Archive for the 'Guest Blogs' Category

The Happiness Index: Can India Go The Bhutan Way ?

Monday, August 28th, 2006 August 28th, 2006 Guest BlogsGuest Blogs

Let us assume that one of those pesticolas/ food materials  creates havoc on the health of your dear and near. To protect yourself and your dear and near from vulnerability, you go to a doctor who is one among those who is determined to make a quick buck. To reach the clinic, you drive a four wheeler which churns out venoms of carbon fumes to the atmosphere.

The interesting fact is that all these negative factors listed above become positive factors during the calculation of GDP. And it is this GDP (or it’s relatives) that get projected as an indicator during many of the dialogues related to growth/ development. So, while calculating GDP, maximum exploitation of water resources which may lead to the fall of ground water level is still considered positive because it is an economic activity.

Unhindered usage of pesticide and fertilizers are considered positive because its manufacture, distribution and consumption is considered an economic activity. A doctor/hospital fleecing a patient for more money is considered positive because it adds to the economic activity. Increased production and consumption of fuel-guzzling SUVs are considered positive because it adds to the economic activity.

Polluters Don’t Really Pay  

At the same time, automobile manufacturers/ consumers do not have to pay for the health related expenses that pedestrians, who inhale polluted fumes are forced to shell out. Such absurdity get exacerbated when we take into consideration that calculation of economic indicators are based on short term perspectives and not long term vision. Sustaining a forest (which ensures pure water and oxygen) would thus be assigned less economic weightage as compared to the option of developing a mine from the same geographical area).

Lets move aside. From our own personal experience, we can infer that a stable family life devoid of tensions related to divorces, quarrels etc. helps us to be more productive at whatever we do (including our professional pursuits) and keeps us at ease with things around the world. It also helps us build and maintain good relationships with others. So doesn’t it make logical sense to include these parameters when we are taking into account the concept of “development”?

Such ideas inspired people to come with indicators like Gross National Happiness, Genuine Progress Indicator etc (Some interesting articles about these indicators are available in the articles section at www.globalsystemchange.com, a website maintained by Frank Dixon, Managing Director - Research, Innovest Venture Partners, the largest sustainability investing firm in the world).

Bhutan Can, Why Can’t We ? 

With exceptions like Bhutan, we are yet to find federal governments actively supporting such indicators. If Bhutan, with its Buddhist ethos, can engage the world with such ideas, India, with its cultural ethos rooted in universality, and harmony with all beings including the ecology, too need to support such initiatives at a local and federal level.

Ajith Sankar

ajithsrn@EcologyFund.net

What Happens To The Train When The Driver Jumps Off ?

Thursday, August 24th, 2006 August 24th, 2006 Guest BlogsGuest Blogs

By Dr Supriya Biswas

When Sun COO Ed Zander left after 15 years there, Sun’s stock fell 14%, shaving $2bn from its market capitalization. When it was announced Zander was joining Motorola as CEO, Motorola’s stock rose 4.2%, adding almost exactly $2bn to Motorola’s valuation. (Jason Stamper) (more…)

Higher Education, Planning for Shortages?

Tuesday, August 22nd, 2006 August 22nd, 2006 Guest BlogsGuest Blogs

Yogesh K. Upadhyaya

Post 1991 liberation era, when the government control and norms are relaxed and economic reforms are carried out, our country has suddenly become a land of plenty. However, if you need to make a professional career and plan to join a reputed college of your choice, the nightmare begins with the entering in high school. (more…)

Trapping The Right Bear

Monday, August 14th, 2006 August 14th, 2006 Guest BlogsGuest Blogs

All of us would have come across the puzzle about the hunter and the bear at least once, either in an aptitude test or on the long list of e-mail forwards we receive everyday. For the benefit of the uninitiated few I am repeating the puzzle.

A hunter walked one kilometer south from his camp. Then he walked one kilometer west. There he shot a bear. Then he walked one kilometer north, and found that he was back at his camp. What color was the bear? (more…)

India-China Trade: Building on Nathu La

Monday, August 14th, 2006 August 14th, 2006 Guest BlogsGuest Blogs

By S K Sarda*

The world was focused on the re-opening of the Nathu la pass - the pass for trade between India & China- the two powerful Asian Giants. The two powerful giants are coming together. The cold war is now history and we are in war of trade. Here no more artillery power shall win. It is the competitiveness, quality and devotion of the trade and industry and commerce that will bring success and then only we can win. (more…)

Mumbai, Delhi Inexpensive, But For Whom !

Thursday, August 10th, 2006 August 10th, 2006 Guest BlogsGuest Blogs

Rashmi Bansal 

“Mumbai, Delhi among least expensive cities” says a UBS study  - story on pg 12 of Business Standard dated Aug 10, 2006.

The question is - least expensive for whom? Perhaps for tourists, NRIs and expatriates. Certainly not for those who earn a living in this country.

That’s clear from the Big Mac Index (originally compiled by The Economist ) which the UBS study has used to estimate the ‘combined impact of cost of living and average wages earned’. (more…)

Management At IITs; Brand Building, Not Brand Dilution

Tuesday, August 8th, 2006 August 8th, 2006 Guest BlogsGuest Blogs

Shubhadeep Sarkar 

“Old order changeth, yielding place to new…”
- Lord Alfred Tennyson

The world has very successfully redefined itself of late. This face of the earth was so far hidden from the realm of humanity. Competition finds itself at the zenith. Buying and selling have left the markets and become the part and parcel of life. A doctor sells himself to retain his patients and attract more.

(more…)

The Charity Search Engines

Sunday, August 6th, 2006 August 6th, 2006 Guest BlogsGuest Blogs

While Google continues to remain the search engine supremo (as per comScore), the world has witnessed the launch of search engines with a social mission - the mission of giving money to charities for each search you and me do on their search engine. And this social mission does make sense when we know that search engines generate, on an annual basis, almost six billion dollars from advertisers. (more…)

Submerged In Central Mumbai

Sunday, August 6th, 2006 August 6th, 2006 Guest BlogsGuest Blogs

 

Citizen Photographer Ashwini is back at her job again in Central Mumbai. This is what she sent us a little while ago. Mumbai has been lashed by heavy rains for the last 24 hours. As usual the city failed to cope !

“My sister had gone to her tutions and she had to go through this situation at Dadar T.T. Circle. This situation is of today Aug 06,2006 at 11.30 am”

Ashwini Patwardhan (more…)

Focus On The Water Source

Friday, August 4th, 2006 August 4th, 2006 Guest BlogsGuest Blogs

Dr. Vishal Sharma 
Associate Professor (Contract)
Dept. of Electrical Engineering
IIT Bombay, Powai, Mumbai

This refers to the article “Pesticides back in colas: CSE” that appears in the BS. God knows I am no fan of colas myself, I am at a loss to see the point being made by your article (and indeed by the much-touted  CSE report itself). The article fails to do a bit more digging to answer the following  natural questions that come to a discerning reader’s mind: (more…)