Thursday, 29 December 2016

Demonetization Opinions

Modi was able to generate euphoria with his charismatic speeches and enjoyed numerous foreign jaunts in the last 30 months without doing anything on the ground. Now he is under pressure to manage economy properly, reduce budget deficits, rescue crumbling banks, pace up reforms moving at snail's pace and he finds no way. Even though everyone knows demonetization doesn't solve any problems and its results are unpredictable, Modi, advised by some quacks, resorted wildest gamble only to win forthcoming elections in UP, Punjab etc, followed by Rajya Sabha, President & Vice President elections. Giving undue importance to secrecy and without any preparation for this gargantuan task, he announced demonetization like a dictator keeping aside all democratic processes, he shot in his foot and instantly landed in a ditch. Now he is digging it further. It was a massive man made economic disaster with informal economy (45% GDP share & 90% job share) standstill and millions of people are without livelihood and costed few lakh crores towards expenses and GDP lost. With none of his stated objectives viz. black money, corruption, fake currency and terrorism funding are achievable, he quickly shifted goalpost to "cashless economy" which is at least  two decades away in the absence of robust rural infrastructure and reliable cyber laws. While upper classes are busy with agents exchanging their black for a fee, middle classes merrily enjoying life with plastic cards, poorer classes having lost their livelihoods were compelled to stand in bank queues for exchanging currency. Supreme Court remarked that "discontinuing of higher denomination notes appears to be carpet bombing and not surgical strike". Instead of recognizing failed operation and taking corrective steps Modi unleashed raids signalling establishing police raj and destruction of institutions and are detrimental to our democracy. His audacity is visible in his remorselessness for 100+ deaths of elderly people & women in bank queues. Ironically, Modi's ascendance to power in 2014 is characterized by his campaign expenses of about Rs.10,000 crores funded by his industrialist friends albeit in black money and today BJP is the most cash funded party in India, for which no sources or accounts disclosed. In the end, this too will pass just as another hollow exercise, but Modi will have gained attention, which he loves. Today, stunned Indians stare to see their nation's economy destroyed, institutions crumbled and democracy in peril.
               
            (Click on the heading for original article)
By Manmohan Singh
Prime Minister has said that we should wait for 50 days. Well 50 days is a short period. But for those who are poor and from the deprived sections of the society even 50 days torture can bring about disastrous effects. The way this scheme has been implemented is a monumental management failure, and in fact, it is a case of organised loot, legalized plunder of the common people.

In India, black money makes for bad policy
By Kaushik Basu in New York Times
Demonetization was ostensibly implemented to combat black money, counterfeit currency, corruption, terrorism financing and inflation. But it was poorly designed, with scant attention paid to the laws of the market, and it is likely to fail. Tackling corruption goes beyond currency, cash or even banking. Demonetization's economics is complex and the collateral damage is likely to far outstrip the benefits. In a country like India, where the illegal economy is so intimately intertwined with the mainstream economy, one inept government intervention against shadow activities can do a lot of harm to the vast majority, who are just trying to make a legitimate living.

Demonetization is a foolish step
By Arun Kumar
Demonetization is a tool for economic surgery when currency has totally lost its value by replacing with a new currency created. But India is not in that situation and all our macro-economic indicators were reasonably good. Black money is not a parallel economy. Black economy and white economy are largely intertwined in India. This move, which is supposed to impact the black economy, is affecting the white economy terribly. Black economy has been growing for 70 years, can’t be solved overnight. There is no magic wand. What you could have done immediately is to bring accountability in the system. One man is trying to deliver on something that is undeliverable, against the advice of everybody else. That’s not how you run such a complex country like India. If I were there I would have asked 100 people.

IMF supports demonetization but cautions transition
Gerry Rice, Director, International Monetary Fund
We support the measures to fight corruption and illicit financial flows in India. Of course, given the large role of cash in everyday transactions in India’s economy, the currency transition will have to be managed prudently to minimize possible disruption. I am just saying that when countries make these kinds of move, which is not exceptional — countries do this quite often — the transition needs to be managed very well.

I.G Patel, RBI Governor on demonetization ordinance 1978
From Patel’s memoirs
“such an exercise seldom produces striking results. Most people who accept illegal gratification or are otherwise the recipients of black money do not keep their ill-gotten earnings in the form of currency for long. The idea that black money or wealth is held in the form of notes tucked away in suit cases or pillow cases is naïve. And in any case, even those who are caught napping or waiting will have the chance to convert the notes through paid agents as some provision has to be made to convert at par notes tendered in small amounts for which explanations cannot be reasonably sought. But the gesture had to be made, and produced much work and little gain.”

