Tuesday, July 19, 2016

HAS INDIAN MEDIA LET DOWN THE NATION?

Bikash Choudhury


One top media mogul described his media outfit “as business of advertising”. This was a very audacious and matter of fact statement by the owner of a very prominent media brands for over 100 years in the practice of this Business. See, this is very much true for other media owners as well; however, they do not have courage of conviction to state the obvious. We all see this happening before our own eyes as we see in the day’s news paper the item of news like Rape, Murder, Accidents, All Kinds of Corrupt Practices and Terror Strikes hog the limelight in the front page and lucidly explained in the right hand side inner pages where it must be prominently visible to a naked eye. Same holds good for the now infamous electronic media whose purse strings are mainly driven by the TRP ratings that decides their level of advertising compensations for a 10 second spots; therefore, apart from news and views they show every thing else that our naked mind drools over without pretensions sex, sleaze, debonair award ceremony most of them purchased before over a five star launch or dinner depending upon their respective libido. They do cover some positive news in the fringe periphery very difficult to get noticed and too far from drawing the social attention or changing our injurious habits, spurious beliefs and toxic culture. The romance of journalism is long dead. Who will wake up our fourth estate now? GoI has started one progressive policy for “Monetizing Gold” that wish to transform unproductive yellow metals in the possessions of individuals into very productive assets for the Nation while individual earns a good income (2.75 % interest) on their exposure to the Sovereign Gold Bonds. However, the public response to this scheme is tepid; because, our social conditioning, popular habits and old culture of having the Yellow Metals at home is so powerful that all the benefits of additional income, safety and substantial return on investments has not been able to draw Indian people to subscribe to Indian Sovereign Gold Bond Scheme. Our Media play a very vital role for public education on such issue of National importance; however, neither our mainstream English Language media nor Vernacular media ever tried to highlight the importance of gold monetization scheme that would have gone a long way to finance our Infrastructure Sector (Rail, Road, Port & Airports) and Social Sectors (Education & Health) which requires a trillion dollars of investment to pull our country from historic disadvantages. India has approximately twenty thousand tonnes of yellow metal in the possession of individuals; at least, if we are able to monetize 50% of the stock then we can have World Class Roads, Bullet Trains, Airports at District Headquarters and we could pay decent salary to our primary teachers to attract talent while populating our rural health centers with qualified Medical practitioners to uplift our general health system just like in developed Nations. There is still time for Indian Media to consider this issue in depth and act with alacrity for the welfare of our billion plus people. Otherwise, Indian Media would let down this Nation.


(Authors Bio: Socio-Economic-Political Activist and Freelance Writer on socioeconomic & political issues and Art & Culture. Contact: streben.market@gmail.com) 


    

Thursday, July 14, 2016

PURI: ERA AND AURA

BIKASH CHOUDHURY


Puri: Era and Aura got off to a colorful start inside the leafy Lalit Kala Akademi Regional Centre at Bhubaneswar. This was the solo maiden show of a very bold and accomplished artist Susmita Sahoo, who is an art teacher in Kendriya Vidyalya, Kharagpur after completing her Bachelor in Fine Arts from BK Art College, Bhubanewswar. Not only the title of the show was unconventional, and in a way unique to the artist inside; but, also her choice of the medium—water color to showcase the cultural legacy of the Puri township that revolves around Sri Mandir, Jagannath Sanskriti, tourists and pilgrims, who come calling from all over the world to inundate themselves with the blessings of Lord Jagannath. Susmita justifiably felt that the rich heritage of Puri is facing a threat from the very turbulent changing times that would take its toll on the rich tradition and culture manifested in its various festivals celebrated throughout the year. Keeping these thoughts at the back of her mind; she was inspired to capture some of the cultural places and activities related to Lord Jagannath in the spiritual township of Puri in her paintings with water color on paper. It would be an understatement if it’s said “Susmita has chosen her subjects carefully and impeccably that would remind any ordinary visitor of Jagannath Temple and instantly connect with him and her. One such painting was about “Dolamandapa Sahi after Dark” the narrow by lanes in front of Srimandira; that is lined with small shops and remain chokablock filled with pilgrims in the day and night. Susmita has captured the place at night with unparalleled brush strokes that illuminates the dusty bylanes in the hearts and minds of an art lover and devotee of Lord Jagannath. Susmita says “water color is a very vibrant medium which is direct and creates its effects at lightening speed, and they can’t be reversed or duplicated.” The artist has used most transparent shades and some cool techniques that orchestrate the luminosity of the medium with diverse textures that illuminates her paintings. In this series she has very deep, rich and larger than life water color paintings depicting ancient folklore with myriad of colors; but, judiciously balanced to give a scintillating view of the art work. The painting referred above is the “Naga Painting—14” x 11”. Nagas used to protect Puri from invaders; and, Naga Puja is one of the rare events practiced only at Puri during Durga Puja. There are some other prominent paintings like Raghunandan Library in Emar Mutt, Hypnotic Drummer, Bojhia bhai, Emar Mutt, Mahaprasad on trolley, Rosha Ghara and Conch seller. Susmita conceded that it will take many more years of efforts to fully cover the rich heritage and diversity of Puri, the cultural icon of Odisha; she has plans to have many exhibitions in the future. Apart from her skill on art; Susmita, would go down in the history as the first cultural chronicler of Jagannath Sanskriti and Puri in a very powerful visual medium. This initiative—Era & Aura shall inspire many younger generation of artist to showcase the precious and affluent cultural heritage of Odisha in the future.

