose a lot –in funding and in popular support. Meanwhile, Congress also, which has always pretended itself to be for the Aam Aadmi (its own activities barely representing what it preaches), has left no stone unturned to project the benefits of Big Retail that accrue to the Farmers – incidentally the easiest to dupe segment of the population. And as the Opposition and Government clamor for popular space, the middle class loses out.

Shouldn’t they be asking the Questions as to why none of the parties deem it important to explain the benefits to the middle class. Well, in a world where the irate Mani Shanker Iyer lives, benefits to the middle class shall remain a pipe-dream.

According to me if any party sincerely wished for the welfare of the society, farmers, middle class, small retailers included, it should have wasted no time in false grandiosities in the parliament. Instead, it could have done a world of good if it had focused on ensuring greater checks and balances in the FDI legislation to ensure no one lost out. Legislations that would have prevented the farmers from losing out in the long run –because of Big retailers’ predatory pricing mechanisms; Consumers – the MIDDLE Class - could have gained because of better cold-chains which would have trickled down into lower prices of end products; SMEs could have gained by actively engaging with retailers and legislations that prevented retailers from importing Chinese goods.

Sadly, in a country where the vote bank “arguably” still lives in villages, the middle class - just 400 million strong - doesn’t count and keeps losing out !!

Meanwhile, our biggest Foreign Direct Investment (from Italy) has already cost the nation a lot! We must wonder why the ruling party has been so hell bent upon supporting FDI.. it’s in their blood B-) !!

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Let's all be a part of a better India !

We all come to this world carrying nothing with us and we all go back from this world carrying nothing with us. But in each of these activities where we step into the world and leave it away we bring a lot of pain and tears.
Then why not recompense for the pains caused by us by bringing in a lot of happiness during the time we spend on the Earth? While each of us should share a lot of love and affection with the other, we should also make our fleck of effort to ensure that the world is a better place to live in after we have left it.
In the same vein, to give back to this world, I have always tried to contribute my two cents towards making it a corruption free place. Unlike a Cancer or an AIDS, Corruption is that dirt ball of our society that infects all of us, in whatever small way possible. In my life, I have paid bribe only once - a paltry sum of Rs200 to get some important documents released from the clutches of the police and get my passport issued. And I hate myself for even having done that. I always had a bit of an issue with people who fleece unsuspecting citizens.Recently, it came to my notice that retailers in Bangalore tend to charge an extra sum of Re1 over the MRP per bottle of cold-drink. The shopkeepers claimed that extra amount was for "Cooling"charges. While a Re.1 might not be that big a sum to be paid, it's about the illegality of the affair. I had tried my hand at correcting the practice a couple of times but ended up fighting my guts out, to the point of getting in to a scuffle publicly.
With my words falling into the deaf ears of the retailers again and again, it was time for me to get knotty. Hence, I got in touch with the Legal Metrology Department (LMD) which takes care of all food related activities. I shot off an Official Complaint to them, with my letter marked to the Controller - Legal Affairs, Dty Controller - Legal Affairs and all Divisional - Legal Departments. This way I ensured that I had a greater probability of my letter getting noticed by at least one person. I also ensured in my letter that I left no scope of the responsible people going scot free - by pulling them into Legal Acts like POCA - 1988, in case no action was taken within a stipulated time period of 10 days as stated under the Citizen's Charter.
I am not sure what portion of my action worked, but within just one day of my missive, I got an affirmative response from the LMD. They promised me of a quick punitive action against the retailer involved in the malpractice. Today, just after 5 days (including a weekend) of my first letter, I have got a confirmation from the Department that an inspector was sent to find more on the malpractice and a case has already been booked against the involved retailer.
While, I was really glad that my actions proved worthy I was also sad to think of the state of our nation - as it is today - where every citizen has to become an activist while the government moves listlessly - and I am not even getting into the Scams that have corroded our country and deprived millions of poor of a decent living.
I also shared the positive results, on the Bulletin Board of our organization, that my small action could bring in. I shared the event to create a more aware junta and encourage them into believing in affirmative actions rather than sitting and grousing while our land gets raped everyday.
For me the day ended on a Happy Note when quite a few employees wrote back to me commending me on my efforts and at the same time promising to take the cause ahead. I counted my success when some people even promised to try and make the country a better place next time onwards.

