Thursday, October 30, 2014

Power of Shadow Economy In India...

UThe poll rhetoric of bringing back all the black money into India within a period of 100 days turned into a long forgotten promise. Only after the Supreme Court rapped Centre for being lethargic, did the NDA government disclose a few names couple of days back. However, after receiving flak for creating a protective umbrella for the rest, the NDA government handed over the entire list containing 600 odd names to the Supreme Court today morning. 

So, will this bring an end to the black money trail and rescue India of the cancer that it has been breeding? 

To be quite honest, I reckon this entire exercise of naming and blaming is merely done for public appeasement. The very thought of tracing black money and punishing the guilty is like searching for Rapunzels in real world.

The logic is straightforward. This saga of bringing back the black money is on since ages. So, it is wishful to believe that account holders have not moved their money by now and are waiting for the government to act. As a matter of fact, an article in FirstPost succinctly highlights how the Indian National money with Swiss banks has vanished over periods. In 2006, Indian money in Swiss accounts stood at Rs 414 bn. It came down to Rs 140 bn in 2013. In fact, Swiss banks themselves have been asking their suspect account holders to move their money for safety purposes. 

It is like a local police station giving the robbers an advanced notice to raid them a week in advance. How stupid it can get to?

As such, this entire exercise of creating a list to trace the money is futile. If either the NDA or the UPA government was indeed serious of punishing the black money culprits, they would have not indulged in this public tamasha. Instead, they would have directly taken action back doors and left no time for culprits to act or react. 

Did Obama made the matter public as to when he was going to execute Osama? Matters of national and security affairs are never made public. They are executed back doors. And the reason execution will never happen in India is because no political party is crystal clean. Execution may embarrass all parties. Hence, the best strategy is to indulge in blame game and fool the public. And the best way to do it is name small bullion traders and Timblo's of the world (read unknown faces). 

Do you think the list shall contain names of top politicians and corporates? Certainly not! Naming is just done to calm our nerves. There is no benefit to aam aadmi here as there is limited possibility of that money getting traced and used for national development. Perhaps, the only beneficiaries could be TV anchors and controversy-hungry journalists since money matters attract maximum eyeballs in Indian drawing rooms. 

The point I am trying to make is that one should not live in false expectations of more transparency and clean economy post this move. It may take uncanny political will to prove us wrong.

On a lighter note, I am still wondering about the sanity and intelligence of those 627+ account holders. If I were them, I would have shut down the shops and escaped long back ;-)

See you until next time..

Power of Shadow Economy In India...

UThe poll rhetoric of bringing back all the black money into India within a period of 100 days turned into a long forgotten promise. Only after the Supreme Court rapped Centre for being lethargic, did the NDA government disclose a few names couple of days back. However, after receiving flak for creating a protective umbrella for the rest, the NDA government handed over the entire list containing 600 odd names to the Supreme Court today morning. 

So, will this bring an end to the black money trail and rescue India of the cancer that it has been breeding? 

To be quite honest, I reckon this entire exercise of naming and blaming is merely done for public appeasement. The very thought of tracing black money and punishing the guilty is like searching for Rapunzels in real world.

The logic is straightforward. This saga of bringing back the black money is on since ages. So, it is wishful to believe that account holders have not moved their money by now and are waiting for the government to act. As a matter of fact, an article in FirstPost succinctly highlights how the Indian National money with Swiss banks has vanished over periods. In 2006, Indian money in Swiss accounts stood at Rs 414 bn. It came down to Rs 140 bn in 2013. In fact, Swiss banks themselves have been asking their suspect account holders to move their money for safety purposes. 

It is like a local police station giving the robbers an advanced notice to raid them a week in advance. How stupid it can get to?

As such, this entire exercise of creating a list to trace the money is futile. If either the NDA or the UPA government was indeed serious of punishing the black money culprits, they would have not indulged in this public tamasha. Instead, they would have directly taken action back doors and left no time for culprits to act or react. 