Demonetisation is a despotic action that undermines trust
by Amartya Sen
The demonetization of currency was a despotic act as the government broke the promise of compensation that comes with a promissory note. Demonetization goes against trust. It undermines the trust of entire economy. Only an authoritarian government can calmly cause such misery to the people - with millions of innocent people being deprived of their money and being subjected to suffering, inconvenience and indignity in trying to get their own money back. At one stroke the move declares all Indians - indeed all holders of Indian currency - as possibly crooks, unless they can establish they are not.

Demonetisation isn't new and has been tried before with limited success
By Raghuram Rajan
The clever find ways around demonetization. It is not that easy to flush out the black money. I would focus more on the incentives to generate and retain black money. My sense is the current tax rate in this country is for the most part reasonable. We have a reasonable tax regime. There is no reason why everybody who should pay taxes is not paying taxes. I would focus more on tracking data and better tax administration to get at where money is not being declared. I think it is very hard in this modern economy to hide your money that easily.

Jumping in the well is also very radical, committing suicide is also radical
By Arun Shourie
While the stated objective may be good, the idea was not well thought out. The government had not anticipated the distress that would be caused by doing away with 85% of Indian currency. Small and medium enterprises, the transport sector, the entire agricultural sector. It's not possible to reach six lakh villages. They did not think about this?  It is about being carried away by a big idea, getting into a self-image that I have to do some surgical strike. Therefore every week you see them saying - its been a week, a month, I have to do something. Jumping in the well is also very radical, committing suicide is also radical...if you want to make a beginning, make a beginning on reforming the tax administration.The cash clean-up would not get to the heart of the black or untaxed money problem. People who hold this black money or black assets don't hold it in cash. He did not think India was ready to move to becoming a cashless economy.

Demonetisation won’t have lasting benefits
Larry Summers, Former U.S. Treasury Secretary
Former U.S. Treasury Secretary Larry Summers has said that the Narendra Modi government’s demonetization move would not have any lasting benefits. Terming India’s demonetization move as one of the “most sweeping change in currency policy that has occurred anywhere in the world in decades”, Mr. Summers said, “…For the government to expropriate from even a few innocent victims who, for one reason or another, do not manage to convert their money is highly problematic.” “We strongly suspect that those with the largest amount of ill-gotten gain do not hold their wealth in cash but instead have long since converted it into foreign exchange, gold, bitcoin or some other store of value. So it is petty fortunes, not the hugest and most problematic ones, that are being targeted,”

India's Demonetization Is A "Massive Man-Made Disaster"
By Jayant Bhandari
Should a single person have the authority to flip a switch and bring all trade, transactions, indeed the entire economy to a halt? Modi suffers from worst possible type of corruption: an insatiable desire for personal glory at any cost, an extremely deep moral and spiritual corruption. He also represents the worst aspect of democracy: a demagogue who caters to an irrational populace’s cravings for self-identity and release from self-responsibility.  What a crazy idea it is to have a State monopoly on money. Cash is not trickling down. The poorest 50% of India’s population, who have no reserves, are the worst affected and are going hungry. A vicious cycle has been set into motion by Modi and unpredictable problems and unintended consequences are bound to surface incessantly. Modi, in his permanent search for personal glorification could easily impose a state of emergency or go to war with Pakistan. This demonetization will go down as one of the most naïve, least thought through policy decisions ever, a massive man-made disaster.

What India has done to its money is sickening and immoral
Steve Forbes, Forbes Staff
India's government perpetrated an unprecedented act of demonetization, that is not only damaging its economy and threatening destitution to countless millions of its already poor citizens but also breathtaking in its immorality. People will always find ways to engage in wrongdoing. Terrorists aren't about to quit their evil acts because of a currency change. As for the digitization of money, it will happen in its own good time if free markets are permitted. And the best cure for tax evasion is a low-rate tax system. India is the most extreme and destructive example of the anticash fad. There's no misunderstanding what this is truly about: attacking your privacy and inflicting more government control over your life. What India has done is commit a massive theft of people's property without even the pretense of due process--a shocking move for a democratically elected government.

