It's time we started measuring third level research - The Irish Times - Tue, Feb 26, 2013: "Research is akin to venture capital. We need to do a lot to get a little output. Success is rare and failure the norm.
Acceptance rates (success) in decent journals or in gaining leading research grants are often less than 10 per cent. Research grants can take months to complete with no guarantee of success.
And doing a paper takes time. It takes typically in excess of 100 hours of work to get a paper to a stage where one is happy to put it out for even working-paper review. And then it takes a long time to get it published. The paper is usually under review at symposiums and conferences and further hundreds of hours are spent refining and tweaking.
Thursday, February 28, 2013
Assessing students, assessing ourselves
Tuesday, February 26, 2013
Consulting firms educating the educational institutions
Schools hire consulting firms for growth push - The Economic Times: "Specifically, schools and colleges are looking for advice on compensation structures to attract better faculty and weave in better incentive plans. Like Corporate India, institutes are asking consulting firms like KPMG, Deloitte, Ernst &Young (E&Y) to draw up performance management plans, curricula that will attract industries and help with understanding ways to generate revenue. For the consulting firms, this spells a fresh opportunity."
"The education sector needs external advisers because for a long time they have not hired quality professionals in non-academic areas," says Narayanan Ramaswamy, partner and national head of education, KPMG. Apart from 300 schools, colleges and vocational training institutes, their clients include IIT Kharagpur, Manipal Group, ISB and Pearson Schools. KPMG also advises international schools that are looking for partners in India. "Schools and colleges have never been evaluated in India, unlike companies, and this is a challenge consulting and advisory firms face."
According to India Ratings, a Fitch Group Company, the education sector grew at a compounded annual growth rate of 15.5% from FY05 to FY12. In the past five years, there has been a 20% growth in private colleges, as per consulting major Ernst and Young's records.
Till recently, benchmarking best practices would mean adopting what counterparts in the West do. "This growth will sustain and so colleges have to hone their USP. Therefore the need for consulting companies," says Amitabh Jhingan, partner, Transaction Advisory Services and national sector leader - Education, Ernst & Young India.
Most consulting forms are tasked with helping schools and colleges structure their goals, work on application-based research to attract recruiters and get more funding. "In the past three years, there has been a flurry of private universities but no focus on grooming talent. One has to distinguish performance and reward correctly and explain to teaching aspirants what one can expect in the job," says Sandeep Chaudhary, partner for talent and reward of Aon Hewitt. The group has worked with global universities and will use the experience to "structure the gap that exists in India," says Chaudhary...
Monday, February 25, 2013
Sharing- ownership and sustainable practices
Investors Demand Climate-Risk Disclosure in 2013 Proxies - Bloomberg: "Bloomberg BNA -- Shareholders are filing resolutions asking companies to disclose physical risks posed by climate change for the first time this proxy season, according to representatives of sustainable investor groups.
Shareholders also are continuing to file an increasing number of sustainability related resolutions asking companies to set greenhouse gas emission reduction goals, publish sustainability reports, pursue energy efficiency, and disclose information about hydraulic fracturing operations.
Although shareholder resolutions on sustainability rarely receive a majority vote, they can still prompt companies to take action to avoid risk to their reputation or address investor concerns, said Jonas Kron, director of shareholder advocacy at Trillium Asset Management. In addition, investors often are engaged in discussions with companies that lead to resolutions being withdrawn before they go up for a vote."
'via Blog this'
Sunday, February 24, 2013
Fast and Junk- fills and pills
Fight unhealthy food, not fat people | Jill Filipovic | Comment is free | guardian.co.uk: ""Nutrient-deficient chemically-processed "food" in increasingly larger sizes is bad for all of our bodies, whether we're fat or thin or somewhere in between. So is the culture in which fast food is able to thrive. Americans work more than ever before; we take fewer vacation days and put in longer hours, especially since the recession hit. The US remains the only industrialized country without national paid parental leave and without mandatory annual vacation time; we also have no federal law requiring paid sick days. Eighty-five percent of American men and 66% of women work more than 40 hours per week (in Norway, for comparison, 23% of men work more than 40-hour weeks, and only 7% of women).
