India In The Balance

Nov 14 2003  | Views 9267 |  Comments  (15)
Britain maintained its vice-like grip over the Indian economy even during the Second World War. India, during that period, had a trade surplus, but its trade with other nations was restricted by the control over its “sterling balance.... Expand

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  Bahadur Singh posted 4 yrs ago

With the veto that the Left has on the new Manmohan Singh government, it appears that we might slip back into the old over-centralized socialist ways, with disastrous consequences -- setting us behind by years.



  Subhash Kak posted 5 yrs ago

The story of how Ajit Jogi sold the rights to 69 universities in Chhatisgarh during his administration tells us how important it is to lessen the control of the government. Taking the power to establish universities from the states and putting it all into the hands of the Central government is not a solution. Private universities must be regulated by autonomous boards. Such boards will provide checks on abuse of power.

Subhash Kak



  G Singh posted 5 yrs ago

Raj,

Pity you were all in the dark before. Sadder still you didn't know those people! ;-)

Seriously, all the best for February. And you are absolutely on the dot re corruption. So is Mr. J N Iyer, who made similar points in his column.

I think Satyajit Ray once made a movie (serious one, not the bollywood type) about corruption even among the educated salaried middle class.



  raj mehta posted 5 yrs ago

I am just back after writing the IIM-CAT exam at the Bangalore IIM this morning - only to be told that the entire exam has been declared null and void because the question papers were available wholesale in Delhi - for 5-15 lakhs rupees, for 2 or 3 days before the exam. This racket has been successfully going on for the last few years it seems , and its only now that it has come to light. One can only wonder how many IIMians who have graduated over the last few years actually got there on merit.

If this can happen to the entrace tests to India's most prestigious institutions , then something is really is wrong. India it seems is becoming more and more like Bihar while trying to catch up with China.
The latest scams invoving politicians and bureacrats are worth like literally billions of $. An ex-CM of Punjab , Prakash Singh Badal was found to have amassed wealth amounting to 4500 crore rupees or 1 bn$ from just 5 years in office. The Telgi-Stamp scam is worth atleast 30,000 crore rupees or 5-6 bn$ , which is half of India's defence budget. We have Chief Ministers like Mayawathi who dont know the difference between fiscal policy and physical policy and so end up with fiscal deficits equal to twice or thrice India's defence budget -in UP alone.
India sure is making a lot of progress it seems...

So forget those extra 6000 universities - what India desperately needs more than everything else is - Accountability. Corruption is eating India alive.



  Dinkir posted 5 yrs ago

More Sensible and"BALANCED" article gfor a Change Compare to Past Ones by KAK

As already corrected some assertions with USA is Untenable and missread in statistical errors like University And colleges are NOT the same as In INDIA vis a vis with USA ....

Also cultural, rascial ,geographical, historical, religious and ROOT wise INDIA is NOT and SHOUD NOT try to bE USA by any stretch of IMagination

..Let USA be our GUINEA PIG and Use IT (USA As canary is used in coal mines of West Virginia to detect the unhealthy carmonoxide warnings to save Miners !!!!!!!


USA is losing as you can see And why copy a loser ???????



  kryptik posted 5 yrs ago

WE JUST NEED TO DO 2 THINGS

1. POPULATION CONTROL
2. DEVELOP VILLAGES AND VILLAGE COMMUNITIES IN THE TRUE SENSE
SO THAT THE GAP BETWEEN SOCIAL CLASSES IS REDUCED

TO DO THAT, WE NEED TO HAVE A STRONG LEADERSHIP AND LESS CONFLICT AMONG OURSELVES. WE NEED TO UNITE AND TURN THE TABLES FOR A MORE BALANCED WORLD.



  Sankalp posted 5 yrs ago

I do not want to generalise here, but here is one interesting observation I have made about the Indian Educational setup. If you visit the rural areas of Maharashtra (especially those situated along the coastal belt) you will realise that the Teachers out there are somehow much more dedicated and better off than their urban counterparts.