Did Obama made the matter public as to when he was going to execute Osama? Matters of national and security affairs are never made public. They are executed back doors. And the reason execution will never happen in India is because no political party is crystal clean. Execution may embarrass all parties. Hence, the best strategy is to indulge in blame game and fool the public. And the best way to do it is name small bullion traders and Timblo's of the world (read unknown faces). 

Do you think the list shall contain names of top politicians and corporates? Certainly not! Naming is just done to calm our nerves. There is no benefit to aam aadmi here as there is limited possibility of that money getting traced and used for national development. Perhaps, the only beneficiaries could be TV anchors and controversy-hungry journalists since money matters attract maximum eyeballs in Indian drawing rooms. 

The point I am trying to make is that one should not live in false expectations of more transparency and clean economy post this move. It may take uncanny political will to prove us wrong.

On a lighter note, I am still wondering about the sanity and intelligence of those 627+ account holders. If I were them, I would have shut down the shops and escaped long back ;-)

See you until next time..

Friday, October 17, 2014

Want to lead a life full of joy, kill this thief!!

This striked me a few minutes back while I am determined to "leverage" the waiting time at the airport waiting for the announcement and once again looking at the facebook of the past through my wall did the strike on my head.

We all do it: we look at what others are doing and wish we were doing that too. Or worse, we scoff at what they’re doing and "judge" them, and see ourselves as better.

Now, The first one would definitely make us feeling inferier when we see people posting about having great time with the family or at the beach or having fun in general while we happen to look at their "incredible" life snapshots through boringly staring at the smart-dumb phone.

Or the second part of "judging", may certainly make us feel superior but does that make us happy, is the question that would take more than a moment to answer, honestly. We don’t know what it feels like to be this person, but maybe we can imagine that they’re suffering, and we can wish for their suffering to end.

So neither part of these behavioural patterns make us happy, right?

Looking deeply into these behavioural patterns, are we fair in our comparisons? We often end up comparing some of the beginning of ours to middle of others, I meant the phases of life.

Take the first case of comparison others seemingly "amazing" life, do you know that not all of them would post their life's happening when they are at stress, when they are at their high anxiety levels or having heated arguments OR in their insecurities.

Comparing yourself to others is insanity, because only you can be you.

Do you know one of the hardest battle you can never win, is comparing others with you.

The only person we should try to be better than at, would the be the person that we were yesterday OR better than the one that we used to be :)

As a wise man right(ful)ly said, the prime thief of one's joy would be the topic of the day, "Compare"...

Let us take that one step to kill this thief!!

Later..later,
Sudh

Thursday, May 8, 2014

Fittest survival - root of the innovation

The Japanese have always loved fresh fish. But the water close to Japan has not held many fish for decades. So to feed the Japanese population, fishing boats got bigger and went farther than ever. The farther the fishermen went, the longer it took to bring the fish. If
the return trip took more time, the fish were not fresh.

To solve this problem, fish companies installed freezers on their boats. They would catch the fish and freeze them at sea. Freezers allowed the boats to go farther and stay longer. However, the Japanese could taste the difference between fresh and frozen fish. And they did not like the taste of frozen fish. The frozen fish brought a lower price. So, fishing companies installed fish tanks.
They would catch the fish and stuff them in the tanks, fin to fin.
After a little thrashing around, they were tired, dull, and lost their fresh-fish taste. The fishing industry faced an impending crisis! But today, they get fresh-tasting fish to Japan. How did they manage? To keep the fish tasting fresh, the Japanese fishing companies still put
the fish in the tanks but with a small shark.
The fish are challenged and hence are constantly on the move. The challenge they face keeps them alive and fresh!

Have you realized that some of us are also living in a pond but most of the time tired and dull? Basically in our lives, sharks are new challenges to keep us active. If you are steadily conquering challenges, you are happy. Your challenges keep you energized. Don’t create success and revel in it in a state of inertia.

You have the resources, skills and abilities to make a difference. Put a shark in your tank and see how far you can really go...

Have a great day.                       
🚣

Tuesday, April 29, 2014

Sunday, March 23, 2014

El Nino - disaster waiting to happen Or stock market mutiny?