Saturday, February 23, 2013
Sewage to Riches, via methane
Sewage Status Grows as Resource for Utilities to Skiers - Bloomberg: "United Utilities Plc and Severn Trent Plc, Britain’s biggest publicly traded water companies, are increasingly feeding human waste into tanks of bacteria whose methane emissions generate electricity.
Sewage-derived power supplies 22 percent of Severn Trent’s energy, almost double that of 2005. At United Utilities, it’s 14 percent. British utilities are shifting fecal matter to vats of bacteria that consume the waste, releasing biogas that’s burned to drive water treatment. The result is lower energy bills and surplus power sent to the grid that heat more U.K. tea kettles."
'via Blog this'
Friday, February 22, 2013
How much profit can be squeezed out of other people's misery?
Big pharma's excuses for the monopolies on medicine won't wash | Dylan Gray | Comment is free | guardian.co.uk: "Several years ago, I began to learn about what I would come to regard as one of the great crimes in human history, whereby millions of people in Africa and elsewhere were cynically allowed to die of Aids, while western governments and pharmaceutical companies blocked access to available low-cost medication. The outrage I felt as I discovered the details of this story was exceeded only by a deep sense of betrayal mixed with shame for not having known more about it in the first place."
Thursday, February 21, 2013
Domino's Wedding, Haagen Daz'ian Style
MNC food giants like Domino's, Costa Coffee, Haagen-Dazs eye a fast buck at Indian weddings - The Economic Times: "NEW DELHI: The big fat Indian wedding is getting bigger, fatter and now branded, with multinational fast-food chains such as Domino's, Costa Coffee, Haagen-Dazs and Baskin Robbins adorning several marriage parties across big cities.
After introducing limousines and even helicopters to ferry the bride and groom, exotic theme-based decorations, and expensive gifts for guests, branded food and beverage stalls have become a new fad among marriage hosts.
Davindra Kapoor, a Delhi-based caterer, says 15-20% of weddings these days demand branded stalls along with traditional snacks and cuisines. Kapoor's SK Caterers counts Honda, Aditya Birla Group and Escorts Group among its corporate clients.
Fast-food majors see this trend not only as a new business channel, but also as a big fat opportunity to promote their brands.
"A lot of people at weddings are our target customers where they get a chance to sample our pizza," Harneet Singh Rajpal, vice-president of marketing at Domino's, says. "It gives us visibility... and is a fantastic consumer connect," he says."
'via Blog this'
Wednesday, February 20, 2013
Unnecessary Medical Tests, Procedures-Doctors cutting u
Doctors Call Out 90 More Unnecessary Medical Tests, Procedures - Forbes: "The new lists include recommendations that advise medical-care providers:
· “Don’t use feeding tubes in patients with advanced dementia.”
· “Don’t perform routine annual Pap tests in women 30 – 65 years of age.”
· “Don’t automatically use CT scans to evaluate children’s minor head injuries.”
· “Avoid doing stress tests using echocardiographic images to assess cardiovascular risk in persons who have no symptoms and a low risk of having coronary disease.”
· “Don’t routinely treat acid reflux in infants with acid suppression therapy.”"
'via Blog this'
Tuesday, February 19, 2013
Moral underpinning: Taoiseach Enda Kenny apologises, P.M. Cameron avoids
Mr Kenny’s voice choked with emotion as he concluded his address to the Dáil when former senator Martin McAleese’s report on the institutions was discussed in a rare non-partisan atmosphere.
“I, as Taoiseach, on behalf of the State, the Government and our citizens, deeply regret and apologise unreservedly to all those women for the hurt that was done to them, and for any stigma they suffered, as a result of the time they spent in a Magdalene laundry.”"
Cameron Stops Short of Apology Over Amritsar Massacre - Bloomberg: "Prime Minister David Cameron will stop short of making an apology for the 1919 killing by the British army of hundreds of unarmed civilians in Amritsar, a massacre that galvanized India’s independence movement.
Cameron will today visit the Golden Temple in the north Indian city, the spiritual home to the world’s 20 million Sikhs, ending a three-day visit to the South Asian nation, his office said. It’s the first time a serving U.K. premier has visited the site of the massacre, Jallianwala Bagh.