(Authors Bio: Socio-Economic-Political Activist and Freelance Writer on Art & Culture. Contact: streben.market@gmail.com) 


Tuesday, July 12, 2016

HOW TO CREATE NON-DIGITAL JOBS?


Bikash Choudhury


Raghuram Rajan, RBI Governor in one of his lecture said “if you down load a movie and enjoy at home; it does not make any economic activity. However, if you go to a theater to watch movies, it does” simple logic is if you go out you have to spend cash on transport, buy a movie ticket on the counter and buy food in the cafeteria; all these make you relax and happy and at the same time it create jobs for many others and therefore add to our Gross Domestic Product (GDP). So thumb rule remains every rupee that is spent if creates a job or fractions of a job, then it is advantage to economy as it goes on adding a virtuous cycle of prosperity depending on the nature & quantum of expenditure.
                                            Simple cooking skills for interested unemployed youth/school drop outs could add a million jobs in our economy. The story is about the challenges of Double income families living in the six metro cities of our country; both of whom drive at least one and half hour for work and find it very difficult to cook at home; mostly live on bought out foods delivered at home which is very expensive and not very healthy. They can afford a good, properly trained cook at home for one break fast, lunch/dinner a day at Rs 5000 a month. If we assume the population of six metro cities of India: Mumbai, Delhi, Chennai, Kolkatta, Hyderabad and Bangaluru at 6 crore and number of families at 1.5 crore and further assume that only 30% families would need & have ability to pay Rs. 5000 a month then approximately we are looking at  5 million families. If one well trained cook could serve 5 families in a 8 hours roaster then we are looking at 1 million jobs that could earn a person about Rs. 10,000-Rs. 15,000 a month enough for a good living for the starters; as they get more experience then they could probably branch out in the food business as entrepreneur or add specialized skills in cooking to become a Chef in Hospitality Industry or could migrate to middle east/western countries and earn a fortune to repatriate to their families back home. Further, we will need a retinue of professional Skill Development Institute for cooking; if one institute can produce 1000 well trained cooks a year then we may require one thousand such Skill Training Institute in the country. And, we shall need at least 10 business organization as Service Providers—Home Cooking, in each metro city that makes it 60 for all six metro cities. This exercise not only reveals the potential of Job Creation in the economy by finding a simple solution to mundane problem of Home Cooked Food for Double Income Families in metro cities; it also indicate the capacity of further growth of economy as series of multiplier effects could happen at different nodes at different life cycles in the Industry. The externalities that comes to mind immediately is the comfort of working house wives with the service of a cook at home; further, they get little more free time for recreation & rejuvenation that aids creativity at work resulting in innovation & enterprise. In the mirror image one million cooks on the job would enhance their personal consumption fueling demand for goods & services worth Rs.10, 000 crore per annum while Rs. 2000 crore could be added to our savings. Again, there are scopes for earning foreign currency for the country with growing numbers of old age people in developed countries, who may need the services of home cook food or a cook at home. All of these could lead to a huge economic activity that benefits a large section of our people at the bottom of the pyramid.        
                        