Good morning friends!

It has been quite some time since we met through my blog posts.  And how I thought I have picked up the habit of regular blogging as part of my new year resolution syndrome.

Anyways,  today morning I had this compelling mind voice about this news which I thought I can share my views with.

Recently there was a strong pitch in about the upcoming dangerous hear wave namely El Nino..  As some of you would have already guessed with the El word,  this appears to have originated from the Spanish with the meaning of small boy.

So how this small boy condition is formed?

EL NINO gets formed when the surface temperature grows higher than the normal in the western Pacific and cooler than the normal on its eastern pacific. 

When this condition happens,  the warm water flow gets created and moves towards the Easter Pacific regions,  blocking the cold water flow to balance it out.  However in the due course,  it triggers the temperature abnormality in the eastern specific regions.

This warm water situation triggers global weather changes.

When this may occur?

Scientists predicted this to happen in August time frame which mean impacting the south west monsoon in India.

What's the impact then...

With more than 50% of work force of India depending on the farm products,  this El Nino theory already caused more fears and damages to the Indian commodity markets,  as this theory focused on eastern Pacific regions.

Now back to the title of this post.. The question is this "El Nino -  disaster waiting to happen Or stock market mutiny?"

Mutiny??!  Why?

We will see the details tomorrow with more data and details..

Have a great day!

Wednesday, January 1, 2014

Speed reading - is it worth investing time with?

Speed Reading is not a complete scam, if that's what you're thinking. But the benefits have been exaggerated. Speed reading is what you might call the Ronald Reagan approach to reading--you get the text's general drift while remaining largely innocent of the details, sometimes embarrassingly so.

Several trained speed readers were once asked to read a doctored text in which the even-numbered lines came from one source and the odd-numbered lines from another.

The speed readers read the material three times (average speed: 1,700 words per minute) and claimed to understand it. But they never noticed it consisted of two separate passages mixed together.

Claims that speed readers comprehend just as well as ordinary readers are probably spurious. In one early comprehension test speed readers scored a seemingly respectable 68 percent. But it turned out the test was so easy that people who had never read the material at all scored 57 percent.

To find out the truth about speed reading one may turn to researchers Marcel Just, Patricia Carpenter, and Michael Masson. All are spiritual graduates of the Cecil Adams Cut-the-Comedy School of Scientific Investigation.

Just and company tested three groups: speed readers, normal readers, and "skimmers"--that is, people who were told to read rapidly but had no special training.

The researchers found that the speed readers read a little faster than the skimmers (700 WPM versus 600 WPM) and much faster than the normal readers (240 WPM). But the speed readers' comprehension was invariably worse, often a lot worse, than that of the normal readers.

What's more, the speed readers out-comprehended the skimmers only when asked general questions about easy material. When asked about details, or when reading difficult material, the skimmers and speed readers tested equally poorly.

I'm currently in the middle of Tony Buzan's book on it. It seems to make more outlandish claims than supported facts. I'm doing his exercises now. I have an above average reading speed ( 350 wpm or so) with about 80-90% comprehension. This increases to about 400-500 wpm but comprehension drops to about 40-50%, so I'm not convinced. It is possible, like many other things in life, that the rewards will become evident much later on, but as a person with very limited time, I am a bit impatient and I don't want to waste my time on something that may not work.

Conclusion: speed reading might help you read TV cue cards faster, but for technical stuff, the kind speed-reading buffs want us to read faster so we can outsmart the Japanese, it's pretty useless.

Reading seems to be like losing weight--there's just no fast and easy way to do it.

Now, what seemed to be good take away??

The basic idea is that you need to stop reading with your larynx (i.e., trying to pronounce each word as you go, even if just mentally) and start reading with your eyes (i.e., the information is processed by the brain immediately as you see it).

The trick to shift from one to the other is try pronounce something as you read, like “aeiou” or “123.” Sounds weird, but for me it worked.

With this tip, Enjoy Reading at your own pace!!