“There are ties of history -- both the good and the bad,” Cameron said in New Delhi yesterday. “In Amritsar, I want to take the opportunity to pay my respects at Jallianwala Bagh. This visit to Punjab is what my visit to India is all about -- strengthening and deepening the ties between our two countries.”"
Sunday, February 17, 2013
Doctors' Rx- not an easy one to take for the fast food joints and soda purveyors
Doctors demand soft drinks tax and healthier hospital food to tackle obesity | Society | The Guardian: "Britain's 220,000 doctors are demanding a 20% increase in the cost of sugary drinks, fewer fast food outlets near schools and a ban on unhealthy food in hospitals to prevent the country's spiralling obesity crisis becoming unresolvable.
The Academy of Medical Royal Colleges is calling for action by ministers, the NHS, councils and food firms, as well as changes in parental behaviour, to break the cycle of "generation after generation falling victim to obesity-related illnesses and death".
In a report spelling out the problem in stark terms, the academy says doctors are "united in seeing the epidemic of obesity as the greatest public health crisis facing the UK. The consequences of obesity include diabetes, heart disease and cancer and people are dying needlessly from avoidable diseases.""
'via Blog this'
Air and Water - challenges for society
Chinese struggle through 'airpocalypse' smog | World news | The Observer:
"A prolonged bout of heavy pollution over the last month, which returned with a vengeance for a day last week – called the "airpocalypse" or "airmageddon" by internet users – has fundamentally changed the way that Chinese people think about their country's toxic air. The event was worthy of its namesake. On one day, pollution levels were 30 times higher than levels deemed safe by the World Health Organisation (WHO). Flights were cancelled. Roads were closed. One hospital in east Beijing reported treating more than 900 children for respiratory issues. Bloomberg found that for most of January, Beijing's air was worse than that of an airport smoking lounge.
The smog's most threatening aspect is its high concentration of PM 2.5 – particulate matter that is small enough to lodge deep into the lungs and enter the bloodstream, causing respiratory infections, asthma, lung cancer, cerebrovascular disease, and possibly damaging children's development.
On one day, pollution levels were 30 times higher than levels deemed safe by the World Health Organisation (WHO). Flights were cancelled. Roads were closed. One hospital in east Beijing reported treating more than 900 children for respiratory issues. Bloomberg found that for most of January, Beijing's air was worse than that of an airport smoking lounge.
The smog's most threatening aspect is its high concentration of PM 2.5 – particulate matter that is small enough to lodge deep into the lungs and enter the bloodstream, causing respiratory infections, asthma, lung cancer, cerebrovascular disease, and possibly damaging children's development. The WHO has estimated that outdoor air pollution accounts for two million deaths per year, 65% of them in Asia. Yet the smog has become more than a health hazard in China – it has become a symbol of widespread dissatisfaction with the government's growth-first development strategy. Feelings of resigned helplessness have given way to fear, anger, and society-wide pressure to change the status quo.
The Lunar New Year, which came last Sunday, usually coincides with clear blue skies – an estimated 9m cars depart from the capital, and its emissions-spewing factories shut down as workers go on holiday. Yet the smog came back with a vengeance on Wednesday. Environmental authorities sent text messages to Beijing residents urging them to mitigate the pollution by refraining from the long-held holiday tradition of lighting fireworks. According to state media, they took heed. Fireworks sales fell 37% compared with last year.
"PM 2.5 and data measurement issues with regard to air quality have entered into mainstream Chinese life," said Angel Hsu, a doctoral candidate at Yale University. Hsu has tracked usage of the term "PM 2.5" on Sina Weibo, China's most popular microblog, over the last two years. In January 2011, it was mentioned about 200 times. Last month, the number soared above three million.
In China, PM 2.5 has acquired a symbolic weight to parallel its medical gravitas. Young internet users post photos of themselves wearing air filtration face masks. One popular mask is hot pink; another looks like a panda bear. Last spring, Shanghai hosted a PM 2.5-themed rock music festival. A music video called "Beijing, Beijing (Big Fog Version)" went viral on video sharing websites. "Who is searching in the fog? Who is weeping in the fog? Who is living in the fog? Who is dying in the fog," A man croons over images of cars crawling along smog-choked highways.