Modi has brought havoc to India
The Guardian, Editorial
Demonetization was justified as a move designed to fight corruption and target people who have been black money. Many initially saw the withdrawal of banknotes as a price worth paying to eliminate graft. The short-term impact of “demonetization” has been dramatic: the $2 trillion Indian economy will shrink. The rich will not suffer, as corruptly acquired fortunes have almost all been converted to shares, gold and real estate. But the poor, who make up the bulk of the nation’s 1.3 billion people, will lose out. They don’t generally have bank accounts and are often paid in cash. For them, getting to a bank and queuing for hours will cost money and time they don’t have. In less than a week the policy has reportedly claimed more than a dozen lives. The government says that it will take weeks to sort out the problems. The scale and speed of Modi’s scheme has more in common with the failed experiments of dictatorships which led to runaway inflation, currency collapse and mass protests. Slower, incremental reforms do not make headlines. They do not instantly hit the war chests of political rivals in upcoming state polls. Mr Modi, a Hindu nationalist, was for a decade an international pariah over his alleged role in the mass murder of Muslims in a region he once administered. He wants to be known for something else. President-elect Trump offers an opportunity to recast himself. Two years ago Mr Trump’s svengali, Steve Bannon, described Mr Modi’s victory as part of a “global revolt”. But a looming cash crunch and an administrative crisis makes it look like the revolt might start at home.

Demonetisation shock has hit the poorest the most
The Wire, Editorial
For the last few days the world is watching the bizarre spectacle of millions of Indians waiting in long, unending queues to recover their own money from banks, post offices and ATMs even as the government at the Centre remains firmly in denial about the untold hardship to the poor. Some senior citizens have died of exhaustion standing in queues for hours on end. It is almost certain that the economy will slowdown further in the short to medium term and there could be more joblessness. Modi has further upped the ante by suggesting he could take more harsh measures in the future. The PM would have truly walked the talk if he had attacked the nexus between the big business and politics which truly nurtures the black money ecosystem. BJP is the most cash funded party these days. If Modi wants his drive against black money to have credibility he must demonstrate he can go after the big fish and cause them immense pain. So far the pain has been largely borne by the ordinary people. The next few months will make it clear whether he has bitten more than he can chew.

Modi’s attempt to crush the black economy is hurting the poor
The Economist
Consumer spending was the one thing really driving this economy, and now we are looking at a negative wealth-effect where people feel poorer and spend less. RBI failed to warn the impatient Modi that there were not enough new notes to replace old ones. It has issued a bewildering blitz of complex and sometimes contradictory instructions to banks. Its governor, Urjit Patel, has been perplexingly silent. Its reputation for probity, competence and independence is in tatters. Such a fiasco could spell disaster for the government in power. Particularly so for a party that sailed into office on promises to boost growth, provide jobs and encourage investment. Modi’s opponents have blasted his policy as obtuse, destructive and downright criminal. Modi has shifted the goalposts. What started as a ‘surgical strike’ on black money is now called the dawn of a cashless society. Pivotal elections in India’s largest state, Uttar Pradesh, loom early next year. But if more cash does not soon appear, Modi’s future may look very different.

The country is in an uproar
The Diplomat
This move has left the biggest chunk of black money untouched – the stacks that lie in undisclosed accounts in Swiss Banks. The argument provided for why this move was announced and administered overnight is that it denies hoarders of black money the chance to dispose of it. While that may appear to be sound logic, it has also apparently impacted the banking system’s ability to ensure a smooth transition. The rural poor, women who do not inform their families of hidden stashes of cash, refugees who lack the requisite documents, socially ostracized communities like transgender communities and sex workers – are other immediate victims. This is in addition to the fact that reports indicate that the government may have over-estimated the existing levels of connectivity to banking. Modi, in a rhetorically rich speech, requested the nation for 50 days to launch this self-labeled war on black money. He asked the people to make short-term sacrifices in the interest of long-term gains. Both the activist and the non-activist sections of social media have equally raved about or ripped apart this rhetoric. While it is too soon to declare whether the long-term gains are indeed forthcoming, the “short term” sacrifices have been more than significant and immensely painful.

The debate is about nationalism and patriotism
The Huffington Post
The debate is no longer about demonetization, whether it works or not, but has been transformed into a debate is about nationalism and patriotism. Plastic is the new patriotism in cashless India. PayTM is the new khadi. Your debit card is your new charkha with which to spin the dreams of India Shining. No one can defend black money, not even those who hoard it. By making it a debate about nationalism, the government tries to cleverly sidestep a more contentious issue of demonetization. Once patriotism could accommodate a spectrum of opinion. Now patriotism is about uniformity of opinion, preferably the government's opinion. Any difference of opinion is tarred quickly as anti-national by the troll brigade. Modi, born after independence, represents an India that has benefited from the sacrifices of its forbears but has little appetite for sacrifice of its own. Rahul Gandhi has never understood that mind shift. He still sells the sacrifice of the Gandhis, way past its expiration date, oblivious to the fact that no one cares about that anymore. Modi, astute politician that he is, understands that his job is to sell success, not sacrifice, with the minimum of sacrifice required at least from its voters. And now suddenly his voice choked with emotion, reminding the nation of his many sacrifices and asks voters to bear with the woes of demonetization. It's no longer a debate about the merits of demonetization or the problems of its implementation. It's about nationalism, jawans and aged mothers. And which spoiled corrupt anti-national naysayer dares to be seen on the wrong side of that argument?