P.S: Now I fear my life as I have already been threatened for my actions. After all it has caused them a loss of a few Lakh Rupees. Never the less, even if I get hurt in the process I believe there are more people who can take similar causes forward !! Jai Hind !!

Sunday, September 02, 2012

HIATUS

Finally after ages got the HEART to somehow get back to inditing my thoughts.. Completely lost it for a long time somewhere...
But once in LOVE Always in LOVE.. isn't it.?? and Writing .. Well !!!! Isn't it MY LOVE that I can claim to never loose !!
What better way to start with these words of LOVE only !!!
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Kaise kahein alvida, mehram ?
Kaise bane ajnabi, humdum ?
Bhool jaao jo tum, 

bhool jaayenge hum
Yeh junoon yeh pyaar ke lamhe nam
Kaise kahein alvida, mehram
Kaise kahein

Gesu resham, labh par shabnam

Woh behakta sa dil
Woh dehekta sa tan
Bhool jaao jo tum, 

bhool jaayenge hum
Yeh junoon yeh pyaar ke lamhe nam
Kaise kahein alvida, mehram ?
Kaise kahein ?

Woh raatein woh sehar

Woh sukoon ke pehar
Bhool jaayenge hum bhoole kyun hum magar
Jiye jaao jo tum, jee he jaayenge hum
Yaadon ke zakhm par, zindagi marham

Kaise kahein alvida, mehram
?
kaise bane ajnabi, humdum ?
Kaise kahein ??????????????????????


Monday, June 11, 2012

Prisoners of Life

Death scares a person who wants to live. But for someone who isn’t fearful of death, life exists, but, without any sensation and feeling and this makes it difficult to differentiate life from death. Even the news of the active, living and dying world outside his own has a certain dream like unreality for him. The inner objective time ceases to be, only the outer subjective sense remains. As the future ceases to exist, life finds sustenance in the encased emotions of the past. There is a stillness and ever lastingness about the past; it changes not, has a touch of eternity, like a painted picture or a statue in bronze or marble. The mind becomes a prisoner of time. It serves a life term, failing to find the vital links between itself and the present with all its conflicts and problems. The person remains a prisoner. The mind becomes a slave. What should life be then – amalgamation of past with the present and extend it to the future or to break from it where it cannot be so united? Aurobindo Ghose writes somewhere of the present as the pure and virgin moment, that razor’s age of time and existence which divides the past from the future and is yet, instantaneously is not. The virgin moment, the present, emerging from the veil of the future in all its naked purity, coming into contact with us and immediately becoming the soiled and stale past. If the past has a tendency to become the present, the present also sometimes recedes into the distant past and assumes its immobile statuesque appearance. In the midst of an intensity of action itself, there would suddenly come a feeling as if it was some past event and one was looking at it, as it were in retrospect. Past merges with present and the life becomes a reality tied up with sensations of pain. As the artist who fails to draw that frame on the canvas without the muse, life too looks sullen without the passion and the urge to action which make it an enjoyable journey. Without that passion and urge, there is a gradual oozing out of hope and vitality, a settling down on lower levels of existence, a slow merging into non-existence.

Sunday, May 06, 2012

Insurance Policy

The INDIA Narrative

"The Reserve Bank has taken a proactive role in the development of financial markets, particularly over the past decade and a half of overall economic policy reforms" - Rakesh Mohan, RBI, 2007

"India insurance is a flourishing industry, with several national and international players competing and growing at rapid rates. Thanks to reforms and the easing of policy regulations, the Indian insurance sector been allowed to flourish, and as Indians become more familiar with different insurance products, this growth can only increase, with the period from 2010 - 2015 projected to be the 'Golden Age' for the Indian insurance industry" - Keith Timini, Economy Watch, 2010

The NEW YORK, USA Narrative
"According to the census, 56 percent of men age 18 to 24 and 48 percent of women in the same age group live under the same roof as their parents.... the portion of 18-to-29-year-olds who live alone declined to 7.3 percent in 2009 from 7.9 percent in 2007, according to the Current Population Survey"  - Sam Roberts, NY Times, 2010

