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Tata Consultancy targets finance clients in growth push
BANGALORE, India
Turkish Press, MI
08-06-2007, 10h05

Top Indian software firm Tata Consultancy Services unveiled a new push Monday to get work from banks and finance firms outside the US to lessen its reliance on dollar billing.

Unveiling a new facility in Bangalore, to be staffed by 2,720 people who will increase to more than 3,200 by next March, company officials said they will focus on clients in the Asia-Pacific, the Middle East and Africa.

TCS, as the Mumbai-based software maker is known, and rivals are trying to reduce dependence on a US market that makes up two-thirds of the sales for India's 50-billion-dollar information-technology industry.

The rupee's 10 percent appreciation against the US currency this year is reducing the local-rupee equivalent of every dollar software makers earn, forcing them to look to alternative markets for future growth.

"The whole idea is to present ourselves across multiple geographies," said Subramaniam Ramadorai, chief executive officer.

"I dont think we have any mechanism to control what the government of India does or what the Reserve Bank of India does."

The rupee's surge has been fuelled partly by the central bank's hands-off approach towards foreign-exchange markets and investment flows into an economy expanding more than nine percent a year.

The central bank has been trying to soften the impact of inflation by allowing the rupee to rise, which makes imports such as crude and edible oils cheaper.

TCS is also trying to beat the rupee's appreciation by tapping new customers who pay more and by improving productivity gains, Ramadorai said.

The company has hedged about 2.5 billion dollars of anticipated revenue against the rupee in the financial markets, he said.

Finance firms provide about 40 percent of the revenues for TCS, part of the tea-to-trucks Tata conglomerate, which counts Deutsche Bank, Bank of China, ABN Amro and State Bank of India among its clients.

In the past year, TCS added 63 financial services clients to take the overall number to 225, competing with global giants including IBM and Accenture.

TCS and other Indian software makers have grown rapidly in the past decade by providing software services that help global clients lessen their business costs by leveraging on India's low-cost engineering talent.

That competitive edge however has been eroded by the surging rupee, forcing companies to explore options ranging from working an extra day a week to expanding in China and Vietnam.
 
India's human resources can fill a global need
MANIPUR, Aug. 6
M.D. NALAPAT

Not every teacher of the language would find that the numerous versions that pass for English in India have much in common with Shakespeare. For example, Mumbaikars (Bombayites, to the unwary) pronounce "snack" as "snake," terrifying friends from abroad who are offered one, while Punjabis call lawyers -- not entirely incorrectly -- "liars."

However, to the tolerant, India has become the largest English-speaking country on the globe, with no fewer than 320 million people speaking their own forms of the language. Once an English-speaking tourist has managed to decipher local accents (a task no more difficult than in parts of the United States or Australia) it would be nearly impossible to find a corner of India where this international language is not understood.

In six years, thanks to an expansion of English teaching in government schools, more than 500 million Indians are expected to speak the language, way ahead of that wannabe English-speaking nation, China. Add to this a Westminster-style legislative system, a British-inspired justice system and wide-open access to cable and the Internet, and it will be seen that the people of India are becoming acculturated into the globalized world at a clip almost as fast as the expansion of the economy.

Sixty years after freedom from the British Raj, several parts of the country -- notably the south and west -- have internalized the moderate, law-respecting chemistry required to remain in sync with the needs of a modern economy. Given the size and population of India, it is not surprising that there remain regions within the country where the dynamics and chemistry more closely mimic the American Wild West than the present law-abiding climate in much of Europe.

An analysis of India's 500-plus districts would match higher penetration of the English language (now the signature "chop" of the Indian middle class) with areas that are more stable in terms of law and order and have faster rates of development than others. This is not surprising, given the link between the effective use of English-style institutions and knowledge of the language.

What does this increase in Indians conversant in the language and social imperatives of Western civilization mean to Europe, faced with declining populations? Rather than Romania, Albania or Bulgaria, it is from India that the continent can find human resources to fuel continued expansion in output and services. An immigrant from the southern Indian cities of Chennai, Hyderabad or Bangalore would be far more likely to make a high net contribution to the country of transfer than an individual who has been resident in Bucharest, Tirana or Sofia.

This is not simply because of knowledge of English, but acclimatization in the institutions and practices of the Anglo-Saxon world, which has remained not simply the hub of economic progress, but the core of the knowledge economy. Rather than stick to a Mugabist policy of discriminating in favor of one's own ethnic group, countries within the European Union should trawl in India to meet their human resource needs for the coming decades.

A start has already been made, with negotiations now on between the newly formed Ministry of Overseas Indians Affairs with the governments of France, Sweden, Poland and Belgium to facilitate procedures for the entry of trained personnel from India, a country that trains 1 million engineers and 200,000 doctors and nurses each year, almost entirely in the English language.

Two countries outside the EU that could benefit from the rising numbers of trained professionals in India are Russia and Brazil, both of which have immense personnel needs. Were the two governments to set up clinics in India that could identify and train prospective migrants in Russian and Portuguese, they would get an economic boost, apart from doing away with hospitals without doctors and schools without teachers. Psychological tests could be given to ensure that those selected had the ability and willingness to adapt to the socio-cultural environment in their new homes. The countries of the Middle East have long used India as a base for sourcing personnel, and other regions could do worse than follow their example.

