A train of thoughts and writings on development, technology and the economy focusing on the socio-techno-economic-cultural surge of developing economies to regain and partake in leadership of the world. Written by George Easaw, member of the faculty of Business Administration of Allliance University, Bangalore, India. (This is purely an academic site, no commercial use is allowed. Photography rights lie with the respective organisations). Mention credits as needed.
Friday, December 31, 2010
an eventful year ..
chinnu as santa ..
just out of curiosity she wanted to wear the costume which Jobin had kept for his use in the church carol rounds.
Thursday, December 30, 2010
Anybody with slipped disc problems . ??
The corruption exposes happening in India ..
Wednesday, December 22, 2010
GMAT perfect scores !!
Monday, December 20, 2010
Sachin after his historic 50 th century at Pretoria ..
great job, but India eventually lost the first test against SA for an innings and 25 runs..
Sunday, December 19, 2010
Tribute to Mrs Mariam George, wife of Fr Dr K M George ..
http://www.malankaraorthodox.tv/News%202010/August/Tribute%20to%20Mrs%20K%20M%20George.pdf
Thursday, December 16, 2010
The world listens when India and China talks..
"The fact is that when India and China, representing more than two and half billion people speak in one voice, the world listens." Dr Manmohan Singh.
India has successfully stalemated Chinese efforts to affirm the 'One China policy' which includes Tibet by linking Kashmir to the Unified India tag .. By this single move, any efforts by China to side with Pakistan and embarrass India on Kashmir has been virtually nullified. We can expect peace on this front in the coming years.
With China and India are eyeing for a $ 100 billion trade turnover between the two Asian giants, definitely the world is taking note. While Obama could finalise deals worth $10 billion during his visit and Sarkozy from France could finalise deals worth $ 15 billion during his visit, Wen Jiabao, Chinese PM has walked away with deals worth $ 20 billion from Indian companies.
The blabbering arising from Pakistan should be looked down upon as shrills and cries from a failed state. The Pakistani people may be looking forward to prosperity and recognition for their country like their counterparts in India, but the military and the military dominated intelligence unit would never allow any such thing to happen in Pakistan , not till they are thrown out of power through a revolution by the people.
ge
Wednesday, December 15, 2010
SKS Microfinance, Akula's story - for-profit vs non-profit Microfinance..
The main argument against his way of functioning has been that SKS has been charging almost 28% interest when conventional banks charge only around 16%. Akula's argument is that it is much less than what money lenders do in the countryside. Even when an illiterate farmer is taking a loan from the bank, at 7 to 12 %, the costs resulting from visiting the banks a number of times, the loss of wages on those days and the costs of greasing the palms of the banker and any middlemen all adds upto more than 30%. The same big banks who are crying foul at this rate of interest from the MFIs, have no qualms in charging upto 36% on loans advanced against their credit cards.
The high rate of interest is a major bone of contention between the father of microfinance, Nobel laureate Dr Mohammed Yunus from Bangaladesh and Vikram. Dr Yunus believes Microfinance is more of social entrepreneurship than a for-profit enterprise.
1. To get the required capital, Akula has turned to the for-profit business model to tap into commercial capital which is available in large numbers.
2. To reduce costs he has adopted modern technology aids like mobile phones, palmtops which feed into a Management Information System as finally each day there are millions of tiny transactions and unless the cost of these transactions are managed well, it is not possible to run the operations at all.
3. To increase capacity he has standardised many of the procedures and has eliminated collecting change, visiting customers who are on the route of travel and so on.
Targeting the middle class and the rural population at the bottom of the pyramid, using the Hybrid Value Chain as propounded by Hau Lee in his recent HBR article September 2010, Nokia and Airtel have been able to sell mobile phones and mobile telephone services at cheaper rates to the people, Metro cash-n-carry is able to sell its wares to the same people who are running provision sores in remote areas at cheap rates, Bajaj Allianz and ING have been able to sell their insurance products to cover the risk of the poor illiterate people of Andhra. Mobile banking has been experimented here. These are unheard of in any part of the world ! SKS has also opened up schools which give English medium training for the students helping lift the society from years of bondage and slavery.
Only future can tell whether Akula was in fact moving in the right direction or whether the politicians from AP have derailed this mass poverty eradication process spearheaded by a single person working against the might of Indian corruption and feudal mindset.
george easaw
Good reviews on the book " A fistful of rice" by Vikram Atula, are given in the links below ..
http://beyondprofit.com/a-fistful-of-rice-vikram-akula/
http://www.business-standard.com/india/news/purpose-to-profits-akula/s-incredible-journey/417565/
On youtube an interview with Akula http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nf98RPvwJ8U
Monday, December 13, 2010
Saina doing the country proud ..
Go Saina, Go !!! This 20 year old is proving herself worthy of the Khel Ratna awarded to her. May she rise to be world no. 1 soon ..