One of the reasons for this obviously is the poverty in the rural areas. A teacher who gets a monthly salary is considered a prosperous and well off person.
In urban areas however, the monthly salary of a teacher is hardly enough to meet monthly expenses.

Because of the general lack of opportunities in the rural areas many of the top students (those who don't intend to migrate to the cities) choose to be a teacher thus making teaching a sought after proffession.
In the urban areas where opportunities abound nobody wants to be a teacher.

In the rural areas where teachers are generally the most educated, respected and well-known people in the village they automatically end up in all important village committees, development project committees etc.
In the urban areas teachers do not enjoy the same status.

These are a few of the reasons why many of the teachers in urban areas are quite frustrated (Again let me say I do not want to generalise. This is only MY observation) and end up being reluctant proffessionals. This affects their teaching abilities.
In rural areas however I have observed that most of the teachers are reasonably well off and happy. This automatically transforms into more dedication towards their proffession. They, hence, end up with much more fulfilling careers.

Conclusion : The pay structures of teachers need to be revised so as to see to it that the proffession attracts the best talent in India. Also steps need to be taken to ensure that teachers get the retirement benifits, reservations, concessions etc to ensure that this important segment that is responsible for shaping a generation gets its due.



  krikkku posted 5 yrs ago

"Moreover, I think one forgets that the US has 3x the land space and 1/4 of the population."

Not 3x, but 9x. China is 3x.



  JeeQ posted 5 yrs ago

the Indian Constitution is several hundred pages long and not many have read it entirely

That in many ways sums up the main problem India faces. A monotonous, bureucracy.

The US Constition can be read in an evening.

Moreover, I think one forgets that the US has 3x the land space and 1/4 of the population.

So lets not compare how many schools without a qualifier. and lets not assume American schools are better, cause America needs a MAJOR overhaul of its education system.

Moreover, a 2child limit for politicians is not good. I understand the idea is it would set a precedent, but we dont want India's 'best and brightest' to limit themselves to 2 children. I know that sounds like a common thing to say, but let's be honest, we'd rather they have 2 kids than someone else.

The article was very good, but its not enough. India's problems are poor infrastructure, the need for capital and unity. We must have planned cities.

I was looking at a physical map of India, I think its time the Indian government built Imphal (NorthEast) into a major city (and keep bangladeshis out) and rebuilt Nagpur into a major city.

I pick these two cities cause they are areas with higher altitudes and thus good locations for Bangalore type cities.

Other locations I suggest are:

a city south of Bhavnagar. Great location for a port city, something like a richer Portland/Seattle.

a city northeast of Jabalpur, just west of Jamshepur, south of Varanasi. This city could become a bigger twin city of Jamshepur and the two can have one name. The location is great cause there are no other major cities in the area, and it has an elevation of over 5000 feet.

Darjeeling. It would connect Sikkim to India even more directly.

Basically you get my point. Cities like Bangalore are way too congested, and by building new cities, basically like the Chinese do, we can control the population better and spread it out more.



  J N Iyer posted 5 yrs ago

As usual an excellent, well researched article.

I have a couple of points.

I agree the License-permit Raj of Nehruvian socialism was bad. However, without full involvement of Government, the big 'temples of modern India' which required massive investments would not have been built That they were badly managed by a corrupt bureaucracy and selfish corrupt politicians is a different matter

Predatory capitalism has no social commitments or loyalty to the nation. Capitalism would have invested only in profit generating- ventures, with no thought about the community's needs. Capitalism worships only the 'bottom line'.

What we need is a regulated, balanced, mixture of capitalism and well administered Public Sector, with mandatory norms about social obligations, environrnent, utilization of natural resources etc.

On proliferation of Engineering colleges Prof Indiresan had recently expressed concern about the looming problem of a surplus of unemployable or under employed engineering graduates .Please see his article on in Business Line dated 23/9.





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