Demonetization cures the disease but kill the patient
By Ramesh Thakur, The Japan Times, Opinion
Disruptive technology can unleash creative forces through destructive impact on an industry that exists in a stable equilibrium of vested interests. Will demonetization cure the disease but kill the patient? By withdrawing 86 percent of circulating currency the Indian government burned down its economic house in order to eradicate the pest of corruption? Such shock therapy in a major economy is without precedent, so no one can predict the long-term structural impact and the full range of intended, pernicious and perverse consequences. The policy is an attack on the Indian way of doing business. Has a single parliamentarian, let alone Cabinet minister, stood in line to exchange currency notes? Demonetization attacks the stock without touching the flow of black money. The move also confuses the black with the informal economy by conflating cash with black money. India’s formal and informal economies are not quarantined from each other, but form a seamless value chain. Almost one-third of the working capital of small businesses comes from the black economy. Can that lost capital be replenished with fresh credit? Shock therapy without institutional transformation enlarges government while minimizing governance; more government equals more corruption. Demonetization cements the Indian government’s reputation for capricious and arbitrary economic actions. It could denude political rivals of substantial cash assets for fighting the forthcoming elections in Uttar Pradesh, India’s most populous state. Another governance pathology is the failure to tell friends from foes and a stubborn refusal to listen to contrarian voices from people of goodwill with the requisite expertise. Instead the government’s default mode is to attack any criticism as somehow anti-national or pro-corruption.

Policy intention and implementation are inseparable
By Rhea Karuturi, The Stanford Daily
The question hardest to answer: Can you separate the intention of a policy from its implementation? And what does that mean in the context of an underfunded government riddled with corruption and charged with a sprawling population united by their diversity? How do we reconcile Modi’s aspirations for a cashless economy in India with the sheer number of people in the economy leading a hand to mouth existence? We need big ideas, bold moves and the audacity to hope. But that doesn’t justify this kind of policy, which writes off the suffering of millions as collateral damage when that suffering could so easily be avoided. And while this policy may make the government wary of large changes, what we don’t need is another political era defined by meek bandaids for gaping wounds. What we need from the Modi government is for them to keep dreaming but to do it better: and to do the hard work of making those dreams work with the reality we have.

There is an empathy deficit
Monishankar Prasad, Author and editor for Alochonaa
The unbanked and informal economy is hard hit. The poor do not have the access to structural and cultural resources to adapt to shock doctrine economics. The poor were taken totally off guard and the banking infrastructure in the hinterland is rather limited. The tech class has poor exposure to critical social theory in order to understand the impact on the ground. There is an empathy deficit.

Modi has shot himself in the foot
By Swaminathan Aiyer
The fact is that you are creating a problem for 100% of the people to catch the top 0.1% of the people. There is going to be huge distress and uncertainty especially for informal economy, poor and peasants who are totally cash dependent. Modi is gambling that there will ultimately be such a positive thing saying I have cracked down on black money and counterfeiters that it will offset the distress being caused to the public. It is a very risky political gambit, causes a lot of pain to everybody and will backfire on Modi. The ultimate problem is much deeper one that we are pathetically impotent in stopping illegal transactions of various kinds. This is very adroit move with political risk, senseless and sure to backfire. Modi has shot himself in the foot and India lost.

Demonetization: Wheels within the wheels
By Ajith Pillai
The recent demonetization drive by the Narendra Modi government is a classic “bolt out of the blue” event that stumped the nation. Providing a rationale for the largest cash culling operation in the world is difficult unless one quietly accepts the official thesis that it was a surgical strike against black money when no more than five percent of unaccounted wealth is in cash. Demonetization was supposed to be a fight against black money but now it seems like a war against the people. All conclusions drawn are limited by the fact that the prime minister took the decision keeping even his cabinet and top bankers in the dark. The only objective demonetization has served is in neutralizing counterfeit currency which funds terrorist groups of about Rs 400 crore and secrecy served no purpose. Cash culling has been projected as a fight against illegal wealth because of its popular appeal. Modi has been reiterating that those who oppose the government are with the evil forces behind black money. BJP hopes to score a moral political victory by projecting few lakh crores of unreturned money as black money disabled. In the past one year, public sector bank NPAs and bad loans doubled compelling former RBI governor Raghuram Rajan recommending a clean-up of the banks through recovery of bad loans by even taking over the assets of defaulters allegedly close to the ruling dispensation. Post demonetization, the defunct money that the common citizen has returned to the banks will be what rescues the banks and not any black money. Banks find themselves in a happy situation where they can consider delaying action against errant corporate houses and big business responsible for the NPAs.