Friday, December 10, 2010
TM Varghese and wife, photo .
One of the Thrimoorthikal of Kerala ( Pattom Thanu Pillai, C Kesavan and T M Varghese..) and the first home minister of Tirukochi in 1948.
He gave up a very promising career and dedicated his whole life for Kerala.. Was instrumental in getting the accession of state of Travancore to India. Reading some historical documents,
a painting of T M Varghese .. |
Towards the end of his career, he had virtually nothing to boast of, all his assets were utilised to support the Travancore State Congress at critical points of time, sometimes even to the extent of three years. The assets were used up over time for the state and its people.
The contribution of T M Varghese will be remembered by the Malayalis for generations to come..
Most of them use politics as a cushion to protect their ancestral or acquired (mostly illegal wine money, or bribery money or illegally acquired land) wealth from poachers and further to give a legitimacy to the ill-gained wealth.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T._M._Varghese,_Thandaneth
Thursday, December 09, 2010
Three Secrets to Happiness
Dear All
But none of that will bring us happiness. No matter how much we earn, no matter how much we have in the bank, no matter how nice our clothing or cars or toys, none of it will make us happier. And the sad thing is that it could take us decades of pursuing wealth and luxury items before we realize this.
Winning in the Green Frenzy .. HBR, Nov 2010.
Thanks to media, journalists and Lokayuktha
Wednesday, December 08, 2010
Harvard Business Review, changing to the times ..
sarkozy and Obama, the subtle difference ..
Tuesday, December 07, 2010
Irshad and Farhan doing TJC real proud ..
This pair of Irshad and Farhan from TJC MBA 3 Sem, have been going all around the state and bagging honours left and right.
Nuclear Suppliers Liability and the 6 EPR reactors from France..
Shoot the message, not the messenger ..
Monday, December 06, 2010
Indian team less superstars playing with New Zealand ?
Saturday, December 04, 2010
The amazing story of Amul .. (rediff.com)
This is a story of a dream to which the interacting faith of a great many people finally gave substance.
Click here to know the diff between pasteurised, homogenised and UHT milk
Photo of Dr Verghese Kurian, Father of the Indian white revolution.
Realisation of the dream began with the Kaira District Cooperative Milk Producers' Union, which was then like a small but sturdy plant, full of sap. That plant has grown into a fruitful tree, with spreading roots and branches, but it is still nourished by the soil from which it sprang. Likewise are the towering concrete structures and landscaped gardens; the array of computers; the clever, highly skilled technical staff; the busy researchers, eloquent teachers, and eager students: they all draw their purpose from the `white revolution' that has brought so much of rural India out of the feudal age.
The white revolution has not been easy to achieve. At one time, the milk lake of Kaira district was stagnant. A few traders skimmed off fat profits, leaving to the numerous producers only a sour thin whey of inadequate payment. But the cooperative movement bean to churn that lake and soon it overflowed, spreading throughout the country.
(In an interview to The Hindu Business Line in May 2006, Kurien said: "He (Sardar Patel) firmly believed that a revolution in marketing the farmers' produce - which would be beneficial to the farmers - was necessary. Sardar Patel was convinced that in order to save themselves, the farmers needed to control the procuring, processing and marketing of milk." They got Tribhuvandas Patel, who by his own admission "did not know anything about the dairy business", to be the chairman of the Kaira Cooperatives.)
The Churning Begins
The cooperative movement in Kaira had an early beginning. A resolution of the Bombay Presidency Government in 1904 had directed that work should begin on organizing cooperatives in six districts, including Kaira. A cooperative Societies Act from the same government in 1912 was more effective. The Congress ministry, which took office in 1937, showed greater interest in the cooperative movement, recognizing it as an instrument of rural reconstruction. A report was commissioned by Vaikunthlal Mehta, (then) finance minister, and M D Bhansali of the ICS (Indian Civil Service), who was registrar of Cooperative Societies. After World War II, the movement progressed greatly in Bombay presidency, despite the short tenure of the Congress ministry.
An Unlikely Recruit
It was kindly providence that brought Verghese Kurien to work at dairy engineering in a part of India that was so different and far from his native Kerala. Kurien was born in Calicut on November 26, 1921. His father, Puthenparakkal Kurien, was a civil surgeon serving in Madras Presidency. In his fifteenth year, Kurien passed the Secondary School Leaving Certificate Examination. Too young for admission to an engineering college, he took a Bachelor of Science degree from Loyola College, Madras, graduating in 1940 with the seventh rank in the presidency. Intelligent, hardworking and ambitious, he was a credit to his family and community.
Shockingly inadequate living quarters (there was no bathroom until Kurien contrived a suitable enclosure with corrugated iron sheets), insalubrious surroundings, and enforced idleness: Kurien might well consider himself to be serving a term of punishment. A natty dresser, he no longer took trouble over his appearance but grew a beard, wore khaki overalls, and began to smoke continuously. His brother sent him an old-fashioned cook-bearer named Anthony, who carried out his duties in full panoply of turban, sash and starched uniform. This added the final touch of absurdity what Kurien could only regard as a farce.
