May 11, 2013

Why India needs its poor

Well, this is a pseudo intellectual thought that I have been harboring for a few years now.

A lack of poverty in India does not augur well for business. As we have seen with the NREGA that when the poor get paid to not work, their incentive to participate in the millions of unskilled jobs in big cities- as construction workers, sweepers, rickshaw pullers- reduces significantly. This drives up the cost of business in the cities- which in the absence of a robust farm/ manufacturing sector are the country's only growth engines.

With agricultural growth defunct and incremental manufacturing capacity kept in check by poor infrastructure (think power cuts), red tape, inability to free up land for setting up hubs, perpetual policy paralysis, etc., all the poor could do earlier was become slaves to city dwellers: drivers, maids, security guards.

But when NREGA gives them an option to stay in their villages and earn money for sitting at home, the cost of labor in our cities goes up- which means the cost of business goes up. It also means that millions of people now have the purchasing power to upgrade their diet beyond basic foodgrain and this ramps up inflation for all of us which makes our central bank raise rates, which in turn makes our growth nose dive.

If India needs to grow the way it is growing right now (with negligible farm and manufacturing growth), it needs its poor to stay poor. Maybe grow poorer.

May 10, 2013

Three

I look at this blog sometimes... a mere shadow of the lively acidic volatile blog that I kept in my DCE days and miss my younger, more carefree days. When there were less excels, less trackers, less presentations, but almost as many idiotic people around me. There is perhaps a moron to non moron ratio that nature maintains delicately, through Group Discussions, Interviews and Offer Letters.

In the name of the Polymer Science and Chemical Technology Course at  Delhi College of Engineering and its concomitant doofuses, Lord, let me be sarcastic again!

Or perhaps, corporate setups train free will, intellect and individual thought out of people. Anyway, I like it this way. I have been with some very smart people at times (in my SFS/ DCE/ FMS days) and sometimes you cannot really keep with their sense of humor (jokes mostly cross reference three or four different difficult to read books).

It will soon be three years of corporate slavery.

I hope my wit survives another year.