The situation has gone from bad to worse
By MS Sriram, IIM Bangalore in scroll.in
In a single announcement, the prime minister Modi declared 86% of the currency as not being legal tender and faith in the currency was fundamentally shaken. The secrecy of the operation has completely prevented adequate preparation. The extent of the exercise for replacing 86% cash has not even been thought through. In short, we are in a massive mess. In shortage times, human tendency is to conserve, hoard and not circulate. We have never seen a real run on the bank in India. What we are witnessing now is a unprecedented run on the banking system and is the worst man-made disaster. Right now, the ones who are celebrating the assault on black money, terrorism and counterfeits and pontificating that we should bear a bit of pain for a great gain are the ones who are in the electronic economy. Imagine the service providers whom we are bypassing are the ones who are not in the digital economy, and are losing business. They are very large in number and they either have to work, or stand in long queues for getting their own legitimate hard-earned cash. The digital divide was never more stark. The informal economy people are patient, and are making informal arrangements in the supply chain.Would the system be able to infuse enough circulation before the informal arrangements and faith breaks apart? This experiment will see much bloodshed and several heads will roll.

Delhi’s planners double down on their ‘cashless society’ blunder
By Wall Street Journal
In a cashless society the state has far greater means to harm the public, both through inept policies and abuses of power. Cashless society is suspected at creating economic devastation and usurping of an individual's economic liberty. Sweden may be the best model for cashlessness, as only 2% of transactions use cash. But Sweden has low corruption in government, reliable legal protections, high social trust and advanced financial and technological infrastructure. India has none of that, but it does have government officials with radical plans to reshape a society in which half of the population doesn’t even have a bank account. Indians would benefit from access to digital finance, which can cut transaction costs, make credit more affordable and channel state aid directly to citizens, bypassing sticky-fingered bureaucrats. The government can help by liberalizing financial regulation and improving telecommunications infrastructure. But it should also respect citizens who want to keep at least some cash. Imposing a “cashless society” is antithetical to economic liberty.

Patriotism is the last resort of the scoundrels;
Pseudo patriotism is the last resort of the incompetent.

What is money?

Money is such a multi-faceted and all-pervasive element of our system, that our capability to obsess about one aspect of it prevents us developing a proper appreciation of what it actually is.

Our monetary system is based on fraud. Can you and I write checks “drawn on ourselves”? Of course not. We have to back them up with value. The Fed does not. So, the mighty US dollar is not backed by gold or silver or anything at all; it’s simply an accounting trick ... Paul Rosenberg

How does a monetary economy differ from one in which trade occurs by barter? This ruled out gold being money, since gold is a commodity that anyone can produce for themselves with a bit of mining (and a lot of luck). So even though gold is really special and incredibly rare, it is in the end, a commodity: an economy using gold for trade is really a barter economy, not a monetary one.

A true monetary economy is inconsistent with the presence of a commodity money. A commodity money is by definition a kind of money that any producer can produce for himself. But an economy using as money a commodity coming out of a regular process of production, cannot be distinguished from a barter economy. A true monetary economy must therefore be using a token money, which is nowadays a paper currency ...  Augusto Graziani

In a credit economy at the end of the period some agents still owe money to other ones, a final payment is needed, which means that no money has been used. So to be money, the token given in exchange for a good must be accepted as a final payment, but this carried the danger that whoever produced the token might be able to “get something for nothing”.

Graziani's three basic conditions that had to be met for something to be called “money”:
  1. money has to be a token currency (otherwise it would give rise to barter and not to monetary exchanges);
  2. money has to be accepted as a means of final settlement of the transaction (otherwise it would be credit and not money);
  3. money must not grant privileges of seignorage to any agent making a payment.
The only way to satisfy those three conditions is to have payments made by means of promises of a third agent, the typical third agent being nowadays a bank.

So money is fundamentally the promise of a bank to its customer, and a monetary payment is the transfer of that promise from one customer to another. 

Monetary payment must therefore be a triangular transaction, involving at least three agents, the payer, the payee, and the bank.