Experts say that the last month's pollution was probably caused initially by a cold snap, forcing huge use of coal, followed by a rare temperature inversion, which trapped emissions under a blanket of warm air. Others say that it could be related to a prolonged period of high humidity, trapping particulate matter in the air. Pollution levels depend heavily on the force and direction of the wind. A strong north-eastern gust can blow the smog out to sea; a few stagnant hours are enough to make noon look like early evening.
The standard international measurement for air quality – the US Air Quality Index, or AQI – rates air quality on a scale of zero to 500. With experience, it becomes possible to guess the AQI in Beijing without looking at official readings. One hundred correlates to a thin grey gauze hovering above the horizon. When the index hits 200, the sky is visible only in a small patch directly overhead. An AQI reading of 300 blots out the sun, smothering the city in drab uniformity. When the AQI reached 755 on 12 January, the worst day on record, the air felt like industrial smoke – chemical-tasting, eye-watering.
On particularly smoggy days, the toxic cloud is visible in satellite photos. The worst of the last month's pollution stretched 1,100 miles south, closing highways near the south-western city Guiyang. When the smog clears, it doesn't simply vanish, but instead drifts to surrounding countries. January's smog spurred Japanese authorities to release health warnings to people living in the country's western cities. Traces of China's smog have been detected as far afield as California.
The Beijing municipal government has taken steps to curb the pollution, temporarily shutting down factories and ordering government cars off the roads. While propaganda authorities used to quash reports of air pollution for fear that they could spark social unrest, Chinese newspapers were allowed to report freely on the crisis. Shanghai's Environmental Protection Bureau has designed a cartoon accompaniment to its AQI readings – a pigtailed girl with big anime-style eyes, green-haired and smiling when the index reads "excellent" but maroon-haired and weepy when smog rolls in.
"I'm pretty optimistic that this happened at the right time to prompt the most action possible," said Deborah Seligsohn, an expert on China's environment at University of California, San Diego. President Xi Jinping took the reins of the Communist party in November; incoming prime minister Li Keqiang has promised to make environmental protection a focus of his tenure. Beijing authorities hope to wean the city off coal and implement stricter vehicle emissions standards by 2016.
Seligsohn added that changes would take a while. "If Beijing were surrounded by cities that were doing the same thing that Beijing was doing, it would be fine, but it isn't," she said. A short drive from central Beijing, the landscape fans out into sprawling, dusty plains, where farmers burn coal to heat their concrete homes. Small factories there often escape the notice of environmental watchdogs. PM 2.5, she explained, is produced by four airborne pollutants – sulphur dioxide, nitrous oxides, volatile organic compounds, and black carbon – each of which would require its own slew of regulations to curb.
People have begun to take protection into their own hands. "People are starting to treat air purifiers as a necessary appliance like a washing machine or computer," said Bi Xiuyan, a 56-year-old product salesperson for Amway. Bi has sold about 50 air purifiers in the last month, each of which costs £960, about twice the average monthly income for Beijing residents. "Everybody needs to breathe," she said.
Louie Cheng, the president of Shanghai-based Pure Living China, a small company that tests indoor air pollution, said that the current situation boosted the company's web traffic 30-fold. "Literally you can see it – this isn't compared with a year ago, this is compared with a month ago," he said. Cheng said that he helped start the company three years ago when an expat friend with an asthmatic daughter couldn't find a local company to competently test his house for pollutants. His client-base has tripled since January, and now includes more than half of Shanghai and Beijing's international schools. "It's just hard to keep up with the demand," he said.
Awareness of the problem has spread beyond major urban centres. Ma Shiying, who sells moist towelettes in the small coastal city of Weifang, Shandong province, heeded the government's warning and lit fewer fireworks this year. "Over the past few months, the whole world has begun to pay close attention to this problem," he said. "It's become impossible for anyone to ignore."
Yet interpretations of the issue vary. Eva Zhong, the head of exports for a fireworks manufacturer in Hunan province, said that the government's fireworks warnings were misplaced. "Fireworks are very innocent," she said. "Car exhaust is a far greater problem."
