Archive for April, 2005



It’s the cities, stupid!

Shekhar Gupta makes an important point
if our major urban centres rot and decay, so will the rest of the country. Like all rapidly developing countries, India is urbanising at a fast pace. Some of its more developed states — Kerala, Gujarat — are already ‘‘reurbanised’’. Big cities are both cradles and magnets for enterprise […]

Should India invade Nepal?

Abheek Barman makes a bold suggestion in today’s Times
the only policy that makes sense for India is this: Export governance and institutions to Nepal. Run it as a protectorate.
I.e. invade Nepal, and rebuild it’s institutions, strenghthen democracy, rule of law, it’s economy (market based?), etc. On paper it sounds good. But leaving aside realpolitik hurdles […]

May Blogger Meet

My suggestion for the May Meet of the Bombay Blogger’s Blah.
Date: Sunday, May 15, 2004
Time: 3 pm
Venue: Not yet fixed. Needs to be accessible, quiet (so that we don’t have to shout over the music– i.e. CCD is out) and with some coffee / food thrown in. Suggestions please?
As before, this is open to all […]

Less is more

is always true of government interventions. If we must have the government tax and regulate, let us have the minimum possible. That’s why I am happy to see this piece on flat taxes in the Economist which shows how the idea is not just fine in theory but has worked in practice as well.
And this […]

Indian blog goodies

Welcome to the weekly Bharateeya Blog Mela. It’s going to be a nice long leisurely read, so bookmark this page and drop by as often as you like over the next week.
Let’s start with some sport. Dilip D’Souza sees cricket through a friend’s eyes. While we’re on cricket, Avinash Tadimalla thinks Ganguly will make a […]

Who guards the guardians?

The Roman satirist Juvenal first raised the question “Who guards the guardians?” as a barb to Plato’s concept of a philosopher-king. For centuries the best (but still unsatisfactory) answer was to have ethical and upright officers as the guardians of society. But only with the advent of technologies like the video recorder and the mobile […]

A Bloggers Dozen

is like a bakers dozen and concerns itself with the number 13. Last Sunday’s blogger meet had 12 bloggers and 1 non-blogger. And to demonstrate the great power of blogs (or bloggers), within 48 hours, the non-blogger started blogging. Bravo and welcome to the club Chandrahas!
Here are some accounts of the blogger meet:
Arnab has a […]

Mela on thursday

And we have only three nominations. Folks please don’t be shy and nominate the gems from your blogs. Don’t wait for someone else to showcase your superior writing. Do it yourself and do it now! Scroll down or click here for the announcement post.
And we have competition from the nascent Bharateeya LiveJournal Mela. Hey LJers, […]

Wily Gujaratis

Amit Varma tries to get a grip on events and the Gujarati psyche just before today’s ODI between India and Pakistan in Ahmedabad.
Gujaratis are expert at constructing order out of chaos. What could have more tumult than the trading floor of a stock exchange, for example? There you will find, making sense of the thousands […]

Predatory pricing

A lot of cellular operators are unhappy about Reliance Infocomm offering unlimited talktime tariffs (Reports in the Hindu Business Line and Business Standard). They’ve gone crying to TRAI calling it unfair and “predatory”. They’re wrong.
Firstly, it’s not predatory pricing. Note the explanation from Wikipedia:
Predatory pricing is the practice of a dominant firm selling a […]

I like the Asian Age, especially it’s features in the weekend edition, but I rarely link to articles written in the Age. There’s a good reason. If you use Firefox, like I do, you will not be able to view the Age’s website. Go on, click www.asianage.com. You’d get to see this:
“This page can only […]

No trade policies please

The Express gets it right in its editorial today on trade policy.
When the state trumpets about “targets” for exports, it is an embarrassing reflection of a sixties mindset. Modern economies no longer set “targets” for exports. Exports are the outcome of a market economy, and not something that a government controls.

We no longer need to […]

From Suketu Mehta’s Maximum City.
[The Taj] is less a hotel than a proving ground for the ego. The Taj lobby and its adjoining toilets are where you test your self-worth; theoretically, anyone can come in out of the heat and sit in the plush lobby, on the ornate sofas, amid the billionaire Arabs and the […]

Hope to meet a lot of bloggers tomorrow. Once again, the details are:
Sunday, April 10, 2004, 3 pm
Cafe Coffee Day, near Pritam Hotel, Dadar East
If you’re coming by train, get off on the Eastern side of Dadar station and ask for Hotel Pritam — it a 2 minute walk. The CCD is quite prominently located […]

Blog Mela Announcement

Time for another mela at AnarCapLib. We’re hosting it on April 14–the day Babasaheb Ambedkar was born, the day Abraham Lincoln was shot, around the time of the Spring festival of Baisakhi, and three days before a neighbouring general visits Delhi to see a cricket match.
The Rules

Posts must either be made by Indians or […]

Sex and Sanity

Yes, sanity, not insanity. It seems sex might just help fend off dementia. No idea whether if the research is junk or not, but it sounds like fun!

Cricket is in the air

Cricket is in the air. Yes, I know it’s a cliché (Amit won’t let me get away with it), but it is so true. I was walking back to office a few minutes ago and I got to know the state of the match without asking anyone.
Guy with ear to radio: “Ek aur wicket gaya. […]

For my niece’s 21st birthday, I gave her a copy of Ayn Rand’s The Virtue of Selfishness. The morning papers were filled with the hysteria of a world gone mad: bloody communal rights, war, corruption, mass suicides, political vandalism – and I thought: here’s a book that will illumine the world for her, help her […]




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