Firms are present in the market as sellers or buyers of commodities and make recourse to banks in order to perform their payments; banks on the other hand produce means of payment, and act as clearing houses among firms. In any model of a monetary economy, banks and firms cannot be aggregated into one single sector.

In reality it is simply the nature of a monetary economy: money is simply a third party’s promise to pay which we accept as full payment in exchange for goods. The two main third parties whose promises we accept are the government and the banks.

Sunday, 25 December 2016

Moody's rejects ratings upgrade lobby by Modi



  • India's current rating by Moody's stands at Baa3, the lowest investment grade, a notch above junk status.
  • US-based agency, Moody's, declined to budge citing concerns over the country's debt levels and fragile banks.
  • Winning a better credit rating on India's sovereign debt would have been a much-needed endorsement of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's economic stewardship, helping to attract foreign investment and accelerate growth.
  • Moody's said India's debt situation was not as rosy as the government maintained and its banks were a cause for concern.
  • India has been the world's fastest growing major economy over the past two years, but that rapid expansion has done little to broaden the government's revenue base.
  • At nearly 21% of gross domestic product (GDP), India's revenues are lower than the 27.1% median for Baa-rated countries. India is rated at Baa3 by Moody's, the agency's lowest notch for debt considered investment grade. A higher rating would signify to bond investors that India was more creditworthy and help to lower its borrowing costs.
  • India's debt-to-GDP ratio has dropped to 66.7% from 79.5% in 2004-05, interest payments absorb more than a fifth of government revenues.
  • The ministry attempting to impress that the government's resolve to contain the fiscal deficit at 3.5 per cent of GDP in the current financial year didn't impress the agency.
  • Diron had told local media that a ratings upgrade for India was some years away, depending on the progress on reforms.
  • Diron said that, not only was India's debt burden high relative to other countries with the same credit rating, but its debt affordability was also low. She added that a resolution to the banking sector's bad loan problems was "unlikely" in the near-term.
  • Moody's on November 16 affirmed its Baa3 issuer rating for India, while maintaining a positive outlook, saying the government's efforts had not yet achieved conditions that would support an upgrade.
My View:
Trying to influence for better ratings, whether deserving or not, is not uncommon but definitely is beneficial to the nation. Attempting to influence rating agencies without taking any pragmatic corrective steps and getting deeply involved in petty politics is unbecoming of leader of the nation. Ask a farmer and he will tell you, fields tilling, irrigating, seeding, cultivating, applying fertilizers and harvesting in a sequential manner over a certain time only will result in good harvest. Nothing can be achieved overnight. In a country with 125 crore people, diverse cultures and saddled with illiteracy, poverty, belief systems and spread over 600,000 villages development is a slow process. In the process inflicting injuries on the lowest strata is immoral and must be avoided. Above all principles of democracy and constitutional obligations should never be given go by.

Friday, 23 December 2016

Success and Failure

Success is the accomplishment of an aim or purpose.
Failure is lacking success.
While succeeding is important, the road map to success is even more important.
Success as a result of illegal & immoral means is worse than failure.

Ingredients of success
  1. Vision & goal definition.
  2. Tenacity and perseverance.
  3. Research, planning & resource mobilization.
  4. Developing sound business model.
  5. Due diligence and risk mitigation.
  6. Timing and luck.
  7. Execution.

Managing success
  1. Managing success is harder than handling failure.
  2. Neither success nor failure are permanent. 
  3. Hard work is the only path to true success.
  4. Elation of success or depression of failure are unnecessary.  
  5. Identify and acknowledge contributors for success and reward them.
  6. Never let ego destroy business. 
  7. Take time to celebrate success and pay attention to the lessons it offers.
  8. Eliminate wastage and optimize costs.
  9. Innovation to stay succeed.

Lessons from failure
  1. Failure is never the end of road. It is just a turn.
  2. Reshape values and redefine priorities
  3. Become more compassionate.
  4. Improve perspective on finance.
  5. Revisit approach and realize true friends.
  6. Realize that success isn’t everything.
  7. Re-envision goals.
  8. Become more passionate about mission.
  9. Develop a deeper sense of community.
  10. Learn to never give up.