Although the Bangalore brothers Kafeel and Sabeel Ahmed, by falling prey to the blandishments of those engaged in a jihad against the West, may -- if guilty -- have blotted the clean copybook of the Muslims of India, yet the difference between the world's largest democracy and the Middle East (or even Muslim enclaves in Europe) is that the action of the two has generated revulsion rather than admiration among their own people, including the Muslim community. Far from celebrating the "martyrs" -- as happens in the West Bank and Gaza -- the luckless parents of the two have publicly expressed their shock and shame at the incident, as has the community at large.

What some have called their "timidity" or "lack of backbone" makes Indians far more likely to accept the constraints of law in an adopted home than many other nationalities. The absence of a breakdown of law and order following the country's natural catastrophes is another indication of this, an attitude of mind perhaps rooted in the ancient belief in "karma."

Whatever the causes, the fact remains that India, with its young and professionally trained population, is ideally suited to filling a good share of the deficit in human resources is other corners of the globe.
 
Wipro Technologies to Acquire Infocrossing
Acquisition of data center leader expected to position Wipro as the leader in global Remote Infrastructure Management Business

CNNMoney.com
August 06, 2007: 09:35 AM EST

BANGALORE, India and LEONIA, N.J., Aug. 6 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Wipro Technologies, the global IT services business of Wipro Limited , and Infocrossing, Inc. , a US-based provider of IT infrastructure management, enterprise application and business process outsourcing services, today announced that the companies have signed a definitive agreement for Wipro to acquire Infocrossing for $18.70 per share in an all cash deal that will create one of the world leaders in end-to-end IT infrastructure management solutions. The acquisition will be conducted by means of a tender offer for all of the outstanding shares of Infocrossing, followed by a merger of Infocrossing with a Wipro subsidiary. The tender offer is subject to a number of customary closing conditions, including regulatory approvals, and is expected to close by the fourth quarter of 2007.

"Wipro Technologies has identified global infrastructure services as an important driver of growth for the company and is pleased to add Infocrossing, which provides integrated managed infrastructure services to premier global clients," said Suresh Vaswani, President, Global IT Service-lines, of Wipro. "Total Outsourcing Services, which include our IT infrastructure services, grew 75% in the past year proving global clients are increasingly realizing the value of these services. This acquisition of an acknowledged industry leader broadens the data center and mainframe capabilities of Wipro Technologies to uniquely position us in the remote infrastructure management space. Through Infocrossing we are deepening our presence in the United States with the addition of five data center locations and approximately nine hundred employees." Sudip Banerjee, President Enterprise Solutions of Wipro Technologies added, "With its unique Platform based solutions, Infocrossing also brings in significant expertise in Health plan & Payer Management segments. With its proven track record of processing over 175 million claims annually and providing contracted services to over 90 managed care organizations, Infocrossing will considerably enhance Wipro's ADM & BPO offerings to our Healthcare customers."

The global IT infrastructure market has been projected to be $150 billion and the global market opportunity for remote infrastructure management services has been predicted to reach $70 billion, according to industry association NASSCOM. Infocrossing's expertise in hosted and managed IT infrastructure services will enhance Wipro's current service offerings. The Company operates five state-of-the art data centers in the United States and provides a full portfolio of infrastructure management solutions, including server management, mainframe outsourcing, network management and security services. For the twelve months ended March 31, 2007, Infocrossing had revenues of $232.4 million and net income of $9.3 million.

"Infocrossing is pleased to be joining such a strong global organization such as Wipro Technologies," said Zach Lonstein, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Infocrossing. "We selected Wipro after conducting a full process and believe that by coupling our strong services and U.S.-based operations with the global delivery model of Wipro Technologies, we will be able to drive additional value for the shareholders and clients of both our companies."

Wipro was advised on the transaction by Citigroup and represented by the law firm of Wilson Sonsini Goodrich and Rosati, and Infocrossing was advised by Credit Suisse Securities (USA) LLC and represented by the law firm of Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher LLP.

Wipro and Infocrossing will hold a conference call with investors on Monday, August 6, 2007 at 2:30 p.m. ET to discuss the announcement. The call-in number for the live audio call beginning at 2:20 p.m. ET is 1-973-633-1010. A live web cast of the conference call will also be available on Infocrossing's website at http://www.infocrossing.com. The webcast may also be accessed at ViaVid's website at www.viavid.net. To access the webcast, you will need to have the Windows Media Player on your desktop. This event is optimized for Microsoft's Windows media player version 9. To download go to http://www.microsoft.com/windows/windowsmedia/download. Wipro and Infocrossing will also hold a conference call on Tuesday August 7, 2007 at 7.00 am Indian Standard Time (9.30 pm US Eastern Time on Monday, August 6, 2007) to discuss the acquisition and answer questions sent to email ID: rajesh.ramaiah@wipro.com. An audio broadcasting of the management discussions and the question and answer session will be available online and will be accessible in the Investor Relations section of the company website at www.wipro.com. The dial-in details of the call are +91 22 2781 3019 / +91 22 6776 3709. Replay numbers are +91 22 6776 3709 (Replay available till September 6, 2007).