Despite the government figures, she added, her company's sales this year have been unscathed.
'via Blog this'
Friday, February 15, 2013
Li-ion batteries- on 787, off 350
BBC News - Airbus A350 to avoid Boeing 787-style lithium-ion batteries: "Airbus says it will not use lithium-ion batteries in its forthcoming A350 plane because of problems that have grounded rival Boeing's 787 Dreamliner.
The European planemaker said it would use traditional nickel-cadmium batteries instead, as already used in the A380 and other models.
Investigations are continuing after battery problems came to light on 787s operated by Japan's top two airlines.
Airbus said they remained "unexplained to the best of our knowledge".
The firm said it did not expect any further delays to the launch of the A350. The maiden flight is due to take place later this year, with the first passenger flight expected in the second half of 2014.
In a statement, Airbus said it was "confident" that the lithium-ion battery that it had been developing with French battery-maker Saft was "robust and safe"."
'via Blog this'
Continuing the fine tradition of Chicago politicians- J J Jr.
BBC News - Jesse Jackson Jr charged with misusing campaign funds: "A former congressman and son of a prominent civil rights leader has been charged with spending campaign funds on personal expenses.
Jesse Jackson Jr of Illinois is accused of misusing $750,000 (£483,000).
He and his wife Sandi Jackson, who is charged with tax fraud in the matter, intend to plead guilty, media report.
Mr Jackson, a 47-year-old Democrat, resigned in November after acknowledging he was being treated for bipolar disorder.
"I offer no excuses for my conduct and I fully accept my responsibility for the improper decisions and mistakes I have made," Mr Jackson said in a statement."
'via Blog this'
Wednesday, February 13, 2013
Fat-Cat Pay - Not Swiss Cheese
Fat-Cat Pay Makes Swiss So Mad CEO Salaries Facing National Vote - Bloomberg:
"With more than 100,000 Swiss citizens having signed a petition to limit “fat-cat” pay, voters will decide at a March 3 referendum whether top executives should have their compensation set by shareholders. While a poll shows a majority may vote yes, the industry’s lobby group warns that it will drive out tax-paying companies and is campaigning for a softer counter proposal.
“If you have this kind of limitation on executive pay, why should an American company put their European headquarters into Switzerland,” Philip Mosimann, CEO of Bucher Industries AG, a Swiss maker of street sweepers with a market valuation of 2.1 billion francs ($2.3 billion), said in an interview. “They would leave. I’m certain of that.”"
“If you have this kind of limitation on executive pay, why should an American company put their European headquarters into Switzerland,” Philip Mosimann, CEO of Bucher Industries AG, a Swiss maker of street sweepers with a market valuation of 2.1 billion francs ($2.3 billion), said in an interview. “They would leave. I’m certain of that.”
The vote is the brainchild of Thomas Minder, a Swiss lawmaker and managing director of herbal toothpaste business Trybol AG, whose petition blames highly-paid “fat cats” -- “Abzocker” in German -- for the financial crisis. If successful, the proposal will give shareholders an annual ballot on executives’ pay and block big payouts for new hires and for managers when they leave companies.
“Shameless executive payouts have very clearly come from the U.S.,” said Brigitta Moser-Harder, an activist shareholder, who owns shares of the country’s biggest bank UBS AG and largest engineering company ABB Ltd. and regularly speaks on the subject at annual shareholder meetings and on Swiss TV. “People have been outraged about high earners for years.”
Schaffhausen to Fordham
Minder, 53, has led a five-year campaign after collecting the signatures needed for a referendum. The businessman, who has an MBA from New York’s Fordham University and runs his family’s 113-year-old company, grew up near Schaffhausen, a small city bordering Germany that’s home to Swiss companies such as automobile parts-maker Georg Fischer AG.
The former Swiss army company commander wants to curb what he sees as a culture of chiefs who only stay for a short time and are still rewarded with high salaries, according to his campaign website. Minder plans to eliminate sign-on bonuses, as well as severance packages and extra incentives for completing merger transactions. He proposes to punish executives who violate the terms with as long as three years in jail.