Resolve to be honest at all events; and if in your own judgment you cannot 
be an honest lawyer, resolve to be honest without being a lawyer. 
Choose some other occupation ... Abraham Lincoln

The progress towards the goal will be in exact 
proportion to the purity of the means. As the means so the end. 
It is not the end that we can work with but only means ... Gandhi 

My View:
Both success and failures are a myth. They are simply results of choices, actions and luck. Results are never in our hands nor predictable. Otherwise, we will not see so many great people fail in the history. What is in our hands is preparation, mitigation of risks and execution. Rest is luck. Ironically, money reflects success. Money is important for comfortable living. But there are many things which money can't buy. Peace & happiness has nothing to do with money. They are mindset. Many poor people live happy and meaningful lives. In this world, no good man has ever made a fortune. The more morals and ethics are compromised they more one can make money. In most cases enrichment is consequence of destruction of ecological assets. People succeed with inside advance information of government policy changes which is a punishable crime in any democracy and reflects its association with crime, corruption and bribery. With all ills of the society there are ample opportunities for good and honest people to do business and earn decent income.

Monday, 19 December 2016

Venezuela: Riots forces suspension of demonetization until Jan 2, 2017


Dec 19 2016 : The Times of India

Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro suspended demonetization of the country's largest denomination bill, which has sparked unrest, until January 2. The surprise pulling out of the 100-bolivar note from circulation this week -before new larger bills were available -led to vast lines at banks, looting at scores of shops, anti-government protests and about four deaths.

Maduro blamed a “sabotage“ campaign by enemies abroad for the delayed arrival of three planes carrying the new 500-, 2,000 and 20,000-bolivar notes. “One plane, contracted was told in flight to change direction and go to another country ,“ he said.“There's another which was not given flyover permission.“

The 100-bolivar bills, officially out of use since Thurs day and worth just 4 US cents at the black market currency rate, can now be used until January 2. Many Venezuelans had found themselves without the means to pay for food, gasoline or Christmas preparations in a country already reeling from an economic crisis.

About 40% of Venezue lans do not have bank accounts. Adding to the chaos, Venezuela has the world's highest rate of inflation, which is set to hit 475% this year, meaning large bags of cash must be humped around to pay for basic items.

“We have a government utterly stupid and destructive in economic management, whose only goal is to keep power at whatever price,“ said opposition leader Julio Borges. Maduro had justified the demonetisation move as a way of strangling mafia on the frontier with Colombia. He has also closed border crossings with Colombia and Brazil until January 2.

My View:
Venezula was suffering from low oil prices and hyperinflation despite percapita GDP of $10,000+ and its currency has become worthless which warranted demonetization. However demonetization with out new bills to replace was monumental mistake that lead to chaos and people starving for food and supplies. Blaming external forces for failures is meaningless. By inept planning & implementation, demonetization has compounded the problems instead of solving any ills.

Maduro emulated Modi with demonetization surprise and with out replacement supplies and it boomeranged on his face. 

Indian exercised unusual patience in queues despite 100+ queue deaths so far despite cash supply situation not improving in 50 days. Past is no guarantee for future, Modi should remember and accelerate mitigation measures.

Demonetisation brings manufacturing to a halt


Auto Spare Parts Sector Takes Beating
Dec 19 2016 : The Times of India (Hyderabad)

About 30,000 units manufacturing auto mobile spare parts and about the same number of agro based industrial units have shut shop post-demonetisation with orders drying up. About 1.5 lakh MSME units (all segments) lined up along Jeedimetla, Balanagar, Shahpur, Maheswaram, Adibatla, Quthbullapur, Dulapally , Kukatpally and Cherlapally are on verge of shutting down operations after facing huge losses over the past one month. Also small players in retail textile, food processing and plastic industry are also bearing the brunt of demonetisation.

Despite the announcement that banks can give upto Rs.50,000 to commercial establishments, banks are not giving that amount. “The worst hit among the lot are the micro units with turnover of `10 lakh to `50 lakh. Also MSMEs across segments are hit badly. In most of these units, the workers are hired on a daily basis.“ added Gowra Srinivas, senior vice president, Federation of Telangana and Andhra Pradesh Chambers of Commerce and Industry .

Since the `micro' industry completely runs on cash, be it placing of orders, transportation, payment to workers or purchase of raw materials, units have seen between 50 to 70% loss of production over the month.“I am unable to pay to my labourers as none of them have bank accounts. They are refusing to come to work, forcing me to suspend operations,“ said Shaik Hussain, accessory manufacturing unit owner from Balanagar.

“With production at the manufacturing units dipping, the supply has gone down. Moreover, even the transportation network which operates only on cash is hit. In the whole process, I am unable to supply to my clients. I have not only lost a number of orders but even reputation in the process.“


My View:
The overall impact could be well over 1,000,000 people. Modi & Co wants brings these people into formal economy and tax them. What a ridiculous idea! 

While they don't pay income tax only they pay all indirect taxes levied on consumption. Even if Modi & Co decides to tax them, it will be meager which produces much work and little gain.