Additional Information

The tender offer described in this press release has not yet commenced, and this press release is neither an offer to purchase nor a solicitation of an offer to sell Infocrossing, Inc.'s ("Infocrossing") common stock. Investors and security holders are urged to read both the tender offer statement and the solicitation/recommendation statement regarding the tender offer described in this press release when they become available because they will contain important information. The tender offer statement will be filed by Wipro Limited ("Wipro") with the Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC"), and the solicitation/recommendation statement will be filed by Infocrossing with the SEC. Investors and security holders may obtain a free copy of these statements (when available) and other documents filed by Infocrossing or Wipro with the SEC at the website maintained by the SEC at www.sec.gov. The tender offer statement and related materials, solicitation/recommendation statement, and such other documents may be obtained for free by directing such requests to Infocrossing, Inc., Investor Relations, 2 Christie Heights Street, Leonia, New Jersey 07605, (201) 840- 4700.

Safe Harbor Statement

This release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. As such, final results could differ from estimates or expectations due to risks and uncertainties, including, but not limited to: completion of the tender offer and merger; incomplete or preliminary information; changes in government regulations and policies; continued acceptance of the Company's products and services in the marketplace; competitive factors; closing contracts with new customers and renewing contracts with existing customers on favorable terms; expanding services to existing customers; new products; technological changes; the Company's dependence upon third-party suppliers; intellectual property rights; difficulties with the identification, completion, and integration of acquisitions; and other risks. For any of these factors, the Company claims the protection of the safe harbor for forward-looking statements contained in the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, as amended.
 
GVK achieves financial closure for Uttarkhand electric project
Alakananda Hydro Power Company Limited (AHPCL), a GVK group company, Monday announced that it achieved financial closure for its 330 mw Shrinagar hydro electric project being set up in Uttarakhand at a cost of Rs.20.69 billion.

Alakananda Hydro Power Company Limited (AHPCL), a GVK group company, Monday announced that it achieved financial closure for its 330 mw Shrinagar hydro electric project being set up in Uttarakhand at a cost of Rs.20.69 billion.

The project will be funded through a debt equity ratio of 80:20, said a company statement here.

The debt component of Rs.16.55 billion is funded in rupees (Rs.14.94 billion) and in US dollars (Rs.1.61 billion). The equity of the project will be Rs.4.14 billion, said A. Issac George, chief financial officer, GVK power and infrastructure Limited.

The debt has been syndicated by Axis Bank (formerly UTI Bank). Punjab National Bank is the lender's agent and Axis bank is the security trustee.

The banks/financial institutions participating in the consortium include Andhra Bank, Central Bank of India, Dena Bank, Indian Bank, India Infrastructure Finance Company Limited and Industrial Development Bank of India Limited.

AHPCL is implementing the project following an implementation agreement signed last year with the governments of Uttar Pradesh and Uttarakhand.

As per the power purchase agreement, Uttar Pradesh Power Corporation Limited (UPPCL) has agreed to purchase 88 percent of the energy generated by the Shrinagar Power Project. The other 12 percent shall be supplied free of cost to Uttarakhand.

The electro-mechanical works have been awarded to Bharat Heavy Electrical Limited (BHEL). The plant will be ready for commercial operations by early 2011.

GVK is also developing a 600 mw thermal project in Punjab and two hydro projects totalling 700 mw in Uttarakhand.

The GVK-led consortium has been mandated to operate, manage and develop India's busiest airport, the Chhatrapati Shivaji International Airport in Mumbai.

GVK has so far invested over Rs.50 billion into infrastructure projects and has on hand projects in the pipeline of over Rs.130 billion.
 
Jet Airways debuts in continental Europe
6 Aug 2007, 1255 hrs IST,PTI

BRUSSELS: Jet Airways on Monday launched its debut flight from Brussels to India, becoming the first private Indian carrier to fly to and from continental Europe.

The flight to Mumbai was flagged off by the Indian ambassador to Belgium and the European Union Dipak Chatterjee from the Brussels National Airport on Monday morning.

On Sunday, Jet Airways launched its first flight from Mumbai to the US with a two-hour stopover in Brussels.

The airline will fly from India through Brussels to Toronto on September five and to Johannesburg in November. Jet Airways established an operational hub in Brussels in May to provide enhanced connectivity between India, Europe, Africa and North America.

The airline has also entered into a codeshare agreement with Brussels Airlines - Belgium's main carrier - for flights from Brussels to Delhi, Mumbai, Toronto, Stockholm, Oslo, Birmingham, Geneva and Madrid.

The airline expects to expand the agreement to include 25 routes ex-Brussels, Bernard Guisset of Jet Airways Belgium said on Monday.

Guisset, who heads the 35-people strong Europe office, added that the airline's future plans include 10 daily flights from Brussels to cities in India and the US, Canada and mainland Europe.

"Jet Airways was looking for an opportunity to combine its expansion plan to USA and Canada with an efficient hub in Europe together with a stronger national carrier offering a wide network ... we have found it all at Brussels," the airline's chairman, Naresh Goyal said in a statement.