"The Accordion Family: Why Are Young Americans Moving Back Home?" - Dylan Ratigan, 2012
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The two narratives provided above hitherto described in an incongruent fashion are actually part of the same story. Or should I say they are the two sides of the same coin. 
On the face of it weaving the two narratives into one seamless story seems a difficult proposition and may be asinine as well. But as I see it, they are connected by a thin common thread. In common parlance what is known as 'Family' and in Wall-street lingo known as 'Insurance'. 
Lets first try and see what the dictionary says about Insurance - It's defined as 'A protection against a future loss".
For any individual, family is the biggest source of  Insurance that one can get. It provides us the much needed protection against most forms of losses including the biggest loss one can have - an emotional one. And it all starts from a human beings birth. A baby before birth is insured in a mother's womb, after birth in her affection.As and when a person grows into a full fledged adult, the insurance comes from parents, spouses, kids, relatives, friends so on and so forth. 
But as the world progresses, ever more quickly than Moore could have imagined, families are disintegrating, giving way to a human kind that is more individualistic and self-reliant. How does this self-reliant individual then protect himself when the family's enshroud remains no more? He goes to the financial market seeking protection for himself - heINSUREShimself. And he pays a premium too for the same. A heavy one at that.
Thus, a fast growing Insurance market is a sure symbol of a society which is certainly more self reliant and individuals find more space at the cost of an integrated family.

The premise laid above can be briefly laid down in the form of the following conjecture:
 - A place that is more family oriented and less individualistic should have smaller insurance market and vice-versa.

Mathematics should come to our rescue if the conjecture holds any truth. To test the conjecture let us do some number crunching. I shall try and do it in a step-wise manner:

1) Compare Developed economies with Emerging economies:
The reason for doing so is that most Developed countries are assumed to be highly Individualistic societies while Emerging countries are considered to be highly collectivist societies. 
The Developed countries in my subset are : Germany, Japan, US and UK
The Emerging countries in my subset are : China, India, Malaysia, Philippines and Thailand.

2) Score these countries on the level of their Individualism (IDV):
The score for IDV can be got from Hofstede's cultural dimensions where Prof. Hofstede has ranked many countries of the world based on how much individualistic they are.
The average score on IDV for Developed countries is: 73.25 and Emerging countries is: 29.2
Higher IDV means more individualistic society. Thus our 1st assumption laid down in point 1 that Developed countries are more individualistic vis-a-vis Emergine countries holds true.

3) Penetration of the Insurance market w.r.t each country's GDP was considered: 
Total paid-out premiums were not considered since countries such as China may have a bigger US$ Insurance market compared to UK because of the sheer size of GDP , even though the penetration remain minimal.
The following Insurance market penetration figures were found: Germany - 7.2%, Japan - 10.2%, US- 8%, UK - 13.8%, China - 3.7%, India - 5.1%, Malaysia - 4.9%, Philippines - 1.1% and Thailand - 4.3%. (Source - World Bank Insurance Review, 2011)

4) A correlation was drawn between the Insurance penetration figure and IDV score for all countries:
A correlation of ~ 75% was obtained. A high correlation of 75% between IDV score and Insurance penetration indicates that the IDV scores are indeed related to greater Insurance markets. 
This proves our initial conjecture to be "POTENTIALLY TRUE".

5) DIVE Deeper:
I further considered the average IDV scores for the 2 sets of countries - Developed (73.25) and Emerging (29.2) and correlated them with the average Insurance Penetration figure - Developed (9.8%) and Emerging (3.82%). The correlation, hence, obtained was = 1. 
A perfect correlation figure (1) further says that on an average Developed countries are more Individualistic and garner a bigger Insurance market, providing further credence to my initial argument.

Going back to the Narratives once again, we must therefore contemplate whether we as a country should mindlessly be bothered about the size of our Financial might and chasing numbers or should we be focusing more on Social security ? The situation in NY must provide us a platform to reconsider the path to our future. 
Governments should focus on "Reforms" not aimed at "easing policy regulations", rather on "stronger social security regulations for a happier family".

Monday, April 30, 2012

Subject to Alternate Paradigms

Everyone is in a HURRY these days!!