Modi as leader of the nation should realize the realities of the nation before heeding to the funny advises of economic pundits living in ivory towers about avenues to maximize tax revenues.

Sunday, 18 December 2016

Patriotism

Patriotism is defined as love for or devotion to one's country. Frequently compared or contrasted with nationalism which is also loyalty and devotion to a nation; especially a sense of national consciousness exalting one nation above all others and placing primary emphasis on promotion of its culture and interests as opposed to those of other nations or supranational groups. The difference between patriotism and nationalism is that the patriot is proud of his country for what it does, and the nationalist is proud of his country no matter what it does; the first attitude creates a feeling of responsibility, but the second a feeling of blind arrogance that leads to war.

Some famous quotations are:
  • When a nation is filled with strife, then do patriots flourish ... Lao Tzu
  • Patriotism is the last refuge of a scoundrel ... Samuel Johnson
  • It is but refusing to gratify an unreasonable or an insolent demand, and up starts a patriot ... Robert Walpole
  • No man can be a patriot on an empty stomach ... William Cowper
  • There are seasons in every country when noise and impudence pass current for worth; and in popular commotions especially, the clamors of interested and factious men are often mistaken for patriotism ... Alexander Hamilton
  • Guard against the impostures of pretended patriotism ... George Washington
  • Patriotism is supporting your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it ... Mark Twain
  • Patriot is the person who can holler the loudest without knowing what he is hollering about ... Mark Twain
  • Patriotism is the virtue of the vicious ... Oscar Wilde
  • Patriotism consists not in waving the flag, but in striving that our country shall be righteous as well as strong ... James Bryce
  • True patriotism hates injustice in its own land more than anywhere else ... Clarence Darrow
  • Patriotism is not a short and frenzied outburst of emotion but the tranquil and steady dedication of a lifetime ... Adlai Stevenson
  • Patriotism is looking out for yourself by looking out for your country ... Calvin Coolidge
  • A patriot must always be ready to defend his country against his government ... Edward Abbey
  • No matter that patriotism is too often the refuge of scoundrels. Dissent, rebellion, and all-around hell-raising remain the true duty of patriots ... Barbara Ehrenreich
  • Heroism on command, senseless violence, and all the loathsome nonsense that goes by the name of patriotism - how passionately I hate them! ... Albert Einstein
  • Let every nation know, whether it wishes us well or ill, that we shall pay any price, bear any burden, meet any hardship, support any friend, oppose any foe to assure the survival and the success of liberty ... John F. Kennedy
  • Patriotism is when love of your own people comes first; nationalism, when hate for people other than your own comes first ... Charles de Gaulle
  • If we love our country, we should also love our countrymen ... Ronald Reagan
  • I saw courage both in the Vietnam War and in the struggle to stop it. I learned that patriotism includes protest, not just military service ... John F. Kerry
  • Unless our conception of patriotism is progressive, it cannot hope to embody the real affection and the real interest of the nation ... Jane Addams
  • I don't want to see the military falling. I want to see the military rising to dignified heights of professionalism and true patriotism ... Aung San Suu Kyi
  • Dissent is the highest form of patriotism ... Howard Zinn
  • Real patriotism is a willingness to challenge the government when it's wrong ... Ron Paul

Patriotism is the last refuge of the scoundrel; 
Pseudo patriotism is the last refuge of the incompetent.

My View:
Modi invoking patriotism following fiasco due to his senseless demonetization to cover up his unauthorized decision is nothing but tyranny. His cabinet ministers, BJP MPs, several opposition leaders and even media were suppressed in raising dissent for the fear of being branded as anti-nationals by Modi with unchallenged grip on the country.Propaganda that cashless transaction as a solution with out any infrastructure or public awareness is a diversionary tactic from the man made economic disaster.

Ironically, middle class educated and salaried classes who were in complete disconnect with poor, peasants and rural masses were solidly behind Modi with blind belief that desired results will be achieved despite crores of people confined to queues for over 40 days for their meager cash needs and queue deaths nearing 100 and informal sector grounded.

From the above quotes it clear that dissenting, challenging and fighting tyrannical government which destroyed the nation with its ill conceived, secretly unveiled and unscientific demonetization is patriotic, but not silently co-operating. Modi not taking experts into confidence for bailing out the national chaos with corrective measures and blindly going in the same wrong direction with increasing speed is nothing but insanity. 

All political parties and people should unite and dislodge Modi from seat of power and save the nation from his authoritarian regime, otherwise we will find ourselves ten years backwards with democracy and institutions facing extinction.

Singing national anthem has nothing to do with either patriotism or nationalism.