Swiss Referendums
A survey conducted in January by researcher gfs.bern showed 65 percent of 1,217 voters supported Minder’s proposal. Switzerland holds regular referendums for issues that are able to draw the required 100,000 signatures. In 1989, an initiative to get rid of the Swiss army was rejected by the Swiss people.
Opposition to excessive executive pay has been building in Switzerland, even though the country has the highest average monthly wage in Europe. Minder and Moser-Harder say payouts such as the 71 million francs of shares that Dougan, Credit Suisse’s CEO, received in 2010 under an incentive program created five years earlier show how executive compensation has become disconnected from average salaries.
At least five of Europe’s 20 highest-paid CEOs work for Swiss companies, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The list includes three Americans, Dougan, Joe Jimenez of Novartis AG and Joe Hogan of ABB, as well as Roche’s Austrian chief Schwan and Nestle’s Bulcke of Belgium.
Jimenez, Switzerland’s highest earning CEO, got 13.2 million Swiss francs in 2012 and Schwan received 12.5 million francs. That compares with an average of about 2.7 million euros (3.3 million francs) for CEOs of companies in Europe’s Stoxx 600 Index which have disclosed 2012 executive salaries, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
Public Support
Minder’s supporters see swollen salaries as an “Americanization” imported by investment bankers in the 1990s. The proposal has broad support among low- and middle-income earners and also among those with vocational training, Susanne Leutenegger Oberholzer, a Social Democratic Party lawmaker, said at a Jan. 31 press conference in Bern.
The plan would result in one of the world’s strictest laws on executive pay, according to Robert Kuipers, a partner in charge of remuneration services in PriceWaterhouseCoopers’ Zurich office. The U.K., by comparison, has instituted a non- binding “say on pay” rules.
Switzerland would become less attractive to foreign multi- nationals such as offshore drilling contractor Transocean Ltd. and oilfield service company Weatherford International Ltd., which relocated because of liberal corporation laws, taxes and infrastructure, said Meinrad Vetter, an official at Economiesuisse, a lobby group for Swiss companies.
Counter Proposal
Economiesuisse has budgeted as much as 8 million francs on a campaign to block the initiative and backs a counter proposal from the government, which would automatically come into force next year if the Swiss people reject Minder’s law.
Switzerland’s largest corporations such as Novartis, Credit Suisse, Syngenta AG and UBS back the counter proposal, which omit Minder’s demands for a binding shareholder vote, prison sentences and a sign-on bonus ban. At the same time, the government plan would allow shareholders of individual companies to decide if they want to introduce a binding vote.
Economiesuisse’s Vetter said it was necessary to address the concerns of enraged voters.
“It’s more a question about social cohesion,” he said. “We need an answer to the Minder initiative and an answer to the anger of Swiss people about executive salaries.”
Economic Index
Switzerland’s ranking as the world’s most competitive country in the World Economic Forum’s annual index won’t be affected by the vote’s outcome, at least in the short term, because executive pay isn’t part of the overall assessment, said Margareta Drzeniek, who is part of the team that covers Switzerland at the WEF. It may even be a positive in the long term, assuming such a change improves social cohesion, she said.
Novartis’s Jimenez has said voters shouldn’t ignore the negative consequences of Minder’s initiative for some of the country’s biggest employers.
“From a competitive standpoint, it’s very difficult for me as a CEO to hire outside talent if any offer I make is contingent on a shareholder vote,” Jimenez said last month. “I think it puts Novartis or any Swiss company at a competitive disadvantage.”
To contact the reporters on this story: Patrick Winters in Zurich at pwinters3@bloomberg.net; Eva von Schaper in Munich at evonschaper@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Simon Thiel at sthiel1@bloomberg.net
Tuesday, February 12, 2013
Costly for U.S., Easy for India
India bought helicopters Obama rejected as ‘costly’ - The Times of India: "NEW DELHI: US president Barack Obama had found a variant of the AW-101 helicopters too exorbitant to pass muster in 2009. But the Indian government had no such qualms while inking the Rs 3,546-crore deal for 12 plush AW-101 helicopters just a year later in 2010."
The American "Marine One", the call sign of theUS Marine Corps helicopter which ferries the US President, would of course have been much more high-tech and "souped-up" helicopter compared to the Indian variant.