Jet Airways has plans to operate flights from Bangalore, Ahmedabad and Chennai to Los Angeles, Chicago and New York (JFK) via its Brussels hub.

Currently seven EU carriers fly to India, while two Indian carriers - Air India and Jet Airways - fly to Europe.

Each week more than 130 flights operate between India and EU. According to the European Commission report on civil aviation relations with India, the number of seats available on scheduled nonstop flights between the EU and India has increased by 70 per cent to about 5 million since 1990.

A total of 17 city-pair routes operate between India and the EU, where Germany holds the biggest share of the nonstop scheduled traffic, followed by the UK, France and the Netherlands.

This is expected to change as the Brussels-hub becomes more important for Indian carriers. The city is a major cargo-hub for the European region. India's state-owned international carrier, Air India, is negotiating to create an operational hub in Brussels.

International passenger traffic to India is expected to grow by 7.8 per cent annually according to the International Air Transport Association, while the Indian cargo market is expected to grow by 8.4 per cent annually.

Presently, Indian airports handle about 2.5 million international passengers and 13,200 international flights during a peak travel month.
 
HAL 34th among top 100 global defence firms
6 Aug 2007, 1842 hrs IST,IANS

BANGALORE: Aerospace major Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL) has climbed 11 places to reach the 34th position in the list of top 100 defence companies in the world.

The list, released by US-based Defence News magazine, saw HAL improving its position from 45th with Lockheed Martin, Boeing, BAe Systems, Northrop Grumman and Raytheon occupying the top five slots in that order.

The ratings are based on a company's sales and turnover, and HAL's leap forward is being attributed to a series of upgrade programmes and new projects.

Reacting to the new rating, HAL chairperson Ashok K. Baweja said: "These are exciting days for us and the current ranking is a testimony to our renewed focus on all fronts. We are hopeful of breaking into the top 25 next year and our current order book position is just a pointer to that."

HAL, now a Navratna company, recorded a sales turnover of Rs.77.84 billion (USD 1.82 billion) during the 2006-07 fiscal to March 31 and recorded a growth of 46 percent over the previous year.

The company's profits before tax soared to Rs.17.44 billion, a jump of 55 percent over the last year, while exports registered a growth of 45 percent at Rs.2.71 billion.
 
Guys,

This thread is getting flooded...30+ daily posts are way too many to read and I'm affraid members will lose interest ( I certainly have) if we don't cut the number and restrict ourselves to news thats really matters.

Anytime I want to post anything I have to go back atleast two or three pages to check if the news is already been covered and I simply don't have time to read it all, I wonder if anyone else does.

Therefor I regret to inform you that I won't be updating this thread anymore, its all yours.

Good luck!
Neo
 
Land of success and 100-hour weeks
Peter Foster, South Asia correspondent
Telegraph.co.uk, United Kingdom
07/08/2007

It is only a year since two young Indian entrepreneurs founded their internet start-up business providing cut-price online maths tuition to British and American school students, but already they are surrounded by the sounds of success.

In the New Delhi basement that is home to Transwebtutors.com the builders are in, drilling and hammering to create more space to accommodate a business that is growing at a rate of 400 per cent per annum.

For Nishant Sinha, 24, and Aditya Singhal, 25, the business represents an investment of faith in the burgeoning Indian information technology sector whose exports, currently growing at 30 per cent a year, are projected to reach £15 billion by 2010.

The two young men are the wide-eyed representatives of a new generation of smart, hard-working young Indians who are enjoying opportunities that their parents could only have dreamed of a generation ago.

Both men gave up lucrative jobs with the American management consultancy firm, Kurt Salmon Associates, to strike out on their own, aspiring in their own small way to emulate the giants of Indian IT industry such as Wipro and Infosys.

Their personal stories reveal the giddy pace of the social and economic changes which the educated classes in India have experienced since the economic liberalisations introduced in 1991 began to bear fruit.

When Nishant, the son of a bank manager from Patna in Bihar, one of India's poorest and least developed states, landed his job at Kurt Salmon he earned double his father's salary at a single stroke.

"At 26, my father started work in a bank and was completely focused on his job," he says. "He had no other options in front of him and was providing financially for the rest of his family. The experience was very different for me."

Nishant says it was his father's aptitude in maths that helped him win a place at the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) in New Delhi - for which 200,000 students compete annually for just 3,500 places.

"I studied until 2am or 3am every night for several years to pass the IIT entrance examinations and my father tutored me all the way," he says.

"He wanted better opportunities for his children than he had enjoyed himself."

Aditya, from Aligarh, a provincial town in Uttar Pradesh, 90 miles east of Delhi, passed the same IIT examination, opening an avenue of opportunity which his father had been denied as a young man 25 years ago.

"At that time things were very conservative," he says. "My father was the youngest child and he had to stay at home and look after his parents, which was the tradition in those days.

"So after three years working for an engineering firm in Delhi he had to return home.

"In my case the situation was completely different and much more liberal. My parents have done everything to support me, including investing in the business. I'd say I live a life very similar to the average young guy in Britain or the US."

The difference, perhaps, is in the ambition and work ethic of young Indians such as Aditya and Nishant who work at least 100 hours a week trying to develop their business.