The Society is in a hurry to claim the world's biggest GDP,
Organisations in the society are in a hurry to claim every pound from this GDP and may be add some fat to it,
Someone in that organisation is in a hurry to become the next CEO,
the CEO is in a hurry to launch the next Product before the competition did,
the Product manager is in a hurry to meet the dead-line of the product launch lest he may be found dead,
the Manager of the Product-Manager's house (his wife) is in a hurry for his promotion so that they can shift into a new Condo,
their Child is in a hurry to have the latest 4 wheel toy so that he can be a part of the cool-gang in school.

But in this mad rush of ours, no one seems to be in a hurry to save the Body that gave birth to the society in the first place, that Body - our Mother Earth. Isn't it our job, the elements of the society to take care of the Earth that gave us so much ? Today a sneak-peek into any major territorial division across India would throw a picture of gargantuan layers of bricks, steel frames and glass panes. And people occupying the spaces in these structures in mindless rush for Greater Comfort !!

Swanky vehicles with engines producing 10000W sound whiz past these massive artifacts, giving a rhythmic tenor to our achievements. While the minutiae on 2 wheels and the still smaller ones are  generally the underbelly that are better kept hidden and not talked about.


But where did we get these materialistic values of ours from, where success is a function of the ability to generate wealth ?

Did these dawn upon us from the Western world and, with an ever greater integration of Peoples in today's age, have become deeply ingrained? Or are they just manifestations of basic human frailties - Greed, Ego & Jealousy - which we have come to blame on shared & adopted values ??

Certainly, the Mind & Soul, the spectacle & the rich Cultural history of this magnificent country - India - didn't give it to us. Wasn't this a country where Values were more pervasive and Material-Wealth was only for sustenance and Knowledge was Sovereign ? Where the Head was supposed to be held high and Mind without fear?

Rather than Wealth to be held high and Mind in consternation ?

In this frenzy to reach the zenith we all are leaving behind a part of us that wants to remain calm & peaceful and are carrying along another part that remains ever dissatisfied - that Bloated Ego of ours !!

It's time for all of us to think Once-Again.
To Subject ourselves to Alternate Paradigms. Or Must I say Subject ourselves to Paradigms we have Un-Followed !!
Why can't we make India, at least, a place which is unique from any other existing territory?
Where Paradigms are established for the rest of the world to follow?
Where GDP doesn't stand for Gross Domestic Product { $$ } but for Glad Domestic People { :-) :-) }.

Can we have a
Society 
Which competes on Strong Value systems where respect and love reign supreme.. where the minutiae are treated at par with the conspicuous... where human beings are not objects to be compared on a scale of material wealth, swanky cars and GDPs rather than the Soul & Mind..Where Happiness comes FIRST??

Where we live in a
House
That is not a map of self-indulgence.. (with the number of square feet and per sqr-foot price..) rather than a heavenly abode ! A place that may just manage to physically accommodate members of a family but still feel extremely big with warmth within !! Where the Mother is the greatest caretaker and everyone Loves her !!!

Where our 
Organisations
Care for the Earth.. and frame Greener buildings.. invest in architectures that are naturally fed rather than fed-up with power guzzling Air-conditioners.. where the money thus saved by not constructing green-house buildings with glass panes all around, is invested back into people..where employees are not just salaried people and instead sensitive stakeholders of the society at large...

And
Children
Hold the mantle of the future by becoming the fore-bearers of a Society that is Proud of itself rather than fore-bearers of Pride where everything comes at the cost of Society !!

And where
We All
Are in a HURRY to set a different path for the rest of the world to follow & re-reap the SOUL we have forgotten somewhere !!


Saturday, March 31, 2012

Inscriptions on a Blank Sheet


Please let me live the life I want;
I have got my acts together ||
It’s okay I dint get that game for me;
Not all games are to be won ||||

Through your wonderla’s silhouettes;
I saw pieces of broken dreams ||
And if you fly through these corridors;
I won’t trace your paths ||||

---- I won’t ever do, won’t ever do, won’t ever----

While my life lists with a broken mast;
I try to inscribe with my blank heart ||
I can’t keep those mid night tantrums anymore;
I am trying my level best to reach the shore ||||


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