If you have bought a fifty gram pack of Haladiram salted pea nuts @ Rs. 10 recently from your neighborhood corner shop; then, you would have actually paid
Rs. 200 for one kilogram of just salted pea nuts hygienically packed with a brand name—no rocket science involved. Do you know how much a farmer is paid for the same 1 Kilogram of raw pea nuts? That varies between Rs.50-80 a Kilogram. The spread remain between Rs.120-Rs.150 for kilogram which is a huge amount for the kind of value addition in terms of food processing. This problem can be turned in its head to create substantial amount of jobs in rural areas in food processing. Rural areas are short in basic technology for food processing, awareness & need of hygiene for food items, packaging and marketing muscle. All of these can be provided for by an entrepreneur from bigger cities at a price to make processed food like salted pea nuts and other items at the “pit head” in rural areas at a fraction of cost in collaboration with “Farmer Collectives”; if they share the spread equally then they both pick up Rs.60-Rs.75 a kilogram which would be huge jump in farmers income with additional opportunity of creating non-farm jobs in the rural areas and at the same time it would be a hugely profitable venture for the business men in bigger cities. It may so happen in future Global Retailers would source processed food from Indian Rural Areas directly making a huge economic activity with creation of new trades of employment. If we could revamp the “SUPW—socially useful productive work” curriculum in the schools of rural areas and train school children on food processing then we could simultaneously create rural job ready work force in food processing. This case study if successfully executed could eliminate about 40% of food waste between “farms to plate” adding its own contribution to our economic growth.    

                               India has earned a name for its Art, Craft and Architecture for thousands of years and all across the globe. However, our Financial Institutional Investors like Life Insurance Corporation and Mutual Funds have deserted our creative people. If our FII start investing 1% of their corpus in Indian Art then we could soon persuade or attract ordinary house holds to keep at least one Indian Art Piece in their living room; that, over a period of time will at least add half million jobs in our economy; how? India has a vibrant eco-system for Art & Architecture which remains dormant due to investor’s apathy. If domestic FII give an initial leg up to our Creative Industry then that could create a robust demand for Art, Art Gallery, Art Museum, Auction House, Art Publication, Rating Agency and professionals needed to run such institutions at the back of enhanced public interest in consequence of demonstration effect. It could soon transform India into a Global Hub for Art driving creativity in the country. Be that as it may; it is apparent, we can also create huge amount of jobs in non-digital medium by solving very mundane problems and also playing into our core strength. Shall we?

Authors Bio: Socio-Economic-Political Activist and Freelance Writer on Socio-economic and Political Issues. Contact: streben.market@gmail.com


Friday, July 8, 2016

ODISHA COULD LEAD INDIA?


Bikash Choudhury

Arun Maira, former member of planning commission and CEO of Boston Consulting Group said “this land has power to change the world” referring to Odisha in his CYSD Memorial Lecture at Bhubaneswar a few years back; however, he did not elaborate. The famous Kalinga war in 261 B.C that changed Emperor Ashoka from Chandashoka to Dharmashoka would have been at the back of his mind. History and Geography of our land bear ample testimony of economic and political power of this ancient civilization that is known as Odisha at present. The moot point remains; can we turn the wheel once again in such a manner that Odisha would become the role model for India both in economics and politics? This is the thought that transcends one’s mind when Lord of the World (Lord Jagannath) troupes out of his abode to meet his subjects in his specially made chariot. India goes through many problems simultaneously which defy a sustainable solution for over 70 years since our independence; abject poverty, unemployment, farmer suicide, flawed education system and non-existing healthcare infrastructure; however, the biggest of them all is the “lack of political unity” at the top and this was the main reason for which our country suffered from colonization for five hundred years and the same holds good even now that hinders a resolution to all intractable problems cited earlier. Architect of modern Odisha, Biju Babu was a man of, and for, consensus who took on the role of consensus builder in Janata and later National Front Government at the centre that gave Odisha a much bigger profile than numeral 21( number of seats in the lower house of parliament). Odisha could once again take on the role of “Political Unifier” amidst stark and staunch Ideological & Political divide in the larger socio-economic interest of our Nation & Nationality. Ideally, GST tax proposals could have been implemented for the benefit of all, much earlier. In fact there is an opening for the role of a National Consensus Builder and Odisha could take on this role to its own advantage. Odisha has already been a role model in management of Natural Disaster, with extraordinary handling of Phailine. We could once again become the role model if we fool proof our coast line with Mangroves and off shore wind mills; making us power surplus for next two decade and attracting Global Industry while earning brownie points on carbon credits. This journey could continue uninterrupted if we adapt to a new entrepreneurial “culture” in our governance, revive our ancient competence in International Trade and creativity in Art, Craft & Architecture. We have already earned laurels for our capacity of imagination in urban management in the SMART City sweep stakes; however, we can actually surprise & shock the country by making all our city and towns free from mosquitoes and providing potable tap water making water purifier redundant. Our buildings and road could sport of rain water harvesting facility combining with roof top solar energy & vegetable farms that would make people of Odisha healthy, wealthy and wise. Shall we?

Authors Bio: Socio-Economic-Political Activist and Freelance Writer on Socioeconomic and Political Issues. Contact: streben.market@gmail.com