Talk of Europe's 35-hour week leaves them shaking their heads.

Both could have opted to remain in their safe, salaried positions at Kurt Salmon, but despite the deep misgivings of their parents, decided instead to bet their futures on the Indian economy which is expanding at a rate of more than eight per cent a year.

Their optimism for the future of India and their business is palpable.

They have clients in Britain, Australia and Canada and already several American businesses are asking if they can take a financial stake in Transwebtutors.

"India has so much potential," says Aditya. "You can see it everywhere.

By 2025 we'll be one of the youngest countries on Earth and with GDP growth continuing at eight to 10 per cent the possibilities for development of all kinds are massive.

"We both had an instinct that we needed to do something that created value both for ourselves and this country and that wasn't going to be achieved by being a salaried employee.

"After all, we are the cream and if we can't create value, then who will?"
 
Wal-Mart to roll out cash-and-carry network across India
Sanjay Jha and Randeep Ramesh in New Delhi
Guardian Unlimited, UK
Monday August 6, 2007

Wal-Mart, the world's largest retailer, today gave a vote of confidence in the booming Indian economy with plans to roll out a network of cash-and-carry superstores across the country.

The venture, with Indian conglomerate Bharti, will see 10 to 15 wholesale stores in the next seven years beginning in 2008. The companies will each have an equal stake in the venture, which will be branded Bharti Wal-Mart and will employ at least 5,000 people.

Rather than targeting Delhi, Kolkata, Mumbai or Chennai - India's four main cities - the joint venture is placing its bets on fast-growing smaller urban centres.

"India has 12m pop-and-mom stores and less than 1m are catered for at the moment," said Raj Jain, India country president of Wal-Mart.

A company spokesman denied the venture would end up like Sam's Club, a successful US wholesale exercise by Wal-Mart that became virtually a retail operation.

No foreign direct investment is allowed in the retail sector, except for single-brand stores such as Nike. By entering the wholesale market, Wal-Mart will gain a foothold ahead of its many competitors should the government allow foreign retailers to expand. But it is years behind German retailer Metro, which has a presence in five Indian states and last month offered to spend 6.5bn rupees (£82m) on a wholesale operation in north India.

"The wholesale model is poised for big success in India," said Arvind Singhal of KSA Technopack, a retail consultancy. Mr Singhal said sales through store chains were projected to increase eightfold to £49bn in five years.

Bharti, which owns India's largest mobile phone network and has a farm business, has the reach and distribution but not the technical know-how to run a large retail business. "I think by improving the cold-chain technology and getting the logistics right, Wal-Mart could help India become an agribusiness exporter," said Mr Singhal.
 
In an ideal world, who can afford to get real?
Sydney Morning Herald, Australia
August 7, 2007

Money might rule the world, but without ecology there is no economy; we need a new 'ism' - naturalism - Satish Kumar tells Dana Nekich.

The modern environmental movement is essentially selfish, says Satish Kumar. And efforts to save the planet will always be ineffectual if the only motivation is to save our own skins, the 71-year-old author, activist and philosopher believes.

Instead, Kumar believes we must recognise the divine in the natural world, seeing ourselves as part of nature, not superior to nature.

"We need a new 'ism' - naturalism," he says. "It means we belong to the land, not that the land belongs to us. We need to have humility. The Aboriginal community in Australia is already there, recognising themselves as passing trustees of the land. We need to remember we borrow the land from future generations; we don't inherit it from the past."

Indian-born Kumar, who visited Sydney recently to promote his ideas, has devoted his life to investigating links between ecology and spirituality, literally walking the talk. At the age of nine he became a child monk, going barefoot, begging for food and wearing a cloth over his mouth to avoid inadvertently killing an insect.

Then, in 1962, he became inspired and outraged by the incarceration of the English philosopher and peace campaigner Bertrand Russell and decided to walk to the four nuclear capitals of the world. Over 18 months, he trekked to Moscow, Paris, London and Washington in a protest against nuclear arms.

He has been called "a kind of international catalyst for unorthodox thinking" by The New York Times and an "eco-pioneer" by The Guardian. He continues to edit a British magazine, Resurgence, which calls on its readers to live a decentralised, simple life.

Kumar makes no apologies for his idealism, contrasting the record of idealists with the "realists".

"What has the realistic approach done to the world?" he said. "Realistic leaders have brought about global warming, a population explosion, the First World War, the Second World War, the Vietnam War and a war in Iraq. When you're a realist, you undergo a confusion of vision and values. You just do what is pragmatically necessary.

"The track record of the idealists is better. Jesus Christ, the Buddha, Mahatma Gandhi, Mother Teresa and Martin Luther King were idealists, and they have transformed the world.

"The two greatest failures of capitalism are global poverty and global warming. At the moment, the economy rules ecology but ecology should come first. In its right order, the economy is a wholly owned subsidiary of ecology. Without ecology, there is no economy."

Kumar says Westerners are trapped in what he calls a "moneyocracy".