Obama had shot down the Marine One project, under which the US Navy was to have acquired 28 helicopters, after cost escalations had taken the overall cost to over $13 billion in June 2009, as per some estimates.
Monday, February 11, 2013
Clean Energy Users
Top 15 Users of Clean Energy: Companies, Cities, Universities - Bloomberg: "Companies are taking the lead. Intel, Kohl's, Whole Foods and Staples (to name a few) all use 100 percent green power for their U.S. operations, according to a ranking of top renewable consumers released last week by the EPA.
Click ahead for the EPA's ranking of the top 15 consumers of America's cleanest energy: solar, wind, geothermal, biogas, biomass, and low-impact small hydroelectric sources, ranked by total green-power use. The agency's list, which isn't comprehensive, draws from 1,300 companies, municipalities and universities that belong to its Green Power Partnership."
'via Blog this'
Sunday, February 10, 2013
100 billion or 1 billion: makes no difference
Aspiration of countrymen to ensure growth: Mukesh Ambani - The Economic Times: "NEW DELHI: Reposing faith in India's vibrant democracy, Reliance Industries' ( RILBSE -0.79 %) Chairman Mukesh Ambani today exuded optimism over the country's long-term growth saying its 100 billion people, each one of whom is a part of the system, will ensure prosperity with their aspirations.
"I am very bullish on India because it is really the aspiration of a billion people and ours is a county where all the billion count. There are some countries in the world where one person counts, there are some where the Politburo or 12 people count. "
'via Blog this'
Saturday, February 09, 2013
Eco-Challenges
David Miliband to head global fight to prevent eco-disaster in oceans | Environment | The Observer:
FISH: BUYERS' GUIDE
Thursday, February 07, 2013
Ireland: making tough choices
Kenny says ECB deal could cut borrowing by €20 billion - The Irish Times - Thu, Feb 07, 2013: "A debt deal to cut the cost of Ireland’s toxic bank rescue could slash €1 billion from tax hikes and spending cuts in upcoming budgets, the Government has claimed.
Taoiseach Enda Kenny said the agreement was not a silver bullet but declared that it would reduce state borrowing by €20 billion over the next decade.
“Step-by-step, this Government is undoing the disastrous banking policies that brought this state to the brink of national bankruptcy,” the Taoiseach said.
“The agreement has reduced Ireland’s vulnerability from the huge debts taken on by Irish taxpayers as a result of the cost of rescuing failed private banks.”
The Government did not ask for a write-down on the Anglo debt during negotiations with the European Central Bank (ECB).
“We always said that we were not looking for any write downs. Anybody who knows the European situation knows that the ECB does not do write downs,” Minister for Finance Michael Noonan said."
'via Blog this'
Wednesday, February 06, 2013
Indian weddings- conspicuous examples of visible consumption
Thailand Corners the Big Fat Indian Wedding Market - Bloomberg:
"The Greeks can say what they like -- nobody does the big fat wedding the way Indians do. The Indian nuptials' long parade of rituals and feasts lasts several days and, even at its smallest, involves a few hundred guests and often just as many staff members.
Indians never spend so lavishly on anything as they do on weddings -- and they've never spent as much on weddings as they do today, two decades after the liberalization of the economy and the revolution in consumer consciousness that followed it. The Indian wedding industry is now worth more than $25 billion a year -- and it's growing at an estimated 20 percent a year. If marrying was the central activity of the Indian economy, we'd knock out China in a few years."
Marriage in India has always involved a kind of economic explosion in the life of the family. During the long decades of socialism after India became independent in 1947, the economy grew at a dismal rate every year; jobs were scarce, consumer goods were of poor quality and in short supply, and the first instinct of the middle class and poor was to save. But even then, families, whether urban or rural, could always be relied on to spend well in excess of their resources for weddings. This was as much for reasons of social prestige as out of a desire to include everybody in the family's networks of blood, friendship and business. (Also, there was the pressure of the old Indian marriage custom, which often has a dark side, of dowry.)
