• rate debate

    January 29, 2007

    Today’s editorial page of Business Line carries an article by Mr S Venkitaramanan “Achieving growth and stability” where he talks about the rope pulling between the Central Banker and the Finance Minister all over the world. The root cause of the strain in relations between the two offices is the autonomy of the Central Banker on manipulating interest rates to reign in inflation. While the central banker will like to raise the interest rates in times of increasing inflation, the FM may not like this to happen for fear of stoking industrial growth as the cost of funds may increase. I was wondering how about if the FM goes on to liberate raising money overseas even further. The Indian corporate can raise money outside at lower rates while RBI can go ahead with increasing the rate in domestic market. This however will affect the exchange rate of the Rupee thereby affecting the export competitiveness of the country. On the other hand RBI’s attempt to reduce the liquidity will also be aided by increased demand for Rupee in addition to the increase in foreign exchange reserves to the comfort of the central bank. I know, it is a debate that never ends and can lead one to reach the point where one started but it is nevertheless interesting.

    Another note that I’d like to make of is about the liberal education as propounded by John Stuart Mill (a British philosopher and political economist was an advocate of utilitarianism) and referred to by Mr T R Rajan (my namesake!) in his article “Shaping a business dynasty”. T R Rajan gives the 7 lessons from Mill’s analysis of liberal education:

    1. Liberal education aims to liberate the mind by furnishing it with literary, historical, scientific and philosophical knowledge and by cultivating its capacity to question and answer on its own;

    2. A liberal education must, in significant measure, provide not a smorgasbord of offerings, but a shared content because knowledge is cumulative and ideas have a history;

    3. Such an education must adapt to local realities, providing the elementary instruction, the stepping stones to higher stages of understanding where grade school and high school education fail to perform their jobs;

    4. The aim of liberal education is not to achieve mastery in any one subject, but an understanding of what mastery entails in several main fields of human learning and an appreciation of the interconnections among the fields;

    5. Liberal education is not an alternative to specialization, but rather a sound preparation for it;

    6. Liberal education culminates in the study of ethics, politics and religion, studies which naturally begin with the near and familiar, extend to include the faraway and foreign and reach their peak in the exploration, simultaneously sympathetic and critical of the history of great debates about justice, faith and reason;

    7. All of the above will be a naught if teaching is guided by partisan of dogmatic spirit, so professors must be cultivated who will bring to the classroom the spirit of free and informed enquiry. I really liked the idea of knowledge being cumulative and ideas have a history! I need to ruminate on this.

    Today’s paper also carries the speech by R Gopalakrishnan, Executive Director of Tata Sons Ltd. On “The entropy of markets” where in he talks about Indian consumer and the initial preference that the indi-consumer will prefer anything foreign and local brands would not be able to fight the foreign brands which was belied as domestic brands are giving good competition to foreign brands. This to some extent is more on account of Indian consumer being lenient on quality as compared to his/her western counterpart than the strength of domestic brands. I know this thought is arguable and may even be refutable.

    India Guru

    January 26, 2007

    First of all, wishes for the Republic Day! Let’s pledge to uphold the essence and integrity of our Constitution.

    It was a nice occasion to watch Guru on our Republic Day. A good day to reflect back. I have had in the past discussions with people on the ways and means of Dhirubhai Ambani’s business growth. I believe that today is an answer to yesterday and a question for tomorrow. And people like Dhirubhai keep answering the question as they work for tomorrow and he did so in justifiable manner in his times of bureaucracy and license-raj. I also agree that the system adopted in 40s and 50s was the best choice available given the fledgling economy which had to guarded by all means. But we erred in keeping it in the same way all through the 50s, 60s, 70, 80s and only the empty coffers in early 90s shook the governance up to see if any change was required. But people like Ambani fought the system much before the awakening of the government and in doing so may have twisted & bent rules but then they made money for the shareholders which even the government encourages now.Though i will be stretching it a bit too far if i call Dhirubhai a person with foresight as his actions were no doubt led by narrow greed of business gain, he was definitely a person with foresight in the way he changed the perception of the people from considering this greed for gain as bad to as something good.

    Coming to the movie, its a Mani Ratnam movie which never fails to impress you.

    a pause

    January 17, 2007

    With the viva on the project today, the semester V now seems to have ended with only the results to be declared now. The experience of the viva was not good, no not because i did not do well, but because i could not do anything at all. It was because of someone’s (panel’s) over enthusiasm owing to which he devoted over 20/25 minutes to each of the initial students and then by the time it was the turn of the tailenders like me he had no time to talk about the projects. The project that we had done with such efforts and enthusiasm did not eventually receive the response it was supposed to receive.

    Anyway, i think i should not let that trouble me much. I am looking forward to my pre-start visit (named Biztrek by my batchmates) to Ahmedabad.  It is said that the winters are much cooler there than they are in Mumbai so will have to get my pullovers and kambal out of the packed suitcases lying on the attics.

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