"Money is ruling the world," he says. "What we need instead is a biocracy, a biological rule, a rule of life. The rule of money has led to waste, one of the greatest shames of civilisation. To maintain the market value of produce, we allow food to rot in warehouses, we burn crops and we throw food into landfills, while people are hungry. It's because we have confused money with real wealth. In the ecological system, wealth is forest, water, clean air, quality of life and human communities." And the answer to this paradox lies in grassroots sustainability.

"Start to eat organic food so we see less toxic chemicals, fertilisers and pesticides on the land," Kumar says. "Eat less meat, and eat organic meat, to eliminate battery farms.

"Install solar panels and windmills in your home and stop relying on fossil fuel energy sources. Harvest water supplies at the household level so we don't have to depend on the government for water.

"Stop pursuing GDP and start thinking about national happiness. Make more time for yourself. Work part-time if you can and let some of that time flow back to the community."

Kumar asked his Sydney audience: "Do you think you're educated? I don't care if you can speak French, you have an MBA, you've travelled the world, you've accumulated plenty of money and you run your own business - you're uneducated if you don't know how to make a compost heap."

You Are, Therefore I Am by Satish Kumar is published by Green Books ($35.95).

Kumar says Westerners are trapped in what he calls a "moneyocracy".

"Money is ruling the world," he says. "What we need instead is a biocracy, a biological rule, a rule of life. The rule of money has led to waste, one of the greatest shames of civilisation. To maintain the market value of produce, we allow food to rot in warehouses, we burn crops and we throw food into landfills, while people are hungry. It's because we have confused money with real wealth. In the ecological system, wealth is forest, water, clean air, quality of life and human communities." And the answer to this paradox lies in grassroots sustainability.

"Start to eat organic food so we see less toxic chemicals, fertilisers and pesticides on the land," Kumar says. "Eat less meat, and eat organic meat, to eliminate battery farms.

"Install solar panels and windmills in your home and stop relying on fossil fuel energy sources. Harvest water supplies at the household level so we don't have to depend on the government for water.

"Stop pursuing GDP and start thinking about national happiness. Make more time for yourself. Work part-time if you can and let some of that time flow back to the community."

Kumar asked his Sydney audience: "Do you think you're educated? I don't care if you can speak French, you have an MBA, you've travelled the world, you've accumulated plenty of money and you run your own business - you're uneducated if you don't know how to make a compost heap."
 
I want to suggest all the friends to post only valuable post which shows only great achievements in business, technology by india INC. It would be great to cut indian author post as they sound too patriotic to me.

Thanks bushroda and friends for posting such great articles.. of foreign authors.. :)
 
Thanx Vips & sorry for this late reply. I took a little break from posting on this thread.
 
India At 60
Amartya Sen 08.13.07, 12:00 PM ET
FORBES, NY

It is 60 years now since I, like many other schoolchildren, stayed up till midnight, bleary-eyed, to hear Jawaharlal Nehru, soon to be prime minister of India, give his famous speech on India's "tryst with destiny."

This was on the eve of India's independence from British rule on Aug. 15, 1947. India would not only be, we were told, a fully democratic and secular state but also a country that will fight for "the ending of poverty and ignorance and disease and inequality of opportunity." It is interesting to ask how far along we have gone in 60 years in fulfilling that momentous resolve.

On the democratic front, India's success was immediate and came with astonishing speed. India became overnight the first poor country in the world to be a full-scale democracy. And there was--and is--success enough here. There was a short-lived hiccup in the 1970s when there was a brief attempt to change the system, but when the government sought endorsement in a general election for those changes, it was driven out of office by the voters.

There have been regular and orderly elections, and the ruling parties have vacated office when defeated in general elections, rather than calling in the army. India has also had other essential features of a democracy, in particular continued freedom and vigor of the media and independence of the judiciary, with the Supreme Court often disallowing decisions of those in governmental office on constitutional grounds.

So democracy has indeed flourished nicely in India, and that has been the case right from the time when India became independent after two centuries of authoritarian British colonial dominance. India's democratic success is sometimes seen only as a consequence of British rule, but that is comparatively recent history shared by a hundred or more other countries that also emerged from the empire, none of which has had quite the easy success that India has had with democracy.

In fact, as I have tried to argue elsewhere (in my book The Argumentative Indian, Piccador, 2005), India's long argumentative tradition and toleration of heterodoxy, going back thousands of years, has greatly helped in making democracy flourish with such ease. This would be remarkable enough for any poor country, but it was a much harder task in a land with a great many major languages, each with a long and proud history, and with a rich and old literature.

And there was, of course, the challenge of the multiplicity of religions in India, with nearly every religion well represented. Jews came to India in the first century; Christians in the fourth; Parsees immigrated as soon as persecution began in Persia in the late seventh century; and early Muslim traders started coming to the western coast of India from the eighth century, well before the later invasion of the north of India by Muslim conquerors in the late tenth century onwards.

Even though British India was partitioned into India and Pakistan in 1947 on religious lines, the vast majority of Muslims on the Indian side chose to stay on in India, and today India has nearly as many Muslims as Pakistan and many more Muslims than Bangladesh. India chose to have a solidly secular constitution, and it is as a secular democracy that India has flourished. Secularism has been threatened from time to time by actions of sectarian groups, but the massive support for secularism across India has asserted itself again and again, the last time in the Indian general elections in 2004. In the political field, India's success today is a firm vindication of what, 60 years ago, it breathlessly tried to achieve.