But now, two decades of India's sometimes incoherent experiment with capitalism have created so much new money that big weddings have to be bigger and better than every other wedding. (And there are always thousands of weddings -- on one particularly auspicious day in the Hindu calendar last November, there were more than 30,000 in the capital, New Delhi.) In a recent piece in the Hindustan Times, the writer Ira Trivedi reported on going to 32 weddings on the same night in Delhi:
The speed of economic growth in India, which is responsible for the creation of overnight fortunes, is also creating a conspicuous, yet almost desperate type of consumption at weddings. The average budget for an Indian wedding ceremony in the middle class is estimated to be US$ 34,000… The upper-middle and rich classes are estimated to spend upward of US$ 1 million… This doesn’t include cash and valuables given as part of a dowry.
Today, Indians travel far more frequently for business, study, employment and pleasure. After decades of being sequestered within their own country by bad economics and red tape, the country's middle and upper classes have come to appreciate the prospects and opportunities available in a globalized world. And as costs for weddings have increased at home, more affluent Indians are looking at other South Asian countries not as honeymoon destinations but as wedding venues.
Top of this list is Thailand, which is the world's favorite destination for foreign weddings and is only a four-hour flight from Delhi and Mumbai. To Indian families, it offers the twin advantages of a foreign jaunt in a beautiful locale as well as cheaper prices. As one Thai wedding site explains on a page called "Why Thailand?":
The value of the Thai currency (the baht) is similar to the Indian rupee, but the prices of hotels in Thailand are 30-60 percent cheaper overall when comparing similar categories. The quality of hotels is among the best in the world. Food and beverage are also 30-60 percent cheaper in general, and flights to Bangkok are only slightly more expensive than domestic flights in India and in some cases, just the same price. These means you get a "bigger bang" for your bucks in Thailand.
Thai business has been extremely enterprising in positioning the country as an attractive destination for Indian families of means. Many big Thai hotels now have web pagesdesigned exclusively for Indian customers, and a host of wedding management companies in the country (including Indians based in Thailand) have set up websites. The Tourism Authority of Thailand, or TAT, offers many incentives and arguments to Indians for weddings(not the least of them is a book called "Fall in Love in India and Get Married in Thailand"). In a piece called "Thai The Knot" in the February issue of the Thai Airlines inflight magazineSawasdee, Chami Jotsalikorn writes:
TAT reports that the average spend for an Indian wedding in Thailand is 10 million baht (about $340,000), with an average of 200 to 500 guests. The average duration of each wedding is three to five nights, with approximately 600 rooms booked. It still costs two to three times more to host a wedding in India than in Thailand, says Satish Sehgal, president of the Thai-Indian Business Association. Indian wedding expenses include airfares, hotel accommodation, food, transportation, hired yachts and the actual wedding ceremony expenses for around 200 guests from overseas, plus priests and Indian chefs from India.
Yes, it seems Indians want to serve Indian food at a Thai wedding -- and fair enough, too, as so many Indian weddings at home today feature, after all, food that Indians think of as Chinese. (This, as the food writer Sourish Bhattacharyya wrote recently, should now be accepted as India's contribution to the globalization of Chinese cuisine.)
Once upon a time, well-off Indians married at home and perhaps put some money aside for what was perceived as a splurge on a honeymoon abroad. But as India enters the mainstream of globalization's currents, the big fat Indian wedding increasingly looks east for lower prices and more exotic pictures for the wedding album.
CHinese pollution- world's outsourcing of manufacturing and social responsibility
Eye-Stinging Beijing Air Risks Lifelong Harm to Babies - Bloomberg: "As doctors tended the patients snaking through the ground floor of Beijing Children’s Hospital last week, it wasn’t the raspy throats and watery eyes caused by the city’s acrid air that concerned Li Pu most. It was the potential for lifelong lung damage and behavioral changes.
Li, a pediatrician focusing on early childhood development, is finding evidence of the cumulative toxic effect that pollution is having on children. It suggests that the acute sickness triggered this year by some of Beijing’s worst smog- cloaked days may be a prelude of chronic illnesses, such as heart disease, decades later.
“Even if children are being exposed for a short period, it may still have a cumulative effect on them in the future,” Li said in an interview. “Beijing has seen a lot more days with serious smog since the start of January.”"