Anand was such a small town that a newcomer was bound to be noticed and talked about. As a meat-eating bachelor (in a largely vegetarian town), and a Malayali-Christian with a phoren (phoren is the vernacular pronunciation of foreign) degree, he provided ample scope for speculation in local gossip.
So determined was Kurien to keep himself usefully occupied that he undertook a private expedition to Bombay to sell the milk powder. With the help of his friends he made a list of likely customers, then tried them one by one. At the end of two days when he was almost at the end of his list, he found a buyer. A biscuit factory was prepared to take all five tones of the milk powder. Tried but pleased, Kurien returned to Anand in a fatefully altered state of affairs.
A Leap of Faith
The year 1953 marked an important milestone, in Kurien's personal life as much as in the history of Kaira Cooperative. On his return from New Zealand in April 1953, Kurien disembarked at Bombay, where he spent a few days. One night, he attended a dinner given by the YMCA to honour his maternal uncle, Dr Thomas Yakhub.
At the dinner he met a prominent businessman and social worker, K M Philip, of the wealthy family that owned Malayala Manorama, Kerala's most widely read and influential daily. Philip's wife had a younger sister, Susan Peter, fair, comely with unusual grey eyes and light brown hair. Her father and Kurien's had been friends, although Molly (as she in known to most of her acquaintances) and Kurien had never met. Kurien's mother had been trying for some time to get her son suitably married. He finally accepted his mother's suggestion that he go to Trichur and meet Molly Peter. They met for the first time on May 28, 1953, were married on June 15, at 10 in the morning, and caught the 4 o'clock train to Bombay enroute to Anand. Molly Kurien learned very early that her husband's life revolved around his work in Anand.
But to return to the history of Amul, in 1953 a proposal came from UNICEF to the Government of Bombay. For years, Unicef had been distributing free milk powder in underdeveloped nations, but it was of no advantage to the recipients in continued dependence on this aid unless it helped the nation to develop some industry of its own. Unicef offered a donation to the Bombay government, which would include milk drying equipment worth Rs 8 lakhs, in return for which the government would bind itself to distribute, through the BMS and Kaira Cooperative, Rs 12 lakh worth of free milk to undernourished, children of Kaira.
Taking on the Giants
During the winter of 1957-58, Amul Dairy frequently worked beyond capacity, sometimes for days on end, making butter and milk powder in a dogged attempt to utilize the surplus milk refused by the Bombay Milk Scheme. For 49 days, the latter only accepted between 3700 and 7500 kl of milk daily, against the contracted minimum of 26,000 kl. Sales of Amul butter helped ease the resultant financial strain. Amul butter also compensated consumers for the shortage arising from the government's policy of severely restricting imports. By filling the gap, Amul became one of the leaders in import substitution, saved foreign exchange, and kept market prices of butter in check.
In 1958-59 the decidedly unhappy relationship between Kaira Cooperative and the BMS took a turn for the better when the latter increased its offtake by 30 per cent over the quantity accepted in 1957-58. Meanwhile, Amul yielded to persuasion by the Indian government and began to manufacture sweetened condensed milk.
The government had two reasons for urging Amul to make condensed milk. While the armed forces required large amounts of it, need to conserve foreign exchange necessitated its removal from the list of imports. In 1954-55, condensed milk worth about $1,500,000 had been imported, of which 60 per cent was taken by the armed forces.
Amul's success story continues...(Click here for IIMA case study..)
Text and photographs excerpted from: The Amul India Story by Ruth Heredia. Price: Rs 295. Published with permission from Tata Mc-Graw Hill Publishing Company Limited. Copyright 1997. All rights reserved.
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A parting line : Nehru has played a very important role in seeing to it that India becomes self sufficient in milk along with Sardar Vallabhai Patel. Green revolution, white revolution, starting of all PSUs. all the initial IITs and IIMs were all started by a great statesman and visionary called Nehru.
ge..
Friday, December 03, 2010
Aravind Eye Hospital, Madurai .. - a visionary
When we grow in spiritual consciousness, we identify ourselves with all that is in the world, so there is no exploitation, it is ourselves we are healing, it is ourselves we are helping - Govindappa Venkataswamy, Aravind Eye Hospitals, Madurai.
The only medical institution in the country where interns from Johns Hopkins US come for a one year training of a life-time.
http://aravind.org/ted.html
ge..
Toyota Prod System ..
Thursday, December 02, 2010
Azim Premji makes a $ 2 billion philanthropic act ..
Toyota introduces Etios sedan in India..
MGOCSM, OCYM meeting in Marthahalli Orthodox church on Saturday, 27 Nov 2010.
--
Sincere regards,
George Easaw Ph. D.,
Bangalore, India.
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