The story is very different on the economic side. The growth rate of the Indian economy remained stuck at its low traditional point of 3% a year for a very long time. The economic policies needed substantial reform. In the old days, some wise guys used to put forward the thesis that India's growth rate was low because of its democracy, which seemed to many of us rather ridiculous. But with continued low growth, that anti-democratic point of view gained some ground among high-octane commentators (never with the general public, though). When India changed its economic policies, the growth rate picked up as expected, without India becoming any less of a democracy to achieve this result.

The economic changes came amid much hesitation and huge resistance. To start with, India hastened slowly. The 1980s, which saw some moderate reforms, produced some quickening, with an economic growth rate of 5%, which may now seem sadly slow but was much faster than what had happened in the early decades of independence, not to mention a century of colonial semi-stagnation. But the economy was still full of problems connected with financial instability, trade imbalances and choking public administration. In general, what used to be called the "license Raj" made business initiatives extremely difficult and at the mercy of bureaucrats (large and small), thereby powerfully stifling enterprise while hugely nurturing corruption.

When Manmohan Singh came to office in the early 1990s as the newly appointed finance minister, in a government led by the Congress Party, he knew these problems well enough, as someone who had been strongly involved in government administration for a long time. (This was after his stint as a very successful university professor at Delhi University where I was privileged to have him as a colleague.) And Singh's response was sure-footed though cautious, given the complex politics of policy reorientation. While the going has been rough from time to time, the direction of policy change has been unmistakable from that point onwards, endorsed even by successor governments run by other political parties.

India is now getting used to its much higher rate of growth, first around 6% a year and now about 8%, occasionally touching 9%. It is also remarkable that India's main success has come not in traditional areas of exports but largely on newer industries, with a large component of high-tech, such as the information technology industry, which has rapidly grown to be a giant from a very modest beginning. Another area is that of pharmaceuticals. Even though in that field the Indian entry began with generic drugs (with a huge reduction--sometimes a cut of 80% or so in the price for many essential drugs, like AIDS medicines), it is now going much more into new research as well.

There is reason enough to celebrate many things happening in India right now. But there are failures as well, which need urgent attention. For example, there is still widespread undernourishment in general and child undernutrition in particular--at a shocking level. The failures include, quite notably, the astonishing neglect of elementary education in India, with a quarter of the population--and indeed half the women--still illiterate.

The average life expectancy in India is still low (below 64) and infant mortality very high (58 per 1,000 live births). It is certainly true that India has narrowed the shortfall behind China in these areas--that is, in life expectancy and infant mortality--but there is still some distance to go for the country as a whole. The problems are gigantic in some of the more "backward" states like Bihar and Uttar Pradesh. And yet there are other states in which the Indian numbers are similar to China's.

There is also one state, Kerala, where the life expectancy is higher than China's (75 years at birth, as opposed to China's 72), and infant mortality lower (12, as opposed to China's 28). Kerala has had good state policies of supporting school education for all and making sure that it works, and has provided free health care to all for many decades now. Even though now many better-off families choose private medical care, everyone still has the option of having health care from the state.

If India has to overcome these failures, it has to spend much more money on expanding the social infrastructure, particularly school education and basic health care. It also needs to spend much more in building up a larger physical infrastructure, including more roads, more power supplies and more water. In some of these, the private sector can help. But a lot more has to be spent on public services themselves, in addition to improving the system of delivery of these services, with more attention paid to incentives and disciplines, and better cooperation with the unions, consumer groups and other involved parties.

On the basis of some investigations that have been done by the Pratichi Trust (a trust I was privileged to set up in 1999 through the use of my 1998 Nobel money), it is clear how much needs to be done and can be done to change the organizational structure of school education and basic health care. (We studied only one part of India, but the results from other studies from elsewhere in India are often quite similar.)

However, aside from organizational change, more public funds, too, will be needed. Where will the money come from? Well, to start with, India can spend a much higher proportion of its public resources on school education and on basic health care, on both of which its percentage share of public spending is among the lowest in the world.

There is, furthermore, good news that has been discussed astonishingly little. If the total revenue, from taxes and other channels, of the central and state governments keeps pace with the rapid growth of the economy, when the economy is growing at 8% a year, that would be a big rate of increase of available funds for public services. As it happens, government revenue has persistently grown faster than the growth of gross domestic product: in 2003-04, the economic growth of 6.5% was exceeded by the revenue growth of 9.5%, and in 2004-05 to 2006-07, the growth rates of 7.5%, 9%, and 9.4% have been bettered, respectively, by the expansion rates of government revenue (in "real terms"--that is corrected for price change) of 12.5%, 9.7% and 11.2%.

Money will continue to come very rapidly into the government's hands if the fast economic growth continues. What is critically important is to use these generated resources to remedy India's continuing deficiencies, in particular in basic health care, in school education and in rapidly expanding its physical infrastructure.

So, as we look back over the last 60 years, some things have happened well enough, and some, where the gaps were large, have started to catch up. However, there are other areas in which there are still huge shortfalls. These gaps would need to be urgently remedied. We know what to do, and there are resources to do it. What we need now is some determined action to do what we can do and must do.
 
Sixty Years Of Progress
Narayana N.R. Murthy 08.13.07, 12:00 PM ET
FORBES, NY

Bangalore, India - India completes her 60th year as a free nation on Aug. 15, 2007. However, 60 years is a short span in the life of a nation, and barely marks the first baby steps of a toddler. Hence, any assessment of India has to be generous and optimistic.

We have made decent progress in several areas during the last 60 years. We have produced world-class scientists, engineers, journalists, soldiers, bureaucrats, politicians and doctors. We have built complex bridges and dams. We have sent satellites and rockets into space. We have increased the number of doctors tenfold.

We have increased life expectancy from 32 years to 65 years. We have built about 1.25 million miles of new roads; we have multiplied our steel production by over 50 times and cement production by almost 20 times. We have increased our exports from a few million dollars at the time of independence to more than $125 billion now, with about $150 billion of imports.

There is an equally convincing set of data to show that we have a long way to go in certain other areas. A whopping 350 million are illiterate; 260 million people are still below the poverty line; 150 million people lack access to drinking water; 750 million people lack decent sanitation; 50% of children are below acceptable nutrition levels; and basic medicines are unavailable in 75% of villages.

Be that as it may, today I want to focus on a few major achievements that have transformed the lives of our people in a way we never imagined would happen.

Green Revolution
Perhaps, no other Indian initiative has enhanced the national confidence as the Green Revolution initiated by Dr. M.S. Swaminathan. This revolution, which started in 1965, not only transformed India into a food-surplus economy from a food-deficit economy but also triggered the expansion of the rural, non-farm economy. The lives of at least 400 million to 500 million Indians have been uplifted due to this initiative. From being a perennial importer of grains, India became a net exporter of food grains 10 years ago.

White Revolution
Coming from a generation that experienced an acute shortage of milk, it is unimaginable that, today, we have become the largest producer of milk in the world. The credit goes to the extraordinary vision of one person, Dr. Verghese Kurien. In a nation where children are malnourished, such abundance of milk has offered us the opportunity to fight malnutrition with the means produced in India.

Economic Reforms Of 1991
The economic reforms of 1991--initiated by the late Narasimha Rao, Dr. Manmohan Singh, Shri P. Chidambaram and Dr. Montek Singh Ahluwalia--opened up the minds of Indian corporate leaders to the power of global markets, helped them accept competition at home and abroad, and raised the confidence of consumers. Our hard currency reserves have gone up from a mere $1.5 billion in 1991 to over $220 billion today. The reforms encouraged entrepreneurship and gave confidence to businessmen and entrepreneurs to dream big, create jobs, enhance exports, acquire companies abroad and follow the finest principles of corporate governance.

Independent Media, Brave Journalists
The success of a democracy depends upon certain important values of governance: fairness, transparency and accountability. The freeing of media, particularly television, has laid the foundation for improving these values in our governments. The courage, enthusiasm and zeal to seek truth of scores of idealistic journalists like N. Ram, Arun Shourie, Sekhar Gupta, Sucheta Dalal, Barkha Dutt and Rajdeep Sardesai are what make us feel confident that the future of this country is safe.

Telecom Revolution
No other technology has brought India--the urban and the rural--together so effectively as the 500-line EPABX designed and implemented by the Center for Development of Telematics under the leadership of Sam Pitroda. This program brought fresh confidence to the people, as they could reach out, in a jiffy, to their loved ones, officials and doctors, just to name a few. People no longer feel that they live in isolation.

Space Technology
Yash Pal's Satellite Instructional Television Experiment blossomed into a full-scale television facility connecting millions of villages of India. Television has made our political masters realize that their actions and inactions will be seen and judged by every citizen--from the forgotten villages of Assam to the activist villages of Kerala. This technology has given voice to the opinions of a billion people--the rich and the poor, the educated and the uneducated, and the powerful and the disfranchised.

Atomic Energy
Dr. Homi Bhabha conceptualized the Indian nuclear program and initiated nuclear science research in India. His program has made possible successful utilization of nuclear energy in defense, power generation, medicine and allied areas. Our peaceful use of nuclear energy has raised India's prestige as a mature and responsible player in this field.

Software Revolution
N. Vittal's Software Technology Program, along with the economic reforms of 1991, laid the foundation for this industry's spectacular progress. India's information technology exports grew from a mere $150 million in 1991-92 to $31.4 billion in 2006-07, and is projected to reach $60 billion by 2010. The Indian IT industry is unique for several reasons. It focused on exports; benchmarked with the best global companies; followed the finest principles of corporate governance; created the largest number of jobs in the organized sector; and demonstrated that Indians, too, could succeed in the most competitive global markets.

What do these eight programs have in common? They were all led by visionaries. These visionaries adopted and improved upon global benchmarks and settled for nothing less despite tremendous odds. In each of these initiatives the national government was a genuine catalyst whose extraordinary leaders helped fashion the India of today. They and so many others created an India where all Indians have the freedom to design, innovate, create and build their futures together. What a remarkable story of how the people and the government can work together to achieve what was once thought impossible.
 
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